VerneMQ comes with a simple file-based password authentication mechanism which is enabled by default. If you don't need this it can be disabled by setting:
Per default VerneMQ doesn't accept any client that hasn't been configured using vmq-passwd
. If you want to change this and accept any client connection you can set:
Warning: Setting allow_anonymous=on
completely disables authentication in the broker and plugin authentication hooks are never called! See more information about the authentication hooks here.
In a production setup we recommend to use the provided password based authentication mechanism or implement your own authentication plugins.
VerneMQ periodically checks the specified password file.
The check interval defaults to 10 seconds and can also be defined in the vernemq.conf
.
Setting the password_reload_interval = 0
disables automatic reloading.
Both configuration parameters can also be changed at runtime using the vmq-admin
script.
vmq-passwd
is a tool for managing password files for the VerneMQ broker. Usernames must not contain ":"
, passwords are stored in similar format to crypt(3).
How to use vmq-passwd
Options
-c
Creates a new password file. If the file already exists, it will be overwritten.
-D
Deletes the specified user from the password file.
-U
This option can be used to upgrade/convert a password file with plain text passwords into one using hashed passwords. It will modify the specified file. It does not detect whether passwords are already hashed, so using it on a password file that already contains hashed passwords will generate new hashes based on the old hashes and render the password file unusable. Note, with this option neither usernames or passwords may contain
":"
.
passwordfile
The password file to modify.
username
The username to add/update/delete.
Examples
Add a user to a new password file: (you can choose an arbitrary name for the password file, it only has to match the configuration in the VerneMQ configuration file).
Delete a user from a password file
Acknowledgements
The original version of vmq-passwd
was developed by Roger Light (roger@atchoo.org).
vmq-passwd
includes :
software developed by the [OpenSSL
Project](http://www.openssl.org/) for use in the OpenSSL Toolkit.
cryptographic software written by Eric Young
(eay@cryptsoft.com)
software written by Tim Hudson (tjh@cryptsoft.com)
VerneMQ comes with a simple ACL based authorization mechanism which is enabled by default. If you don't need this it can be disabled by setting:
VerneMQ periodically checks the specified ACL file.
The check interval defaults to 10 seconds and can also be defined in the vernemq.conf
.
Setting the acl_reload_interval = 0
disables automatic reloading.
Both configuration parameters can also be changed at runtime using the vmq-admin
script.
Topic access is added with lines of the format:
Only one space should be put between the topic and the preceeding keyword. Extra spaces will be interpreted as part of the topic! Also note that the ACL parser doesn't accept empty lines between entries.
The access type is controlled using read
or write
. If not provided then read and write access is granted for the topic
. The topic
can use the MQTT subscription wildcards +
or #
.
The first set of topics are applied to all anonymous clients (assuming allow_anonymous = on
). User specific ACLs are added after a user line as follows (this is the username not the client id):
It is also possible to define ACLs based on pattern substitution within the topic. The form is the same as for the topic keyword, but using pattern as the keyword.
The patterns available for substitution are:
%c
to match the client id of the client
%u
to match the username of the client
The substitution pattern must be the only text for that level of hierarchy. Pattern ACLs apply to all users even if the user keyword has previously been given.
Example:
VerneMQ currently doesn't cancel active subscriptions in case the ACL file revokes access for a topic.
Anonymous users are allowed to
publish & subscribe to topic bar.
publish to topic foo.
subscribe to topic open_to_all.
User john is allowed to
publish & subscribe to topic foo.
subscribe to topic baz.
publish to topic open_to_all.