Goals
- Allow CDAP users to securely store sensitive data.
- Allow authorized CDAP users to access stored data at runtime.
- Allow authorized CDAP users to manage the stored data.
Checklist
- User stories documented (Nishith)
- User stories reviewed (Nitin)
- Design documented (Nishith)
- Design reviewed (Andreas/Terence)
- Feature merged (Nishith)
- Blog post
User Stories
- As a CDAP/Hydrator security admin, I want all sensitive information like passwords not be stored in plaintext.
Brief introduction to Hadoop KMS
Hadoop KMS is a cryptographic key management server based on Hadoop’s KeyProvider API.
It provides a client and a server components which communicate over HTTP using REST API.
The client is a KeyProvider implementation which interacts with the KMS using the KMS HTTP REST API.
The KMS is a proxy that interfaces with a backing key store on behalf of HDFS daemons and clients. Both the backing key store and the KMS implement the Hadoop KeyProvider API. A default Java Key store is provided for testing but is not recommended for production use. Cloudera provides Navigator Key Trustee for production clusters. Hortonworks recommends using Ranger KMS.
*Image taken from Cloudera engineering Blog
Design
The entity stored will be composed of three parts
- Name: This will be the identifier, provided by the user, that will be used to retrieve the object.
- Properties: A key value map containing the properties of the object being stored.
- Data: The data being stored. Passed in as a byte array.
Design decisions
- Hadoop KMS supports versioning for the keys it stores. This is used mainly for key rollovers. In this release, we won't support versioning.
Following operations will supported by the store
- Store
- Get data
- Get metadata
- List
- Delete
The system will expose these APIs to clients:
// Represents the metadata about the data interface SecureStoreMetaData { String getName(); String getDescription(); long getLastModifiedTime(); Map<String, String> getProperties(); } // Represents the secure data interface SecureStoreData { // Returns the meta data about the secure data SecureStoreMetaData getMetaData(); // Returns the secure data String get(); } // Provides read-only access to secure store interface SecureStore { // Returns a map with names as key and descriptions as the value of available // secure data in the store. Map<String, String> list(String namespace); // Gets the secure data SecureStoreData get(String namespace, String name); } // Manager interface for managing secure data interface SecureStoreManager { // Stores the secure data void put(String namespace, String name, String data, Map<String, String> properties); // Remove the secure data void delete(String namespace, String name); }
REST API
Operation | REST API | Body | Response |
---|---|---|---|
Put | PUT /v3/namespaces/<namespace>/securekeys/<key-name> | Content-Type: application/json Put Data { "description" : "<description>" "value" : "<value>" "properties" : { "key" : "value" ... } } | 200 OK |
Delete | DELETE /v3/namespaces/<namespace>/securekeys/<key-name> | N/A | 200 OK 404 Not Found |
Get | GET /v3/namespaces/<namespace>/securekeys/<key-name> | N/A | 200 OK value 404 Not Found |
Get Metadata | GET /v3/namespaces/<namespace>/securekeys/<key-name>/metadata | N/A | 200 OK Content-Type: application/json { "name" : "<name>" "description" : "<description>" "created" : <millis-epoch> //long "properties" : { "key" : "value" ... } } 404 Not Found |
List | GET /v3/namespaces/<namespace>/securekeys/ | N/A | 200 OK Content-Type: application/json [ { "name" : "<name>" "description" : "<description>" } { "name" : "<name>" "description" : "<description>" } { "name" : "<name>" "description" : "<description>" } ... ] |
Access Control
The secure store can be protected with a key in the CDAP master keystore, which CDAP already requires the user to provide in order to have SSL enabled. Since the program will be executed in the same JVM as the SDK process, access to the sensitive data can be done directly through the proper Guice binding that binds the SecureStore
interface to the actual implementation.
KMS uses Hadoop Authentication for HTTP authentication. Hadoop Authentication issues a signed HTTP Cookie once the client has authenticated successfully.
Caching
Hadoop KMS caches keys for a short period of time to avoid excessive hits to the underlying key provider. In the operations we are interested in, only 2 use the cache, get data, and get metadata.
Audit logs
All access to the secure store will be logged.
Audit logs are aggregated by KMS for API accesses to the GET_KEY_VERSION, GET_CURRENT_KEY, DECRYPT_EEK, GENERATE_EEK operations.
Entries are grouped by the (user,key,operation) combined key for a configurable aggregation interval after which the number of accesses to the specified end-point by the user for a given key is flushed to the audit log.
Implementation
Following two implementations will be provided
Standalone mode
An implementation using standard Java tools (JKS or JCEKS) will be provided. The secure store will be kept in an encrypted file on the local filesystem.
Distributed mode
The cluster has KMS running
If the cluster has KMS running, we will utilize that for securely storing sensitive information. To do that we will implement the Hadoop KeyProvider API and forward user calls to KMS. The API with the methods that need to be implemented are listed below.
The cluster does not have KMS running
This mode will not be supported in this release.
Out-of-scope User Stories (4.0 and beyond)
- Support for secure store in distributed mode when KMS is not present.
References
https://hadoop.apache.org/docs/stable/hadoop-kms/index.html
https://hadoop.apache.org/docs/r2.7.2/hadoop-project-dist/hadoop-hdfs/TransparentEncryption.html
https://hadoop.apache.org/docs/r2.7.2/api/org/apache/hadoop/crypto/key/KeyProvider.html