Security

There are three main components to the security features provided by Cassandra:

  • TLS/SSL encryption for client and inter-node communication

  • Client authentication

  • Authorization

By default, these features are disabled as Cassandra is configured to easily find and be found by other members of a cluster. In other words, an out-of-the-box Cassandra installation presents a large attack surface for a bad actor. Enabling authentication for clients using the binary protocol is not sufficient to protect a cluster. Malicious users able to access internode communication and JMX ports can still:

  • Craft internode messages to insert users into authentication schema

  • Craft internode messages to truncate or drop schema

  • Use tools such as sstableloader to overwrite system_auth tables

  • Attach to the cluster directly to capture write traffic

Correct configuration of all three security components should negate theses vectors. Therefore, understanding Cassandra’s security features is crucial to configuring your cluster to meet your security needs.

TLS/SSL Encryption

Cassandra provides secure communication between a client machine and a database cluster and between nodes within a cluster. Enabling encryption ensures that data in flight is not compromised and is transferred securely. The options for client-to-node and node-to-node encryption are managed separately and may be configured independently.

In both cases, the JVM defaults for supported protocols and cipher suites are used when encryption is enabled. These can be overidden using the settings in cassandra.yaml, but this is not recommended unless there are policies in place which dictate certain settings or a need to disable vulnerable ciphers or protocols in cases where the JVM cannot be updated.

FIPS compliant settings can be configured at the JVM level and should not involve changing encryption settings in cassandra.yaml. See the java document on FIPS for more details.

Cassandra provides flexibility of using Java based key material or completely customizing the SSL context. You can choose any keystore format supported by Java (JKS, PKCS12 etc) as well as other standards like PEM. You can even customize the SSL context creation to use Cloud Native technologies like Kuberenetes Secrets for storing the key material or to integrate with your in-house Key Management System.

For information on generating the keystore and truststore files required with the Java supported keystores used in SSL communications, see the java documentation on creating keystores.

For customizing the SSL context creation you can implement ISslContextCreationFactory interface or extend one of its public subclasses appropriately. You can then use the ssl_context_factory setting for server_encryption_options or client_encryption_options sections appropriately. See ssl-factory examples for details. Refer to the below class diagram to understand the class hierarchy.

image

Using PEM based key material

You can use the in-built class PEMBasedSSLContextFactory as the ssl_context_factory setting for the PEM based key material.

You can configure this factory with either inline PEM data or with the files having the required PEM data as shown below,

  • Configuration: PEM keys/certs defined in-line (mind the spaces in the YAML!)
  1. client/server_encryption_options:
  2. ssl_context_factory:
  3. class_name: org.apache.cassandra.security.PEMBasedSslContextFactory
  4. parameters:
  5. private_key: |
  6. -----BEGIN ENCRYPTED PRIVATE KEY----- OR -----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----
  7. <your base64 encoded private key>
  8. -----END ENCRYPTED PRIVATE KEY----- OR -----END PRIVATE KEY-----
  9. -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
  10. <your base64 encoded certificate chain>
  11. -----END CERTIFICATE-----
  12. private_key_password: "<your password if the private key is encrypted with a password>"
  13. trusted_certificates: |
  14. -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
  15. <your base64 encoded certificate>
  16. -----END CERTIFICATE-----
  • Configuration: PEM keys/certs defined in files
  1. client/server_encryption_options:
  2. ssl_context_factory:
  3. class_name: org.apache.cassandra.security.PEMBasedSslContextFactory
  4. keystore: <file path to the keystore file in the PEM format with the private key and the certificate chain>
  5. keystore_password: "<your password if the private key is encrypted with a password>"
  6. truststore: <file path to the truststore file in the PEM format>

SSL Certificate Hot Reloading

Beginning with Cassandra 4, Cassandra supports hot reloading of SSL Certificates. If SSL/TLS support is enabled in Cassandra and you are using default file based key material, the node periodically (every 10 minutes) polls the Trust and Key Stores specified in cassandra.yaml. When the files are updated, Cassandra will reload them and use them for subsequent connections. Please note that the Trust & Key Store passwords are part of the yaml so the updated files should also use the same passwords.

