StoreFront Load Balancing – NetScaler 10.5

Last Modified: Nov 6, 2020 @ 6:57 am

Navigation

Monitor

Note: This is a Perl monitor, which uses the NSIP as the source IP.

  1. On the left, expand Traffic Management, expand Load Balancing, and click Monitors.
  2. On the right, click Add.
  3. Name it StoreFront or similar.
  4. Change the Type drop-down to STOREFRONT.
  5. If you will use SSL to communicate with the StoreFront servers, then scroll down, and check the box next to Secure.
  6. Scroll up, and switch to the Special Parameters tab.
  7. In the Store Name field, enter the name of your store (e.g. Store).
  8. The other two checkboxes are not working with StoreFront 2.6. Click Create.

    add lb monitor StoreFront STOREFRONT -scriptName nssf.pl -dispatcherIP 127.0.0.1 -dispatcherPort 3013 -secure YES -storename Store

Servers

  1. On the left, expand Traffic Management, expand Load Balancing, and click Servers.
  2. On the right, click Add.
  3. Enter a descriptive server name, usually it matches the actual server name.
  4. Enter the IP address of the server.
  5. Enter comments to describe the server. Click Create.
  6. Continue adding StoreFront servers.

    add server SF01 10.2.2.57
    add server SF02 10.2.2.58

Service Group

  1. On the left, expand Traffic Management, expand Load Balancing, and click Service Groups.

  2. On the right, click Add.
  3. Give the Service Group a descriptive name (e.g. svcgrp-StoreFront-SSL).
  4. Change the Protocol to HTTP or SSL. If the protocol is SSL, ensure that StoreFront Monitor has Secure checked.
  5. Scroll down and click OK.
  6. On the right, under Advanced, click Members.
  7. Click where it says No Service Group Member.
  8. If you did not create server objects, then enter the IP address of a StoreFront Server. If you previously created a server object then change the selection to Server Based and select the server objects.
  9. Enter 80 or 443 as the port. Then click Create.

  10. To add more members, click where it says 1 Service Group Member and then click Add. Click Close when done.

  11. On the right, under Advanced, click Monitors.
  12. Click where it says No Service Group to Monitor Binding.
  13. Click the arrow next to Click to select.
  14. Select your StoreFront monitor, and click OK.
  15. Then click Bind.
  16. To verify that the monitor is working, on the left, in the Service Group Members section, click the Service Group Members line.
  17. Highlight a member, and click Monitor Details.
  18. The Last Reponse should be Success – Probe succeeded. Click Close twice.
  19. On the right, under Advanced, click Settings.
  20. Check the box for Client IP and enter X-Forwarded-For as the Header. Then click OK.
  21. Then click Done.

    add serviceGroup svcgrp-StoreFront-SSL SSL -maxClient 0 -maxReq 0 -cip ENABLED X-Forwarded-For
    
    bind serviceGroup svcgrp-StoreFront-SSL SF01 443
    bind serviceGroup svcgrp-StoreFront-SSL SF02 443
    bind serviceGroup svcgrp-StoreFront-SSL -monitorName StoreFront
  22. If the Service Group is http and you don’t have certificates installed on your StoreFront servers (aka SSL Offload), then you’ll need to enable loopback in StoreFront:
    1. In StoreFront 3.5, you enable it in the GUI console.
    2. In StoreFront 3.0, run the following commands on the StoreFront 3.0 servers as detailed at Citrix Blog Post What’s New in StoreFront 3.0.
      & "C:\Program Files\Citrix\Receiver StoreFront\Scripts\ImportModules.ps1"
      
      Set-DSLoopback -SiteId 1 -VirtualPath /Citrix/StoreWeb -Loopback OnUsingHttp

Load Balancing Virtual Server

  1. Create or install a certificate that will be used by the SSL Offload Virtual Server. This certificate must match the DNS name for the load balanced StoreFront servers. For email discovery in Citrix Receiver, the certificate must either be a wildcard (*.corp.local) or have a subject alternative name for discoverReceiver.domain.com (domain.com = email address suffix)
  2. On the left, under Traffic Management > Load Balancing, click Virtual Servers.

