docs: add auth system replacement plan
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Evaluate options for replacing LLDAP+Authelia with a unified auth solution.
Recommends Kanidm for its native NixOS PAM/NSS integration and built-in OIDC.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
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# Authentication System Replacement Plan
## Overview
Replace the current auth01 setup (LLDAP + Authelia) with a modern, unified authentication solution. The current setup is not in active use, making this a good time to evaluate alternatives.
## Goals
1. **Central user database** - Manage users across all homelab hosts from a single source
2. **Linux PAM/NSS integration** - Users can SSH into hosts using central credentials
3. **UID/GID consistency** - Proper POSIX attributes for NAS share permissions
4. **OIDC provider** - Single sign-on for homelab web services (Grafana, etc.)
## Options Evaluated
### OpenLDAP (raw)
- **NixOS Support:** Good (`services.openldap` with `declarativeContents`)
- **Pros:** Most widely supported, very flexible
- **Cons:** LDIF format is painful, schema management is complex, no built-in OIDC, requires SSSD on each client
- **Verdict:** Doesn't address LDAP complexity concerns
### LLDAP + Authelia (current)
- **NixOS Support:** Both have good modules
- **Pros:** Already configured, lightweight, nice web UIs
- **Cons:** Two services to manage, limited POSIX attribute support in LLDAP, requires SSSD on every client host
- **Verdict:** Workable but has friction for NAS/UID goals
### FreeIPA
- **NixOS Support:** None
- **Pros:** Full enterprise solution (LDAP + Kerberos + DNS + CA)
- **Cons:** Extremely heavy, wants to own DNS, designed for Red Hat ecosystems, massive overkill for homelab
- **Verdict:** Overkill, no NixOS support
### Keycloak
- **NixOS Support:** None
- **Pros:** Good OIDC/SAML, nice UI
- **Cons:** Primarily an identity broker not a user directory, poor POSIX support, heavy (Java)
- **Verdict:** Wrong tool for Linux user management
### Authentik
- **NixOS Support:** None (would need Docker)
- **Pros:** All-in-one with LDAP outpost and OIDC, modern UI
- **Cons:** Heavy stack (Python + PostgreSQL + Redis), LDAP is a separate component
- **Verdict:** Would work but requires Docker and is heavy
### Kanidm
- **NixOS Support:** Excellent - first-class module with PAM/NSS integration
- **Pros:**
- Native PAM/NSS module (no SSSD needed)
- Built-in OIDC provider
- Optional LDAP interface for legacy services
- Declarative provisioning via NixOS (users, groups, OAuth2 clients)
- Modern, written in Rust
- Single service handles everything
- **Cons:** Newer project, smaller community than LDAP
- **Verdict:** Best fit for requirements
### Pocket-ID
- **NixOS Support:** Unknown
- **Pros:** Very lightweight, passkey-first
- **Cons:** No LDAP, no PAM/NSS integration - purely OIDC for web apps
- **Verdict:** Doesn't solve Linux user management goal
## Recommendation: Kanidm
Kanidm is the recommended solution for the following reasons:
| Requirement | Kanidm Support |
|-------------|----------------|
| Central user database | Native |
| Linux PAM/NSS (host login) | Native NixOS module |
| UID/GID for NAS | POSIX attributes supported |
| OIDC for services | Built-in |
| Declarative config | Excellent NixOS provisioning |
| Simplicity | Modern API, LDAP optional |
| NixOS integration | First-class |
### Key NixOS Features
**Server configuration:**
```nix
services.kanidm.enableServer = true;
services.kanidm.serverSettings = {
domain = "home.2rjus.net";
origin = "https://auth.home.2rjus.net";
ldapbindaddress = "0.0.0.0:636"; # Optional LDAP interface
};
```
**Declarative user provisioning:**
```nix
services.kanidm.provision.enable = true;
services.kanidm.provision.persons.torjus = {
displayName = "Torjus";
groups = [ "admins" "nas-users" ];
};
```
**Declarative OAuth2 clients:**
```nix
services.kanidm.provision.systems.oauth2.grafana = {
displayName = "Grafana";
originUrl = "https://grafana.home.2rjus.net/login/generic_oauth";
originLanding = "https://grafana.home.2rjus.net";
};
```
**Client host configuration (add to system/):**
```nix
services.kanidm.enableClient = true;
services.kanidm.enablePam = true;
services.kanidm.clientSettings.uri = "https://auth.home.2rjus.net";
```
## Implementation Steps
1. **Create Kanidm service module** in `services/kanidm/`
- Server configuration
- TLS via internal ACME
- Vault secrets for admin passwords
2. **Configure declarative provisioning**
- Define initial users and groups
- Set up POSIX attributes (UID/GID ranges)
3. **Add OIDC clients** for homelab services
- Grafana
- Other services as needed
4. **Create client module** in `system/` for PAM/NSS
- Enable on all hosts that need central auth
- Configure trusted CA
5. **Test NAS integration**
- Verify UID/GID mapping works with NFS/SMB shares
6. **Migrate auth01**
- Remove LLDAP and Authelia services
- Deploy Kanidm
- Update DNS CNAMEs if needed
7. **Documentation**
- User management procedures
- Adding new OAuth2 clients
- Troubleshooting PAM/NSS issues
## Open Questions
- What UID/GID range should be reserved for Kanidm-managed users?
- Which hosts should have PAM/NSS enabled initially?
- What OAuth2 clients are needed at launch?
- Should LDAP interface be enabled for any legacy services?
## References
- [Kanidm Documentation](https://kanidm.github.io/kanidm/stable/)
- [NixOS Kanidm Module](https://search.nixos.org/options?query=services.kanidm)
- [Kanidm PAM/NSS Integration](https://kanidm.github.io/kanidm/stable/pam_and_nsswitch.html)