If you are customizing the SSL configuration via ssl_context_factory setting, Cassandra polls (at the same periodic interval mentioned above) your implementation to check if the SSL certificates need to be reloaded. See the ISslContextFactory documentation for more details. If you are using one of the Cassandra’s in-built SSL context factory class (example: PEMBasedSslContextFactory) with file based key material, it supports the hot reloading of the SSL certificates like mentioned above.

Certificate Hot reloading may also be triggered using the nodetool reloadssl command. Use this if you want to Cassandra to immediately notice the changed certificates.

Inter-node Encryption

The settings for managing inter-node encryption are found in cassandra.yaml in the server_encryption_options section. To enable inter-node encryption, change the internode_encryption setting from its default value of none to one value from: rack, dc or all.

Client to Node Encryption

The settings for managing client to node encryption are found in cassandra.yaml in the client_encryption_options section. There are two primary toggles here for enabling encryption, enabled and optional.

  • If neither is set to true, client connections are entirely unencrypted.

  • If enabled is set to true and optional is set to false, all client connections must be secured.

  • If both options are set to true, both encrypted and unencrypted connections are supported using the same port. Client connections using encryption with this configuration will be automatically detected and handled by the server.

As an alternative to the optional setting, separate ports can also be configured for secure and unsecure connections where operational requirements demand it. To do so, set optional to false and use the native_transport_port_ssl setting in cassandra.yaml to specify the port to be used for secure client communication.

Roles

Cassandra uses database roles, which may represent either a single user or a group of users, in both authentication and permissions management. Role management is an extension point in Cassandra and may be configured using the role_manager setting in cassandra.yaml. The default setting uses CassandraRoleManager, an implementation which stores role information in the tables of the system_auth keyspace.

See also the CQL documentation on roles.

Authentication

Authentication is pluggable in Cassandra and is configured using the authenticator setting in cassandra.yaml. Cassandra ships with two options included in the default distribution.

By default, Cassandra is configured with AllowAllAuthenticator which performs no authentication checks and therefore requires no credentials. It is used to disable authentication completely. Note that authentication is a necessary condition of Cassandra’s permissions subsystem, so if authentication is disabled, effectively so are permissions.

The default distribution also includes PasswordAuthenticator, which stores encrypted credentials in a system table. This can be used to enable simple username/password authentication.

Enabling Password Authentication

Before enabling client authentication on the cluster, client applications should be pre-configured with their intended credentials. When a connection is initiated, the server will only ask for credentials once authentication is enabled, so setting up the client side config in advance is safe. In contrast, as soon as a server has authentication enabled, any connection attempt without proper credentials will be rejected which may cause availability problems for client applications. Once clients are setup and ready for authentication to be enabled, follow this procedure to enable it on the cluster.

Pick a single node in the cluster on which to perform the initial configuration. Ideally, no clients should connect to this node during the setup process, so you may want to remove it from client config, block it at the network level or possibly add a new temporary node to the cluster for this purpose. On that node, perform the following steps:

  1. Open a cqlsh session and change the replication factor of the system_auth keyspace. By default, this keyspace uses SimpleReplicationStrategy and a replication_factor of 1. It is recommended to change this for any non-trivial deployment to ensure that should nodes become unavailable, login is still possible. Best practice is to configure a replication factor of 3 to 5 per-DC.
  1. ALTER KEYSPACE system_auth WITH replication = {'class': 'NetworkTopologyStrategy', 'DC1': 3, 'DC2': 3};
  1. Edit cassandra.yaml to change the authenticator option like so:
  1. authenticator: PasswordAuthenticator
  1. Restart the node.

  2. Open a new cqlsh session using the credentials of the default superuser:

  1. $ cqlsh -u cassandra -p cassandra
  1. During login, the credentials for the default superuser are read with a consistency level of QUORUM, whereas those for all other users (including superusers) are read at LOCAL_ONE. In the interests of performance and availability, as well as security, operators should create another superuser and disable the default one. This step is optional, but highly recommended. While logged in as the default superuser, create another superuser role which can be used to bootstrap further configuration.
  1. # create a new superuser
  2. CREATE ROLE dba WITH SUPERUSER = true AND LOGIN = true AND PASSWORD = 'super';
  1. Start a new cqlsh session, this time logging in as the new_superuser and disable the default superuser.
  1. ALTER ROLE cassandra WITH SUPERUSER = false AND LOGIN = false;
  1. Finally, set up the roles and credentials for your application users with CREATE ROLE statements.