  3. On the right click Add.
  4. Name it lbvip-StoreFront-SSL or similar.
  5. Change the Protocol to SSL.
  6. Specify a new internal VIP.
  7. Enter 443 as the Port.
  8. Click OK.

    add lb vserver lbvip-StoreFront-SSL SSL 10.2.2.221 443 -persistenceType SOURCEIP -timeout 60
  9. On the left, in the Services and Service Groups section, click where it says No Load Balancing Virtual Server ServiceGroup Binding.
  10. Click the arrow next to Click to select.
  11. Select your StoreFront Service Group, and click OK.
  12. Click Bind.

    bind lb vserver lbvip-StoreFront-SSL svcgrp-StoreFront-SSL
  13. Click OK.
  14. Click where it says No Server Certificate.
  15. Click the arrow next to Click to select.
  16. Select the certificate for this StoreFront Load Balancing Virtual Server, and click OK.
  17. Click Bind.

    bind ssl vserver lbvip-StoreFront-SSL -certkeyName WildCorpCom
  18. On the right, in the Advanced column, click Persistence.
  19. On the left, in the Persistence section, select SOURCEIP.  Do NOT use COOKIEINSERT persistence or Android devices will not function correctly.
  20. Set the timeout to match the timeout of Receiver for Web.
  21. The IPv4 Netmask should default to 32 bits.
  22. Click OK.
  23. On the right, in the Advanced column, click SSL Parameters.
  24. If the NetScaler communicates with the StoreFront servers using HTTP (aka SSL Offload), at the top right, check the box next to SSL Redirect. Otherwise the Receiver for Web page will never display.
  25. Uncheck the box next to SSLv3.
    set ssl vserver lbvip-StoreFront-SSL -sslRedirect ENABLED -ssl3 DISABLED
  26. NetScaler VPX 10.5 build 57 and newer lets you enable TLSv11 and TLSv12. Click OK.
  27. Perform other normal SSL vServer configuration including: disable SSLv3, bind a Modern Cipher Group, and enable Strict Transport Security.
    bind ssl vserver lbvip-StoreFront-SSL -certkeyName MyCert
    
    set ssl vserver lbvip-StoreFront-SSL -ssl3 DISABLED -tls11 ENABLED -tls12 ENABLED
    
    unbind ssl vserver lbvip-StoreFront-SSL -cipherName ALL
    
    bind ssl vserver lbvip-StoreFront-SSL -cipherName Modern
    
    bind ssl vserver lbvip-StoreFront-SSL -eccCurveName ALL
    
    bind lb vserver lbvip-StoreFront-SSL -policyName insert_STS_header -priority 100 -gotoPriorityExpression END -type RESPONSE
  28. Then click Done.

SSL Redirect – Down vServer Method

If you created an SSL Offload Virtual Server that only listens on SSL 443, users must enter https:// when navigating to the website. To make it easier for the users, create another load balancing Virtual Server on the same VIP that listens on HTTP 80 and then redirects the user’s browser to reconnect on SSL 443.

This procedure details the Down vServer method of performing an SSL redirect. An alternative is to use the Responder method.

  1. On the left, under Traffic Management > Load Balancing, click Virtual Servers.

  2. On the right, find the SSL Virtual Server you’ve already created, right-click it, and click Add. Doing it this way copies some of the data from the already created Virtual Server.
  3. Change the name to indicate that this new Virtual Server is an SSL Redirect.
  4. Change the Protocol to HTTP on Port 80.
  5. The IP Address should already be filled in. It must match the original SSL Virtual Server.
  6. Click OK.
  7. Don’t select any services. This vServer must intentionally be marked down so the redirect will take effect. Click Continue.
  8. On the right, in the Advanced column, click Protection.
  9. In the Redirect URL field, enter the full URL including https://. For example: https://storefront.company.com/Citrix/StoreWeb. Click OK.
  10. Click Done.

    add lb vserver lbvip-storefront-HTTP-SSLRedirect HTTP 10.2.2.201 80 -redirectURL "https://storefront.corp.com"
  11. When you view the SSL redirect Virtual Server in the list, it will have a state of DOWN. That’s OK. The Port 80 Virtual Server must be DOWN for the redirect to work.

StoreFront Base URL

  1. Create a DNS Host record that resolves to the new VIP.
  2. The DNS name for StoreFront load balancing must be different than the DNS name for NetScaler Gateway. Unless you are following the Single FQDN procedure.

  3. In the Citrix StoreFront console, right-click Server Group and click Change Base URL.
  4. Enter the new Base URL in https://storefront.corp.com format. This must match the certificate that is installed on the load balancer. Click OK.

Subscription Replication Load Balancing

If you have multiple StoreFront clusters (separate datacenters), you might want to replicate subscriptions between them. StoreFront subscription replication uses TCP port 808. To provide High Availability for this service, load balance TCP port 808 on the StoreFront servers. See Configure subscription synchronization at Citrix Docs for more information.

