I have a lot of different services which I self host for me and my family like:
- PeerTube
- Lemmy
- Mastodon
- Synology NAS
- TTRSS
- NextCloud
- Matrix
- HomeAssistant
- etc.
Right now every family member needs to create a user on each of those services and have a different password on them, which is OK when you use a Password Manager, but most of my extended family members don’t. And they often forget their password and stop using the service because they can’t figure out how to reset the password with each and every service.
I would like to try to consolidate all of it with a Single Sign-On (SSO) solution but It’s not obvious to me if there is one which is not overly over engineered for hundreds of thousands of users but small and lightweight, perhaps even easy to set up.
I tried OpenLDAP but Jesus that was very involved.


OpenLDAP is easy :) Once you understand LDAP concepts.
Check this and read through the
tasks/directory (particularlyopenldap.ymlandpopulate.yml. It sets up everything needed for an LDAP authentication service (if you don’t use ansible you can still read what the tasks do and you should get a pretty good understanding of what’s needed, if not let me know).In short you need:
slapd(the OpenLDAP server)system,usersandgroups)admindirectly at the base of the LDAP directory)binduser in the LDAP directory (unvprivileged account that can only list/read users/groups) (mine isbindunder thesystemOU)access_jellyfinare allowed to login to jellyfin)When you login to an application/service configured to use the LDAP authentication backend, it connects to the LDAP directory using the
binduser credentials, and checks that the user exists (depending on how you configured the application either by name, uid, email…) , that the password you provided matches the hash stored in the LDAP directory, optionally that the user is part of the required groups. Then it allows or denies access.There’s not much else to it:
bindaccount but I wouldn’t recommend it (either configure your applications to use theadminuser in which case they have admin access to the LDAP directory… not good. Or allow anonymous read-only access to the LDAP directory - also not ideal).slapdstores its configuration (admin user/password, log level…) inside the LDAP directory itself as attributes of a special entity (cn=config), so to access or modify it you have to use LDIF files and theldapadd/ldapmodifycommands, or use a convenient wrapper like the ansible modules tools used above.jane.doein OUusersin the directory for domainexample.orghas the Distinguished Name (DC)cn=jane.doe,ou=users,dc=example,dc=org. Think of it like/path/to/file.inetOrgPersons, groups areposixGroups…) and attributes (uid,cn,email,phonenumber…). Usually applications that support LDAP come with predefined filters to look for users in specific groups, etc.