At the end of these steps, the one node is configured to use password authentication. To roll that out across the cluster, repeat steps 2 and 3 on each node in the cluster. Once all nodes have been restarted, authentication will be fully enabled throughout the cluster.

Note that using PasswordAuthenticator also requires the use of CassandraRoleManager.

See also: setting-credentials-for-internal-authentication, CREATE ROLE, ALTER ROLE, ALTER KEYSPACE and GRANT PERMISSION.

Authorization

Authorization is pluggable in Cassandra and is configured using the authorizer setting in cassandra.yaml. Cassandra ships with two options included in the default distribution.

By default, Cassandra is configured with AllowAllAuthorizer which performs no checking and so effectively grants all permissions to all roles. This must be used if AllowAllAuthenticator is the configured authenticator.

The default distribution also includes CassandraAuthorizer, which does implement full permissions management functionality and stores its data in Cassandra system tables.

Enabling Internal Authorization

Permissions are modelled as a whitelist, with the default assumption that a given role has no access to any database resources. The implication of this is that once authorization is enabled on a node, all requests will be rejected until the required permissions have been granted. For this reason, it is strongly recommended to perform the initial setup on a node which is not processing client requests.

The following assumes that authentication has already been enabled via the process outlined in password-authentication. Perform these steps to enable internal authorization across the cluster:

  1. On the selected node, edit cassandra.yaml to change the authorizer option like so:
  1. authorizer: CassandraAuthorizer
  1. Restart the node.

  2. Open a new cqlsh session using the credentials of a role with superuser credentials:

  1. $ cqlsh -u dba -p super
  1. Configure the appropriate access privileges for your clients using GRANT PERMISSION statements. On the other nodes, until configuration is updated and the node restarted, this will have no effect so disruption to clients is avoided.
  1. GRANT SELECT ON ks.t1 TO db_user;
  1. Once all the necessary permissions have been granted, repeat steps 1 and 2 for each node in turn. As each node restarts and clients reconnect, the enforcement of the granted permissions will begin.

See also: GRANT PERMISSION, GRANT ALL and REVOKE PERMISSION.

Caching

Enabling authentication and authorization places additional load on the cluster by frequently reading from the system_auth tables. Furthermore, these reads are in the critical paths of many client operations, and so has the potential to severely impact quality of service. To mitigate this, auth data such as credentials, permissions and role details are cached for a configurable period. The caching can be configured (and even disabled) from cassandra.yaml or using a JMX client. The JMX interface also supports invalidation of the various caches, but any changes made via JMX are not persistent and will be re-read from cassandra.yaml when the node is restarted.

Each cache has 3 options which can be set:

Validity Period

Controls the expiration of cache entries. After this period, entries are invalidated and removed from the cache.

Refresh Rate

Controls the rate at which background reads are performed to pick up any changes to the underlying data. While these async refreshes are performed, caches will continue to serve (possibly) stale data. Typically, this will be set to a shorter time than the validity period.

Max Entries

Controls the upper bound on cache size.

The naming for these options in cassandra.yaml follows the convention:

  • <type>_validity_in_ms

  • <type>_update_interval_in_ms

  • <type>_cache_max_entries

Where <type> is one of credentials, permissions, or roles.

As mentioned, these are also exposed via JMX in the mbeans under the org.apache.cassandra.auth domain.

JMX access

Access control for JMX clients is configured separately to that for CQL. For both authentication and authorization, two providers are available; the first based on standard JMX security and the second which integrates more closely with Cassandra’s own auth subsystem.

The default settings for Cassandra make JMX accessible only from localhost. To enable remote JMX connections, edit cassandra-env.sh to change the LOCAL_JMX setting to no. Under the standard configuration, when remote JMX connections are enabled, standard JMX authentication <standard-jmx-auth> is also switched on.

Note that by default, local-only connections are not subject to authentication, but this can be enabled.

If enabling remote connections, it is recommended to also use SSL connections.

Finally, after enabling auth and/or SSL, ensure that tools which use JMX, such as nodetool are correctly configured and working as expected.