  1. On the left, expand Traffic Management, expand Load Balancing, and click Service Groups.

  2. On the right, click Add.
  3. Give the Service Group a descriptive name (e.g. svcgrp-StoreFront-SubRepl).
  4. Change the Protocol to TCP.
  5. Scroll down and click OK.
  6. On the right, under Advanced, click Members.
  7. Click where it says No Service Group Member.
  8. In the IP Address field, enter the IP address of a back-end StoreFront server.
  9. Enter 808 as the port. Then click Create.

  10. To add more members,  on the left, in the Service Group Members section, click where it says 1 Service Group Member.
  11. Click Add to add a member. Click Close when done.
  12. On the right, under Advanced, click Monitors.
  13. Click where it says No Service Group to Monitor Binding.
  14. Click the arrow next to Click to select.
  15. Select the tcp monitor, and click OK.
  16. Then click Bind, and click Done.

    add serviceGroup svcgrp-StoreFront-FavRepl TCP
    bind serviceGroup svcgrp-StoreFront-FavRepl SF01 808
    bind serviceGroup svcgrp-StoreFront-FavRepl SF02 808
  17. On the left, under Traffic Management > Load Balancing, click Virtual Servers.

  18. On the right click Add.
  19. Name it lbvip-StoreFront-SubRepl or similar.
  20. Change the Protocol to TCP.
  21. Specify the same VIP that you used for SSL Load Balancing of StoreFront.
  22. Enter 808 as the Port.
  23. Click Continue.
  24. Click where it says No Load Balancing Virtual Server ServiceGroup Binding.
  25. Click the arrow next to Click to select.
  26. Select your StoreFront Subscription Replication Service Group, and click OK.
  27. Click Bind.
  28. Click OK.
  29. On the right, in the Advanced column, click Persistence.
  30. Select SOURCEIP persistence.
  31. Set the timeout to 5 minutes.
  32. The IPv4 Netmask should default to 32 bits.
  33. Click OK.
  34. Then click Done.

    add lb vserver lbvip-StoreFront-FavRepl TCP 10.2.2.201 808 -persistenceType SOURCEIP -timeout 5
    
    bind lb vserver lbvip-StoreFront-FavRepl svcgrp-SF-FavRepl

Related Posts

Domain Controller (LDAPS) Load Balancing – NetScaler 10.5

Last Modified: Nov 7, 2020 @ 6:34 am

Navigation

Overview

If you plan to use LDAP (Active Directory) for NetScaler Gateway or NetScaler management authentication, load balance the Domain Controllers that are used for authentication.

An alternative to load balancing is to configure NetScaler Gateway and NetScaler management authentication with multiple authentication policies, each pointing to a single Domain Controller. However, NetScaler will try each authentication policy until it finds one that works. If the user enters a wrong password and if you have three authentication policies pointing to different Domain Controllers in the same domain then three different failure attempts will be recorded thus causing premature account lockout. Use Load Balancing to avoid this behavior.

This page details LDAPS, aka Secure LDAP. This protocol requires certificates to be installed on the Domain Controllers. When a user’s password expires, Active Directory does not allow password changes over clear text LDAP so LDAPS must be used instead. Make sure you have certificates installed on your Domain Controllers. The easiest way to accomplish that is to deploy a Microsoft Certificate Authority. Once that’s done the Domain Controllers will request certificates automatically.

An ldaps monitor can be used to verify that the Domain Controller is functional. The ldaps monitor will login as an account, perform an LDAP query, and look for a successful response. The ldaps monitor uses a service account to login. Make sure the service account’s password does not expire. Domain User permissions are sufficient. Since this monitor is a Perl script, it uses NSIP as the source IP.

If you have Domain Controllers in multiple datacenters, you can create multiple load balancing Virtual Servers and cascade them so that the local Domain Controllers are used first, and if they’re not available, then the Virtual Server fails over to Domain Controllers in remote datacenters.

The Load Balancing Virtual Server for LDAPS can be TCP or SSL_TCP:

  • If the protocol is TCP, then SSL-encrypted LDAP traffic is not terminated on the NetScaler, and is simply forwarded to the LDAP servers. If your LDAP client needs to verify the LDAP server certificate, then this Load Balancing configuration will not work, since each back-end LDAP server will have a different certificate.
  • If your Load Balancing Virtual Server is protocol SSL_TCP, then a certificate must be installed on the NetScaler and bound to the Load Balancing Virtual Server. SSL is terminated at the NetScaler and re-encrypted before sending it to the destination Domain Controller. The primary benefit of NetScaler SSL termination is that your LDAP clients can verify the Virtual Server SSL certificate.

