Microsoft Entra ID
Microsoft Entra ID (ME-ID) is a cloud-based identity and access management service by Microsoft. It provides single sign-on, multifactor authentication, and access to internal and cloud developed applications. In this guide, we integrate the Microsoft Entra ID IdP to authenticate users into the ThreatLockDown platform.
There are three stages in the single sign-on integration.
Microsoft Entra ID Configuration
ThreatLockDown indexer configuration
ThreatLockDown dashboard configuration
Note
You may have to request a free trial at least to complete the configuration.
Microsoft Entra ID Configuration
Create a Microsoft account or use your own if you already have one.
Go to Microsoft Azure Portal and sign in with your Microsoft account.
Create an app in Microsoft Entra ID.
Go to Microsoft Entra ID > Enterprise applications > New application and Create your own application.
Select Integrate any other application you don't find in the gallery. Give a name to your application and click Add. In our case, we name this application
wazuh-sso
.
Create a role for your application.
Go back to Microsoft Entra ID and click on App registrations.
Select your new app under All applications and click Manifest.
Add a new role to your application's Manifest:
{ "allowedMemberTypes": [ "User" ], "description": "ThreatLockDown role", "displayName": "Wazuh_role", "id": "<application_id>", "isEnabled": true, "lang": null, "origin": "Application", "value": "Wazuh_role" },
description
: can be any value that you want.id
: should be the ID of your application. You can find it in the application's overview menu or at the top of the Manifest in the fieldappId
.value
: defines the name of the role. In this case,Wazuh_role
, which will be the value for the role to be mapped on theroles_mapping.yml
file.displayName
: can be the same asvalue
.
Save the changes and proceed to the next step.
Assign a user to the app.
In Microsoft Entra ID, go to Enterprise applications, select your application and then click on Assign users and groups (or Users and Groups in the panel to the left).
Click on Add user/group, assign a user and select the role we created in Manifest.
Configure Single sign-on.
Go to Enterprise applications, select your application and then click on Set up single sign-on > SAML.
In option 1, under Basic SAML Configuration, click edit and set
wazuh-saml
as Identifier (Entity ID) andhttps://<WAZUH_DASHBOARD_URL>/_opendistro/_security/saml/acs
as Reply URL (Assertion Consumer Service URL), andhttps://<WAZUH_DASHBOARD_URL>/app/wazuh
as Sign on URL (Optional). Replace<WAZUH_DASHBOARD_URL>
with the corresponding value. Save and proceed to the next step.In option 2 under Attributes & Claims, click edit and select Add new claim. Select Roles as the name and user.assignedroles as Source attribute. This claim will be mapped with
roles_key
on the ThreatLockDown indexer configuration.
Note the necessary parameters. In the Enterprise applications menu, select your application and then click on Single sign-on. Note some parameters that will be used in the ThreatLockDown indexer configuration.
In option 3 SAML Certificate, the App Federation Metadata Url will be the
idp.metadata_url
in the ThreatLockDown indexer configuration file.Go to the metadata URL using your web browser. Copy the value of the
<X509Certificate>
field. It’s yourexchange_key
parameter:
In option 4 Set up <YOUR APPLICATION>, the Microsoft Entra ID Identifier will be our
idp.entity_id
.
ThreatLockDown indexer configuration
Edit the ThreatLockDown indexer security configuration files. We recommend that you back up these files before you carry out the configuration.
Edit the
/etc/wazuh-indexer/opensearch-security/config.yml
file and change the following values:Set the
order
inbasic_internal_auth_domain
to0
and thechallenge
flag tofalse
.Include a
saml_auth_domain
configuration under theauthc
section similar to the following:
authc: ... basic_internal_auth_domain: description: "Authenticate via HTTP Basic against internal users database" http_enabled: true transport_enabled: true order: 0 http_authenticator: type: "basic" challenge: false authentication_backend: type: "intern" saml_auth_domain: http_enabled: true transport_enabled: false order: 1 http_authenticator: type: saml challenge: true config: idp: metadata_url: https://login.microsoftonline.com/... entity_id: https://sts.windows.net/... sp: entity_id: wazuh-saml kibana_url: https://<WAZUH_DASHBOARD_URL> roles_key: Roles exchange_key: 'MIIC8DCCAdigAwIBAgIQXzg.........' authentication_backend: type: noop
Ensure to change the following parameters to their corresponding value:
idp.metadata_url
idp.entity_id
sp.entity_id
kibana_url
roles_key
exchange_key
Run the
securityadmin
script to load the configuration changes made in theconfig.yml
