Introduction
This document describes how to use SSL feature of ZooKeeper.
By default network communication of ZooKeeper isn’t encrypted. However, each user and service can leverage the SSL feature and/or custom authentication implementation in order to use ZooKeeper in secure mode.
Netty communication
ZooKeeper was initially designed and implemented using the Java NIO package. Later on, we added Netty to optionally replace NIO, since Netty better supports SSL. SSL is only supported on top of Netty communication, which means if you want to use SSL you have to enable Netty. We will discuss how to do it in the following section.
SSL
It's been added in ZOOKEEPER-2125.
Client-Server Communication
The communication between a ZooKeeper client and a server has Netty and SSL support. Note that Netty needs to be enabled to use SSL.
Client
ZooKeeper client can use Netty by setting property:
zookeeper.clientCnxnSocket="org.apache.zookeeper.ClientCnxnSocketNetty"
In order to do secure communication on client, set this property:
zookeeper.client.secure=true
Note that with "secure" property set the client could and should only connect to server’s “secureClientPort
” which will be described shortly.
Then set up keystore and truststore environment by setting the following properties:
zookeeper.ssl.keyStore.location="/path/to/your/keystore" zookeeper.ssl.keyStore.password="keystore_password" zookeeper.ssl.trustStore.location="/path/to/your/truststore" zookeeper.ssl.trustStore.password="truststore_password"
Server
ZooKeeper server can use Netty by setting this property:
zookeeper.serverCnxnFactory="org.apache.zookeeper.server.NettyServerCnxnFactory"
ZooKeeper server also needs to provide a listening port to accept secure client connections. This port is different from and running in parallel with the known “clientPort”. It should be added in “zoo.cfg”:
... secureClientPort=2281
All secure clients (mentioned above) should connect to this port.
Then set up keystore and truststore environment like what client does.
Example
An example setup for running bin/zkServer.sh:
export SERVER_JVMFLAGS=" -Dzookeeper.serverCnxnFactory=org.apache.zookeeper.server.NettyServerCnxnFactory -Dzookeeper.ssl.keyStore.location=/root/zookeeper/ssl/testKeyStore.jks -Dzookeeper.ssl.keyStore.password=testpass -Dzookeeper.ssl.trustStore.location=/root/zookeeper/ssl/testTrustStore.jks -Dzookeeper.ssl.trustStore.password=testpass"
and set additionally in “zoo.cfg”:
… secureClientPort=2281
For bin/zkCli.sh:
export CLIENT_JVMFLAGS=" -Dzookeeper.clientCnxnSocket=org.apache.zookeeper.ClientCnxnSocketNetty -Dzookeeper.client.secure=true -Dzookeeper.ssl.keyStore.location=/root/zookeeper/ssl/testKeyStore.jks -Dzookeeper.ssl.keyStore.password=testpass -Dzookeeper.ssl.trustStore.location=/root/zookeeper/ssl/testTrustStore.jks -Dzookeeper.ssl.trustStore.password=testpass"
Start the ZK server, and then connect client to server’s port 2281 should work like normal.
Quorum
There is currently no support for SSL for the communication between ZooKeeper servers.
Authentication
It's been added in ZOOKEEPER-2123.
When connecting to ZooKeeper via the secure port, the client is automatically authenticated with credentials associated with the client certificate. Specifically, the connection adds auth info with the scheme “x509” and the ACL ID set to the client certificate principal name.
X509 Authentication Provider
By default, authentication is performed by the X509AuthenticationProvider, corresponding to the auth scheme “x509.” This is initialized with server certificates and trusted client certificates specified according to the following properties:
zookeeper.ssl.keyStore.location zookeeper.ssl.keyStore.password zookeeper.ssl.trustStore.location zookeeper.ssl.trustStore.password
The keyStore JKS file contains the server certificate and private key. This certificate needs to be trusted by the clients, i.e. include the server’s certificate or its CA in the client’s trustStore JKS files. Meanwhile the trustStore JKS file on the server contains the client certificates or CA to trust.
Once authentication is complete and a ZooKeeper session is established, the client may set ACLs against the “x509” scheme. x509 uses the client’s authenticated X500 Principal as an ACL ID identity. The ACL expression is the exact X500 Principal name of an authenticated client.
Similar to the digest auth scheme, an x509 “superUser” can be configured by the server. Set the property zookeeper.X509AuthenticationProvider.superUser
to an X500 Principal that corresponds to a client that should have full privileges to all znodes regardless of ACLs.
Custom Authentication Provider
ZooKeeper can be configured to use a different X509-based trust mechanism. This is useful in certificate key infrastructures that do not use JKS.
To specify a custom authentication provider, extend the org.apache.zookeeper.server.auth.X509AuthenticationProvider
. It may be necessary to extend javax.net.ssl.X509ExtendedKeyManager
and javax.net.ssl.X509ExtendedTrustManage
r
to get the desired behavior from the SSL stack. Then override X509AuthenticationProvider.getKeyManager()
and getTrustManager()
so that the SSLEngine will pick up the custom implementation.
To configure the ZooKeeper server to use the custom provider for authentication, choose a scheme name and set the property zookeeper.authProvider.[scheme]
to the fully-qualified class name of the custom implementation. This will load the provider into the ProviderRegistry. Then set the property zookeeper.ssl.authProvider=[scheme]
and that provider will be used for secure authentication.