When NetScaler uses a local (same appliance) load balanced Virtual Server for LDAPS authentication, the traffic is sourced from the NetScaler SNIP (Subnet IP). When NetScaler uses a direct connection to a Domain Controller without going through a local Load Balancing Virtual Server, or if NetScaler uses a remote (different appliance) Load Balancing VIP, then the traffic is sourced from the NetScaler NSIP (NetScaler IP). Adjust firewall rules accordingly.

LDAPS Monitor

LDAPS monitor instructions from Citrix article CTX117943 – Secure LDAP Monitor Does not Work. Note: Perl monitor uses NSIP as the source IP.

  1. Use WinSCP or similar to connect to the NetScaler appliance.
  2. On the right, navigate to /netscaler/monitors.
  3. Right-click nsldap.pl, and click Duplicate.
  4. Change the target remote directory to /nsconfig/monitors/nsldaps.pl, and check the box next to Duplicate via local temporary copy. Click OK. The source file is in the /netscaler/monitors directory, but it needs to be copied to the /nsconfig/monitors directory.
  5. Navigate to /nsconfig/monitors. Right-click the new nsldaps.pl file, and click Edit.
  6. Search for the following entry in the file:
    my $ldap=Net::LDAP->new($_[0].":".$_[1],Timeout=>$_[3])
  7. Replace the entry with the following entry. The only change is the addition of: scheme=>’ldaps’
    my $ldap=Net::LDAP->new($_[0].":".$_[1],scheme=>'ldaps',Timeout=>$_[3])
  8. Save the file.
  9. Right-click the nsldaps.pl file, and click Properties.
  10. Check the X box in all three rows, and click OK.
  11. Use WinSCP to download the nsldaps.pl file to your computer, and then copy it to the secondary appliance in the /nsconfig/monitors directory.
  12. In the NetScaler Configuration Utility, expand Traffic Management, expand Load Balancing, and click Monitors.
  13. On the right, click Add.
  14. Name the monitor ldaps-Corp or similar. The ldaps monitor logs into Active Directory, performs an LDAP query, and looks for a successful response. The monitor configuration has domain specific information, so if you have multiple Active Directory domains, then you will need multiple ldaps monitors. Include the domain name in the monitor name.
  15. Change the Type to LDAP.
  16. On the Special Parameters tab, use the Script Name drop-down list to select the nsldaps.pl file.
  17. In the Base DN field, enter your domain name in LDAP format (e.g. dc=company,dc=com)
  18. In the Bind DN field, enter the UPN login (e.g. ctxsvc@company.com) of a service account in the domain that can browse all objects. Any normal Domain User should be sufficient. Just make sure the password doesn’t expire.
  19. In the Filter field, enter cn=builtin. This limits the search results.
  20. In the Password field, enter the password for the service account. Make sure there is no semicolon in the password or the script will be unable to parse the parameters.
  21. Click Create.

    add lb monitor LDAP-Corp LDAP -scriptName nsldaps.pl -dispatcherIP 127.0.0.1 -dispatcherPort 3013 -password Passw0rd -secure YES -baseDN "dc=corp,dc=local" -bindDN "corp\\ctxsvc" -filter cn=builtin
  22. If you have multiple domains, then create additional monitors: one for each domain.

Servers

  1. On the left, expand Traffic Management, expand Load Balancing, and click Servers.
  2. On the right, click Add.
  3. Enter a descriptive server name, usually it matches the actual server name.
  4. Enter the IP address of the server.
  5. Enter comments to describe the server. Click Create.

    add server AD01 10.2.2.11
    add server AD01 10.2.2.12
  6. Continue adding Domain Controllers.

Service Groups

  1. On the left, expand Traffic Management, expand Load Balancing, and click Service Groups.
  2. On the right, click Add
  3. You will create one Service Group per datacenter. Enter a name reflecting the name of the data center. Also, you will create a set of service groups per Active Directory domain so include the domain name.
  4. Change the Protocol to SSL_TCP. Scroll down, and click Continue.
  5. On the right, in the Advanced column, click Members.
  6. On the left, in the Service Group Members section, click where it says No Service Group Member.
  7. If you did not create server objects then enter the IP address of a Domain Controller in this datacenter. If you previously created a server object, then change the selection to Server Based, and select the server object. In the Port field, enter 636 (LDAPS).
  8. Note: Any Domain Controller you add to this list must have an SSL certificate installed. The easiest way to install SSL certificates on the Domain Controllers is with Active Directory Certificate Services since it installs the certificates automatically.