Standard JMX Auth

Users permitted to connect to the JMX server are specified in a simple text file. The location of this file is set in cassandra-env.sh by the line:

  1. JVM_OPTS="$JVM_OPTS -Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.password.file=/etc/cassandra/jmxremote.password"

Edit the password file to add username/password pairs:

  1. jmx_user jmx_password

Secure the credentials file so that only the user running the Cassandra process can read it :

  1. $ chown cassandra:cassandra /etc/cassandra/jmxremote.password
  2. $ chmod 400 /etc/cassandra/jmxremote.password

Optionally, enable access control to limit the scope of what defined users can do via JMX. Note that this is a fairly blunt instrument in this context as most operational tools in Cassandra require full read/write access. To configure a simple access file, uncomment this line in cassandra-env.sh:

  1. #JVM_OPTS="$JVM_OPTS -Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.access.file=/etc/cassandra/jmxremote.access"

Then edit the access file to grant your JMX user readwrite permission:

  1. jmx_user readwrite

Cassandra must be restarted to pick up the new settings.

See also : Using File-Based Password Authentication In JMX

Cassandra Integrated Auth

An alternative to the out-of-the-box JMX auth is to useeCassandra’s own authentication and/or authorization providers for JMX clients. This is potentially more flexible and secure but it come with one major caveat. Namely that it is not available until after a node has joined the ring, because the auth subsystem is not fully configured until that point However, it is often critical for monitoring purposes to have JMX access particularly during bootstrap. So it is recommended, where possible, to use local only JMX auth during bootstrap and then, if remote connectivity is required, to switch to integrated auth once the node has joined the ring and initial setup is complete.

With this option, the same database roles used for CQL authentication can be used to control access to JMX, so updates can be managed centrally using just cqlsh. Furthermore, fine grained control over exactly which operations are permitted on particular MBeans can be acheived via GRANT PERMISSION.

To enable integrated authentication, edit cassandra-env.sh to uncomment these lines:

  1. #JVM_OPTS="$JVM_OPTS -Dcassandra.jmx.remote.login.config=CassandraLogin"
  2. #JVM_OPTS="$JVM_OPTS -Djava.security.auth.login.config=$CASSANDRA_HOME/conf/cassandra-jaas.config"

And disable the JMX standard auth by commenting this line:

  1. JVM_OPTS="$JVM_OPTS -Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.password.file=/etc/cassandra/jmxremote.password"

To enable integrated authorization, uncomment this line:

  1. #JVM_OPTS="$JVM_OPTS -Dcassandra.jmx.authorizer=org.apache.cassandra.auth.jmx.AuthorizationProxy"

Check standard access control is off by ensuring this line is commented out:

  1. #JVM_OPTS="$JVM_OPTS -Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.access.file=/etc/cassandra/jmxremote.access"

With integrated authentication and authorization enabled, operators can define specific roles and grant them access to the particular JMX resources that they need. For example, a role with the necessary permissions to use tools such as jconsole or jmc in read-only mode would be defined as:

  1. CREATE ROLE jmx WITH LOGIN = false;
  2. GRANT SELECT ON ALL MBEANS TO jmx;
  3. GRANT DESCRIBE ON ALL MBEANS TO jmx;
  4. GRANT EXECUTE ON MBEAN 'java.lang:type=Threading' TO jmx;
  5. GRANT EXECUTE ON MBEAN 'com.sun.management:type=HotSpotDiagnostic' TO jmx;
  6. # Grant the role with necessary permissions to use nodetool commands (including nodetool status) in read-only mode
  7. GRANT EXECUTE ON MBEAN 'org.apache.cassandra.db:type=EndpointSnitchInfo' TO jmx;
  8. GRANT EXECUTE ON MBEAN 'org.apache.cassandra.db:type=StorageService' TO jmx;
  9. # Grant the jmx role to one with login permissions so that it can access the JMX tooling
  10. CREATE ROLE ks_user WITH PASSWORD = 'password' AND LOGIN = true AND SUPERUSER = false;
  11. GRANT jmx TO ks_user;

Fine grained access control to individual MBeans is also supported:

  1. GRANT EXECUTE ON MBEAN 'org.apache.cassandra.db:type=Tables,keyspace=test_keyspace,table=t1' TO ks_user;
  2. GRANT EXECUTE ON MBEAN 'org.apache.cassandra.db:type=Tables,keyspace=test_keyspace,table=*' TO ks_owner;

This permits the ks_user role to invoke methods on the MBean representing a single table in test_keyspace, while granting the same permission for all table level MBeans in that keyspace to the ks_owner role.

