Jumpcloud

Jumpcloud, is a Unified Device and Identity Access Management platform that provides services such as Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA), Single Sign-On, password management, and cloud directory. In this guide, we integrate the Jumpcloud SSO to authenticate users into the Wazuh platform.

Learn how to create administrator and read-only roles on Jumpcloud and map them with Wazuh in the sections below.

Setup Jumpcloud single sign-on with administrator role

Follow these steps to integrate Jumpcloud IdP with Wazuh for single sign-on and grant administrator role to the authenticated Jumpcloud users on the Wazuh platform:

  1. Jumpcloud Configuration

  2. Wazuh indexer configuration

  3. Wazuh dashboard configuration

Jumpcloud Configuration

  1. Create an account in Jumpcloud. Request a free trial if you don't have a paid license.

  2. Create a new user. This step can be skipped if you are just testing, you can use your Jumpcloud admin user for example.

    1. Go to User Management, click on Users > + Users > Manual User Creation, fill in the user information, activate the user and click on Save user.

  3. Create a new group and assign the user.

    1. Go to User Management > User Groups > (+) and give a name to the group. In our case, this is wazuh-admins.

      The group name will be used as the backend_roles for Wazuh role mapping.

    2. In the selected User Groups, go to the Users tab, select the newly created user and click Save Group.

  4. Create a new app. Configure the SAML settings while you create the app.

    1. Under Access, go to SSO Applications > Get Started, and select Custom Application.

    2. Complete the Create New Application Integration page with the appropriate information.

      • Click Next on the Select Application page.

      • Check the Manage Single Sign-On (SSO) and Configure SSO with SAML options on the Select Options page. Click Next to proceed to the next step.

      • Assign a Display Label to the application, and click the Show this application in User Portal checkbox on the Enter General Info page. Click Save Application to apply the settings.

      • Click Configure Application on the Review page.

      Custom application selected
      Configure SSO options
      Enter general info
      Confirm new application integration
    3. Complete the SSO tab with the appropriate information.

      • IdP Entity ID: wazuh (this will be the idp.entity_id in our Wazuh indexer configuration).

      • SP Entity ID: wazuh-saml (this will be the sp.entity_id in our Wazuh indexer configuration).

      • ACS URL: https://<WAZUH_DASHBOARD_URL>/_opendistro/_security/saml/acs

      • Check Assertion under Sign.

      • Check Declare Redirect Endpoint.

      • Check include group attribute and add Roles as the attribute. This will be used later in the Wazuh indexer configuration file.

      • Leave the rest of the options as their default values and click Save.

    4. On the User Groups tab, select the Group created previously and click save.

  5. Note the necessary parameters from the SAML settings of the new app.

    The parameters already obtained during the integration are:

    • idp.entity_id: wazuh

    • sp.entity_id: wazuh-saml

    • roles_key: Roles

    • backend_roles: wazuh-admins

    • kibana_url: https://<WAZUH_DASHBOARD_URL>

    To obtain the remaining parameter, open the recently created application, go to the SSO tab and copy the Metadata URL.

Wazuh indexer configuration

Edit the Wazuh indexer security configuration files. We recommend that you back up these files before you carry out the configuration.

  1. Generate a 64-character long random key using the following command.

    openssl rand -hex 32
    

    The output will be used as the exchange_key in the /etc/wazuh-indexer/opensearch-security/config.yml file.

  2. Edit the /etc/wazuh-indexer/opensearch-security/config.yml file and change the following values:

    • Set the order in basic_internal_auth_domain to 0 and the challenge flag to false.

    • Include a saml_auth_domain configuration under the authc 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: true
            order: 1
            http_authenticator:
              type: saml
              challenge: true
              config:
                idp:
                  metadata_url: 'https://sso.jumpcloud.com/saml2/metadata/.....'
                  entity_id: wazuh
                sp:
                  entity_id: wazuh-saml
                  forceAuthn: true
                kibana_url: https://<WAZUH_DASHBOARD_URL>
                roles_key: Roles
                exchange_key: 'b1d6dd32753374557dcf92e241.......'
            authentication_backend:
              type: noop
    

    Ensure to change the following parameters to their corresponding value:

