When four-eyes authorization is required for a connection, a user (called authorizer) must authorize the connection on One Identity Safeguard for Privileged Sessions (SPS) as well. This authorization is in addition to any authentication or group membership requirements needed for the user to access the remote server. For details about the concepts of four-eyes authorization, see Four-eyes authorization.
Configuring four-eyes authorization
Performing four-eyes authorization on One Identity Safeguard for Privileged Sessions (SPS)
The following describes how to configure four-eyes authorization.
To require four-eyes authorization for a connection
Navigate to the Connections page of the traffic (for example to SSH Control > Connections), and select the connection policy to modify.
Figure 310: <Protocol name> Control > Connections > Access Control — Configuring four-eyes authorization
Navigate to Access Control and click .
Enter the name of the usergroup whose members are permitted to authorize the sessions of the connection policy into the Authorizer Group field. This group must exist on the Users & Access Control > Local User Groups page. For details on creating and managing usergroups, see Managing user rights and usergroups.
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Caution:
Usernames, the names of user lists, and the names of usergroups are case sensitive. |
By default, the authorizer can authorize any session of the connection policy.
If the authorizer is permitted to authorize only the sessions of a certain usergroup, select Client user is > Member of, and enter the name of the userlist whose sessions the authorizer can authorize. If you use four-eyes authorization without gateway authentication, you can specify an LDAP group instead of a userlist.
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Caution:
Usernames, the names of user lists, and the names of usergroups are case sensitive. |
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Caution:
When using both gateway authentication and four-eyes authorization in a Connection Policy, specify the usergroup of the gateway username. The specified group must be a local or LDAP group. |
Set the permissions of the usergroup set in the Authorizer Group field.
If the Authorizer group can authorize (that is, enable) and audit (that is, monitor in real-time and download the audit trails) the sessions, select Permission > Follow&Authorize.
If the Authorizer group can only authorize (that is, enable) the sessions, select Permission > Authorize.
NOTE: This option is not valid for HTTP connections.
If the Authorizer group can only audit (that is, monitor in real-time and download the audit trails) the sessions, select Permission > Follow.
NOTE: If the Client user is > Member of field is set, the auditor can only monitor the sessions of the specified usergroup. However, if Client user is > Member of field is set, the Auditor cannot access the Search page. To avoid this problem, add another Access Control rule for the Authorizer Group without setting the Client user isfield.
The admin user of One Identity Safeguard for Privileged Sessions (SPS) can audit and authorize every connection.
To ensure that the client and the authorizer use different IP addresses and thus prevent self-authorization, enable Require different IP. If this is enabled, and the client and the authorizer do not have different IP addresses, it disables all actions for the connection and the four-eyes authorization, until they have different IP addresses.
To ensure that the client and the authorizer use different usernames and thus prevent self-authorization, enable Require different Username. If this is enabled, and the client and the authorizer do not have different usernames, it disables all actions for the connection and the four-eyes authorization, until they have different usernames.
Repeat steps 2-6 to add other authorizers or usergroups if needed.
Click .
Navigate to the Channel Policies page of the traffic (for example, to SSH Control > Channel Policies), and select the channel policy used in the connection.
Figure 311: <Protocol name> Control > Channel Policies — Configuring four-eyes authorization in the channel policy
Enable the Four-eyes option for the channels which should be accessed only using four-eyes authorization.
NOTE: If a connection uses secondary channels that require four-eyes authorization — for example, a Remote Desktop connection allows a Drawing channel but requires four-eyes authorization for a Disk redirection channel — the connection is locked until the authorizer accepts the channel on the Four-Eyes page of SPS, or the four-eyes request times out. During this time, the client application can become nonresponsive, for example, display the graphical desktop but not react to mouse clicks.
Click . After that, users accessing connections using the modified channel policy must be authorized as described in Performing four-eyes authorization on One Identity Safeguard for Privileged Sessions (SPS).
(Optional) If you want to provide a limited SPS web interface to your users that can be used only for gateway authentication and 4-eyes authorization, set up a dedicated user-only web login address. For details, see Configuring user and administrator login addresses.
The following describes how to perform four-eyes authorization on One Identity Safeguard for Privileged Sessions (SPS).
To perform four-eyes authorization on SPS
When a user initiates a connection from a client and four-eyes authorization is required for the connection, SPS will pause the connection.
NOTE: Four-eyes authorization can be set separately for every channel. However, if a client of an existing connection opens a new channel that requires four-eyes authorization, every channel is paused until the authorization is completed.
Login to SPS, and select Four-Eyes from the main menu. The list of connections waiting for authorization will be displayed.
Figure 312: Four-Eyes — Performing four-eyes authorization
NOTE: Only those connections will be listed, where your usergroup has the Authorize or the Follow&Authorize permissions. No other SPS privilege is required to access this page.
Select the connection and click Accept to enable the connection, Reject to deny the connection, or Accept&Follow to enable it and monitor in real-time.
NOTE: Following a session requires the following:
The Record audit trail option must be enabled for the specific channel in the Channel policy of the connection.
The Audit Player application must be installed on the computer of the auditor.
If the Audit policy of the connection uses encryption, the appropriate decryption keys must be available on the computer of the auditor.
The Safeguard Desktop Player application replays the live streams in live mode. For details on how to monitor a connection in real-time using the Safeguard Desktop Player, see "Replay audit files in follow mode" in the Safeguard Desktop Player User Guide.
Enter a note why the connection was accepted/rejected into the appearing dialog box. This description will be stored in the connection database together with other metadata about the connection.
Figure 313: Describing why a connection was accepted/rejected
If you have to terminate an ongoing connection for some reason, select Active Connections from the main menu. The list of ongoing connections will be displayed.
Figure 314: Active Connections — Displaying active connections
Select the connection to stop, and click Terminate.
NOTE: When following a connection in the Safeguard Desktop Player application, the auditor can also terminate the connection from the Audit Player by clicking Terminate.
Figure 315: Terminating a connection in Safeguard Desktop Player
Credential Stores offer a way to store user credentials (for example, passwords, private keys, certificates) and use them to log in to the target server, without the user having access to the credentials. That way, the users only have to perform gateway authentication on One Identity Safeguard for Privileged Sessions (SPS) with their usual password (or to an LDAP database), and if the user is allowed to access the target server, SPS automatically logs in using the Credential Store. For details on gateway authentication, see Configuring gateway authentication.
NOTE: Keyboard-interactive authentication is not supported when using credential stores.
Figure 316: Authenticating using Credential Stores
Credential Stores can be stored locally on SPS, or on a remote device. For remote Credential Stores, SPS integrates with external authentication and authorization systems using plugins.
To configure a local Credential Store, see Configuring local Credential Stores.
To configure a local, password-protected Credential Store, see Configuring password-protected Credential Stores.
To unlock a local, password-protected Credential Store, see Unlocking Credential Stores.
To configure a custom Credential Store plugin, see Using a custom Credential Store plugin to authenticate on the target hosts.
NOTE: After performing a successful gateway authentication, if the credential store does not contain a password for the user, the user is prompted for the server-side password as a fallback.
In case of authenticating to RDP servers using Network Level Authentication (NLA), the server-side password is prompted at the start of the connection. If there is no password in the credential store for the user and the server-side password is incorrect, the connection is terminated.
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