Adding/removing roles and granting/revoking of permissions is handled dynamically once the initial setup is complete, so no further restarts are required if permissions are altered.

See also: Permissions.

JMX With SSL

JMX SSL configuration is controlled by a number of system properties, some of which are optional. To turn on SSL, edit the relevant lines in cassandra-env.sh to uncomment and set the values of these properties as required:

com.sun.management.jmxremote.ssl

set to true to enable SSL

com.sun.management.jmxremote.ssl.need.client.auth

set to true to enable validation of client certificates

com.sun.management.jmxremote.registry.ssl

enables SSL sockets for the RMI registry from which clients obtain the JMX connector stub

com.sun.management.jmxremote.ssl.enabled.protocols

by default, the protocols supported by the JVM will be used, override with a comma-separated list. Note that this is not usually necessary and using the defaults is the preferred option.

com.sun.management.jmxremote.ssl.enabled.cipher.suites

by default, the cipher suites supported by the JVM will be used, override with a comma-separated list. Note that this is not usually necessary and using the defaults is the preferred option.

javax.net.ssl.keyStore

set the path on the local filesystem of the keystore containing server private keys and public certificates

javax.net.ssl.keyStorePassword

set the password of the keystore file

javax.net.ssl.trustStore

if validation of client certificates is required, use this property to specify the path of the truststore containing the public certificates of trusted clients

javax.net.ssl.trustStorePassword

set the password of the truststore file

See also: Oracle Java7 Docs, Monitor Java with JMX

Crypto providers

The ability to specify a custom Java Crypto Provider was done as part of CASSANDRA-18624

The default configuration of crypto_provider in cassandra.yaml looks like this:

  1. # Configures Java crypto provider. By default, it will use
  2. # DefaultCryptoProvider which will install Amazon Correto
  3. # Crypto Provider.
  4. #
  5. # Amazon Correto Crypto Provider works currently for
  6. # x86_64 and aarch_64 platforms. If this provider fails it will
  7. # fall back to the default crypto provider in the JRE.
  8. #
  9. # To force failure when the provider was not installed properly,
  10. # set the property "fail_on_missing_provider" to "true".
  11. #
  12. # To bypass the installation of a crypto provider use
  13. # class 'org.apache.cassandra.security.JREProvider'
  14. #
  15. crypto_provider:
  16. - class_name: org.apache.cassandra.security.DefaultCryptoProvider
  17. parameters:
  18. - fail_on_missing_provider: "false"

For older nodes, when they upgrade to Cassandra 5.0 with the same cassandra.yaml where crypto_provider section is not set yet, they will default to JREProvider which does not install any provider, and it will use the one which is in a JRE Cassandra runs with.

As the above snippet shows, DefaultCryptoProvider is installing Amazon Corretto Crypto provider which is proven to be way more performant than default crypto providers in a JRE installation.

If you want to use other crypto provider, you have two options.

The first one is to configure your JRE, specifically java.security file, to instruct JRE what crypto provider to use. You would need to put respective implementation of such crypto provider to the class path of JRE as well.

The second option is to implement your own crypto provider by extending org.apache.cassandra.security.AbstractCryptoProvider and implementing four methods:

getProviderName

Returns name of your provider

getProviderClassAsString

Returns FQCN of your actual crypto provider which extends java.security.Provider.

installator

Returns Runnable which installs your java.security.Provider in runtime.

isHealthyInstallation

Returns true if the installation is healthy, false otherwise. This serves as a way to check if the installation of your provider was successful or not.

Upon installation of a crypto provider, AbstractCryptoProvider checks whether the provider you want to install is already installed or not. If it is installed and its installation position is 1 (as providers are installed in an order), a message will be logged about this fact. This case may happen if you configured your JRE directly via java.security and you try to install same provider by Cassandra itself as well.

If it is installed already but not on the first position, if fail_on_missing_provider is set to true, an exception will be thrown and a node will fail to start. Same happens if the installation of a provider is not successful as such.

Platform-specific libraries are added to Cassandra’s class path automatically by cassandra.in.sh script. Currently, there are lib/aarch64 and lib/x86_64 directories with JAR files for each respective architecture. A platform is determined by the output of uname -m command.