    • idp.metadata_file

    • idp.entity_id

    • sp.entity_id

    • kibana_url

    • roles_key

    • exchange_key

  3. Run the securityadmin script to load the configuration changes made in the config.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 Wazuh indexer node. Note that this command uses localhost, set your Wazuh 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: 2.19.4
    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 /home/wazuh-user
    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
    
  4. 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 Jumpcloud user group to the appropriate Wazuh indexer role. In our case, we map the wazuh-admins group to the all_access role:

    all_access:
      reserved: false
      hidden: false
      backend_roles:
      - "admin"
      - "wazuh-admins"
      description: "Maps admin to all_access"
    
  5. Run the securityadmin script to load the configuration changes made in the roles_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 Wazuh indexer node. Note that this command uses localhost, set your Wazuh 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: 2.19.4
    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 /home/wazuh-user
    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
    

Wazuh dashboard configuration

  1. Verify that run_as is set to true in the /usr/share/wazuh-dashboard/data/wazuh/config/wazuh.yml configuration file. This is required to create a role mapping in the Wazuh dashboard, ensuring the backend role provided by the IdP is correctly mapped to the corresponding Wazuh role.

    hosts:
      - default:
          url: https://localhost
          port: 55000
          username: wazuh-wui
          password: "<WAZUH_WUI_PASSWORD>"
          run_as: true
    
    1. Click to open the menu on the Wazuh dashboard, go to Server management > Security, and then Roles mapping to open the page.

      Wazuh role mapping
    2. 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 name of the Jumpcloud user group. In our case, this is wazuh-admins.

      • Click Save role mapping to save and map the backend role with Wazuh as administrator.

      Create Wazuh role mapping
  2. Edit the Wazuh 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.multiple_auth_enabled: true
    opensearch_security.auth.type: ["basicauth","saml"]
    server.xsrf.allowlist: ["/_opendistro/_security/saml/acs", "/_opendistro/_security/saml/logout", "/_opendistro/_security/saml/acs/idpinitiated"]
    
  3. Restart the Wazuh dashboard service.

    # systemctl restart wazuh-dashboard
    
  4. To test the configuration, go to your Wazuh dashboard URL and log in with your Jumpcloud account.

Setup Jumpcloud single sign-on with read-only role

Follow these steps to integrate Jumpcloud IdP with Wazuh for single sign-on and grant read-only role to the authenticated Jumpcloud users on the Wazuh platform:

  1. Jumpcloud Configuration

  2. Wazuh indexer configuration

  3. Wazuh dashboard configuration

Jumpcloud Configuration

  1. Create an account in Jumpcloud. Request a free trial if you don't have a paid license.

  2. Create a new user. This step can be skipped if you are just testing, you can use your Jumpcloud admin user for example.

    1. Go to User Management, click on Users > + Users > Manual User Creation. Fill in the user information, activate the user and click on Save user.

  3. Create a new group and assign the user.

    1. Go to User Management > User Groups > (+) and give a name to the group. In our case, this is wazuh-readonly.

      The group name will be used as the backend_roles for Wazuh role mapping.

    2. In the selected User Groups, go to the Users tab, select the newly created user and click Save group.

  4. Create a new app. Configure the SAML settings while you create the app.

    1. Under Access, go to SSO Applications > Get Started and select Custom Application.

    2. Complete the Create New Application Integration page with the appropriate information.

      1. Click Next on the Select Application page.

      2. Check the Manage Single Sign-On (SSO) and Configure SSO with SAML options on the Select Options page. Click Next to proceed to the next step.

      3. Assign a Display Label to the application, and click the Show this application in User Portal checkbox on the Enter General Info page. Click Save Application to apply the settings.

      4. Click Configure Application on the Review page.

      Custom application selected
      Configure SSO options
      Enter general info
      Confirm new application integration
    3. Complete the SSO tab with the appropriate information.

      • IdP Entity ID: wazuh (this will be the idp.entity_id in our Wazuh indexer configuration).

      • SP Entity ID: wazuh-saml (this will be the sp.entity_id in our Wazuh indexer configuration).

      • ACS URL: https://<WAZUH_DASHBOARD_URL>/_opendistro/_security/saml/acs

      • Check Assertion under Sign.

      • Check Declare Redirect Endpoint.

      • Check include group attribute and add Roles as the attribute. This will be used later in the config.yml configuration file.

      • Leave the rest of the options as their default values and click Save.