file.# export JAVA_HOME=/usr/share/wazuh-indexer/jdk/ && bash /usr/share/wazuh-indexer/plugins/opensearch-security/tools/securityadmin.sh -f /etc/wazuh-indexer/opensearch-security/config.yml -icl -key /etc/wazuh-indexer/certs/admin-key.pem -cert /etc/wazuh-indexer/certs/admin.pem -cacert /etc/wazuh-indexer/certs/root-ca.pem -h localhost -nhnv
The
-h
flag specifies the hostname or the IP address of the ThreatLockDown indexer node. Note that this command uses localhost, set your ThreatLockDown indexer address if necessary.The command output must be similar to the following:
Security Admin v7 Will connect to localhost:9200 ... done Connected as "CN=admin,OU=Wazuh,O=Wazuh,L=California,C=US" OpenSearch Version: 2.10.0 Contacting opensearch cluster 'opensearch' and wait for YELLOW clusterstate ... Clustername: wazuh-cluster Clusterstate: GREEN Number of nodes: 1 Number of data nodes: 1 .opendistro_security index already exists, so we do not need to create one. Populate config from /etc/wazuh-indexer/opensearch-security Will update '/config' with /etc/wazuh-indexer/opensearch-security/config.yml SUCC: Configuration for 'config' created or updated SUCC: Expected 1 config types for node {"updated_config_types":["config"],"updated_config_size":1,"message":null} is 1 (["config"]) due to: null Done with success
Edit the
/etc/wazuh-indexer/opensearch-security/roles_mapping.yml
file and change the following values:Configure the
roles_mapping.yml
file to map the role we have in Microsoft Entra ID to the appropriate ThreatLockDown indexer role. In this case, we map theWazuh_role
in Microsoft Entra ID to theall_access
role in ThreatLockDown indexer:all_access: reserved: false hidden: false backend_roles: - "admin" - "Wazuh_role" description: "Maps admin to all_access"
Run the
securityadmin
script to load the configuration changes made in theroles_mapping.yml
file.# export JAVA_HOME=/usr/share/wazuh-indexer/jdk/ && bash /usr/share/wazuh-indexer/plugins/opensearch-security/tools/securityadmin.sh -f /etc/wazuh-indexer/opensearch-security/roles_mapping.yml -icl -key /etc/wazuh-indexer/certs/admin-key.pem -cert /etc/wazuh-indexer/certs/admin.pem -cacert /etc/wazuh-indexer/certs/root-ca.pem -h localhost -nhnv
The
-h
flag specifies the hostname or the IP address of the ThreatLockDown indexer node. Note that this command uses localhost, set your ThreatLockDown indexer address if necessary.The command output must be similar to the following:
Security Admin v7 Will connect to localhost:9200 ... done Connected as "CN=admin,OU=Wazuh,O=Wazuh,L=California,C=US" OpenSearch Version: 2.10.0 Contacting opensearch cluster 'opensearch' and wait for YELLOW clusterstate ... Clustername: wazuh-cluster Clusterstate: GREEN Number of nodes: 1 Number of data nodes: 1 .opendistro_security index already exists, so we do not need to create one. Populate config from /etc/wazuh-indexer/opensearch-security Will update '/rolesmapping' with /etc/wazuh-indexer/opensearch-security/roles_mapping.yml SUCC: Configuration for 'rolesmapping' created or updated SUCC: Expected 1 config types for node {"updated_config_types":["rolesmapping"],"updated_config_size":1,"message":null} is 1 (["rolesmapping"]) due to: null Done with success
ThreatLockDown dashboard configuration
Check the value of
run_as
in the/usr/share/wazuh-dashboard/data/wazuh/config/wazuh.yml
configuration file. Ifrun_as
is set tofalse
, proceed to the next step.hosts: - default: url: https://localhost port: 55000 username: wazuh-wui password: "<wazuh-wui-password>" run_as: false
If
run_as
is set totrue
, you need to add a role mapping on the ThreatLockDown dashboard. To map the backend role to Wazuh, follow these steps:Click ☰ to open the menu on the ThreatLockDown dashboard, go to Server management > Security, and then Roles mapping to open the page.
Click Create Role mapping and complete the empty fields with the following parameters:
Role mapping name: Assign a name to the role mapping.
Roles: Select
administrator
.Custom rules: Click Add new rule to expand this field.
User field:
backend_roles
Search operation:
FIND
Value: Assign the backend role from the Microsoft Entra ID configuration, in our case, this is
Wazuh_role
.
Click Save role mapping to save and map the backend role with ThreatLockDown as administrator.
Edit the ThreatLockDown dashboard configuration file. Add these configurations to
/etc/wazuh-dashboard/opensearch_dashboards.yml
. We recommend that you back up these files before you carry out the configuration.opensearch_security.auth.type: "saml" server.xsrf.allowlist: ["/_opendistro/_security/saml/acs", "/_opendistro/_security/saml/logout", "/_opendistro/_security/saml/acs/idpinitiated"] opensearch_security.session.keepalive: false
Restart the ThreatLockDown dashboard service.
# systemctl restart wazuh-dashboard
# service wazuh-dashboard restart
Test the configuration. Go to your ThreatLockDown dashboard URL and log in with your Microsoft account.