  9. To add more members, click where it says 1 Service Group Member and then click Add. Click Close when done.

  10. On the right, in the Advanced column, click Monitors.
  11. On the left, in the Monitors section, click where it says No Service Group to Monitor Binding.
  12. Click the arrow next to Click to select.
  13. Select your new LDAPS monitor and click OK.
  14. Click Bind.
  15. To verify the member is up, click in the Service Group Members section.
  16. Highlight a member and click Monitor Details.
  17. It should say Probe successful. Click OK.
  18. If the monitor doesn’t work, use ldp.exe to verify the Domain Controller certificate.
  19. Click Done to finish creating the Service Group.

    add serviceGroup svcgrp-LDAP-Corp SSL_TCP
    bind serviceGroup svcgrp-LDAP-Corp AD01 636
    bind serviceGroup svcgrp-LDAP-Corp AD02 636
    bind serviceGroup svcgrp-LDAP-Corp -monitorName LDAP-Corp
  20. The Service Group is displayed as UP.
  21. Add additional service groups for Domain Controllers in each data center.

Virtual Server

  1. Create or import a certificate that matches the FQDN that resolves to the new Load Balancing VIP for LDAPS.
  2. On the left, expand Traffic Management, expand Load Balancing, and click Virtual Servers.
  3. On the right, click Add.

    1. Name it lbvip-LDAPS-Corp-HQ or similar. You will create one Virtual Server per datacenter so include the datacenter name. Also, each domain has a separate set of Virtual Servers so include the domain name.
  4. Change the Protocol drop-down to SSL_TCP.
  5. Enter a Virtual IP. This VIP cannot conflict with any other IP + Port already being used. You can use an existing VIP that is not already listening on TCP 636.
  6. Enter 636 as the Port. Click OK.
  7. On the left, in the Service Group section, click where it says No Load Balancing Virtual Server ServiceGroup Binding.
  8. Click the arrow next to Click to select.
  9. Select the previously created Service Group, and click OK.
  10. Click Bind.
  11. Click OK.
  12. On the right, in the Advanced column, click SSL Certificate.
  13. On the left, in the Certificates section, click where it says No Server Certificate.
  14. Click the arrow next to Click to select.
  15. Select a certificate that matches the FQDN that will resolve to this VIP. Click OK.
  16. Click Bind.
  17. Click OK.

    add lb vserver lbvip-LDAP-Corp SSL_TCP 10.2.2.210 636 -persistenceType NONE -cltTimeout 9000
    
    bind lb vserver lbvip-LDAP-Corp svcgrp-LDAP-Corp
  18. Perform other normal SSL configuration including: disable SSLv3, and bind a Modern Cipher Group.
    bind ssl vserver MyvServer -certkeyName MyCert
    
    set ssl vserver MyvServer -ssl3 DISABLED -tls11 ENABLED -tls12 ENABLED
    
    unbind ssl vserver MyvServer -cipherName ALL
    
    bind ssl vserver MyvServer -cipherName Modern
    
    bind ssl vserver MyvServer -eccCurveName ALL
  19. Click Done to finish creating the Virtual Server.
  20. The new Virtual Server should show as Up.
  21. Create additional Virtual Servers for each datacenter. These additional Virtual Servers do not need a VIP, so change the IP Address Type to Non Addressable. Only the first Virtual Server will be accessible.

    add lb vserver lbvip-LDAP-Corp-Backup SSL_TCP 0.0.0.0 0
  22. Notice that the additional datacenter Virtual Servers show up with an IP Address of 0.0.0.0 and port of 0.
  23. After you are done creating a Virtual Server for each datacenter, right-click the primary datacenter’s Virtual Server and click Edit.
  24. On the right, in the Advanced column, click Protection.
  25. On the left, in the Protection section, change the Backup Virtual Server to one of the other datacenter Virtual Servers. If all of the services in this datacenter are DOWN, the backup Virtual Server will be used instead. You can cascade multiple Virtual Servers using this method. Click OK and Done.

    set lb vserver lbvip-LDAP-Corp -backupVServer lbvip-LDAP-Corp-Backup

Next Steps

You may now use this Virtual IP in your LDAP authentication policies for NetScaler Gateway and/or NetScaler management login.