    4. On the User Groups tab, select the Group created previously and click Save.

  5. Note the necessary parameters from the SAML settings of the new app.

    The parameters already obtained during the integration are:

    • idp.entity_id: wazuh

    • sp.entity_id: wazuh-saml

    • roles_key: Roles

    • backend_roles: wazuh-readonly

    • kibana_url: https://<WAZUH_DASHBOARD_URL>

    To obtain the remaining parameter, open the recently created application, go to the SSO tab and copy the Metadata URL.

Wazuh indexer configuration

Edit the Wazuh indexer security configuration files. We recommend that you back up these files before you carry out the configuration.

  1. Generate a 64-character long random key using the following command.

    openssl rand -hex 32
    

    The output will be used as the exchange_key in the /etc/wazuh-indexer/opensearch-security/config.yml file.

  2. Edit the /etc/wazuh-indexer/opensearch-security/config.yml file and change the following values:

    • Set the order in basic_internal_auth_domain to 0 and the challenge flag to false.

    • Include a saml_auth_domain configuration under the authc 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: true
            order: 1
            http_authenticator:
              type: saml
              challenge: true
              config:
                idp:
                  metadata_url: 'https://sso.jumpcloud.com/saml2/metadata/.....'
                  entity_id: wazuh
                sp:
                  entity_id: wazuh-saml
                  forceAuthn: true
                kibana_url: https://<WAZUH_DASHBOARD_URL>
                roles_key: Roles
                exchange_key: 'b1d6dd32753374557dcf92e241.......'
            authentication_backend:
              type: noop
    

    Ensure to change the following parameters to their corresponding value:

    • idp.metadata_file

    • idp.entity_id

    • sp.entity_id

    • kibana_url

    • roles_key

    • exchange_key

  3. Run the securityadmin script to load the configuration changes made in the config.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 Wazuh indexer node. Note that this command uses localhost, set your Wazuh 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: 2.19.4
    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 /home/wazuh-user
    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
    

Wazuh dashboard configuration

  1. Create a new role mapping for the backend role. Follow these steps to create a new role mapping, and grant read-only permissions to the backend role.

    1. Log into the Wazuh dashboard as administrator.

    2. Click the upper-left menu icon to open the options, go to Indexer management > Security, and then Roles to open the roles page.

    3. Click Create role, complete the empty fields with the following parameters, and then click Create to complete the task.

      • Name: Assign a name to the role.

      • Cluster permissions: cluster_composite_ops_ro

      • Index: *

      • Index permissions: read

      • Tenant permissions: global_tenant and select the Read only option.

    4. Select the newly created role.

    5. Select the Mapped users tab and click Manage mapping.

    6. Under Backend roles, add the name of the group you created in JumpCloud and click Map to confirm the action. In our case, the backend role is wazuh-readonly.

  2. Verify that run_as is set to true in the /usr/share/wazuh-dashboard/data/wazuh/config/wazuh.yml configuration file. This is required to create a role mapping in the Wazuh dashboard, ensuring the backend role provided by the IdP is correctly mapped to the corresponding Wazuh role.

    hosts:
      - default:
          url: https://localhost
          port: 55000
          username: wazuh-wui
          password: "<WAZUH_WUI_PASSWORD>"
          run_as: true
    
  3. Click to open the menu on the Wazuh dashboard, go to Server management > Security, and then Roles mapping to open the page.

    Wazuh role mapping
    1. 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 readonly.

      • Custom rules: Click Add new rule to expand this field.

      • User field: backend_roles

      • Search operation: FIND

      • Value: Assign the name of the group you created in JumpCloud. In our case, the backend role is wazuh-readonly.

      • Click Save role mapping to save and map the backend role with Wazuh as read-only.

      Create Wazuh role mapping
  4. Edit the Wazuh 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.multiple_auth_enabled: true
    opensearch_security.auth.type: ["basicauth","saml"]
    server.xsrf.allowlist: ["/_opendistro/_security/saml/acs", "/_opendistro/_security/saml/logout", "/_opendistro/_security/saml/acs/idpinitiated"]
    
  5. Restart the Wazuh dashboard service using this command.

    # systemctl restart wazuh-dashboard
    
  6. Test the configuration. To test the configuration, go to your Wazuh dashboard URL and log in with your Jumpcloud account.