Provide authentication using MySQL.
When using MySQL as an authentication backend, you will need to create or use an existing table that has a username and a password column.
To get started, create a simple table that holds just a username and a password. The password field will hold a SHA256 checksum.
CREATE TABLE `users` (
`id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`username` varchar(25) DEFAULT NULL,
`password` varchar(70) DEFAULT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`id`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB AUTO_INCREMENT=2 DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
To create a user within MySQL, execute the following statement.
INSERT INTO users VALUES (NULL, 'diana', SHA2('secret', 256))
mysql_auth:
hostname: localhost
database: SaltStack
username: root
password: letmein
auth_sql: 'SELECT username FROM users WHERE username = "{0}" AND password = SHA2("{1}", 256)'
The auth_sql contains the SQL that will validate a user to ensure they are correctly authenticated. This is where you can specify other SQL queries to authenticate users.
Enable MySQL authentication.
external_auth:
mysql:
damian:
- test.*
MySQL-python Python module
salt.auth.mysql.
auth
(username, password)¶Authenticate using a MySQL user table