Transparent Encryption (stable/beta)
This guide explains how to configure Cilium to use IPsec based transparent encryption using Kubernetes secrets to distribute the IPsec keys. After this configuration is complete all traffic between Cilium-managed endpoints, as well as Cilium managed host traffic, will be encrypted using IPsec. This guide uses Kubernetes secrets to distribute keys. Alternatively, keys may be manually distributed, but that is not shown here.
Note
The encryption feature is stable in combination with the direct-routing and ENI datapath mode. In combination with encapsulation/tunneling, the feature is still in beta phase.
Packets destined to the same node they were sent out of are not encrypted. This is a intended behavior as it doesn’t provide any benefits because the raw traffic on the node can be seen.
Transparent encryption is not currently supported when chaining Cilium on top of other CNI plugins. For more information, see GitHub issue #15596.
Generate & import the PSK
Note
Secret
resources need to be deployed in the same namespace as Cilium! In our example, we use kube-system
.
First, create a Kubernetes secret for the IPsec keys to be stored. This will generate the necessary IPsec keys which will be distributed as a Kubernetes secret called cilium-ipsec-keys
. In this example we use GMC-128-AES, but any of the supported Linux algorithms may be used. To generate, use the following:
$ kubectl create -n kube-system secret generic cilium-ipsec-keys \
--from-literal=keys="3 rfc4106(gcm(aes)) $(echo $(dd if=/dev/urandom count=20 bs=1 2> /dev/null| xxd -p -c 64)) 128"
The secret can be seen with kubectl -n kube-system get secret
and will be listed as “cilium-ipsec-keys”.
$ kubectl -n kube-system get secrets cilium-ipsec-keys
NAME TYPE DATA AGE
cilium-ipsec-keys Opaque 1 176m
Enable Encryption in Cilium
Note
First, make sure you have Helm 3 installed.
If you have (or planning to have) Helm 2 charts (and Tiller) in the same cluster, there should be no issue as both version are mutually compatible in order to support gradual migration. Cilium chart is targeting Helm 3 (v3.0.3 and above).
Setup Helm repository:
helm repo add cilium https://helm.cilium.io/
Deploy Cilium release via Helm with the following options to enable encryption:
helm install cilium cilium/cilium --version 1.8.10 \
--namespace kube-system \
--set global.encryption.enabled=true \
--set global.encryption.nodeEncryption=false
These options can be provided along with other options, such as when deploying to GKE, with VXLAN tunneling:
helm install cilium cilium/cilium --version 1.8.10 \
--namespace cilium --set global.nodeinit.enabled=true --set nodeinit.reconfigureKubelet=true --set nodeinit.removeCbrBridge=true --set global.cni.binPath=/home/kubernetes/bin --set global.tunnel=vxlan --set global.encryption.enabled=true --set global.encryption.nodeEncryption=false
At this point the Cilium managed nodes will be using IPsec for all traffic. For further information on Cilium’s transparent encryption, see eBPF Datapath.
Encryption interface
If direct routing is being used, an additional argument can be used to identify the network-facing interface. If no interface is specified, the default route link is chosen by inspecting the routing tables. This will work in many cases, but depending on routing rules, users may need to specify the encryption interface as follows:
--set global.encryption.interface=ethX
Node to node encryption
In order to enable node-to-node encryption, add:
[...]
--set global.encryption.enabled=true \
--set global.encryption.nodeEncryption=true
--set global.tunnel=disabled
Note
Node to node encryption feature is tested and supported with direct routing modes. Using with encapsulation/tunneling is not currently tested or supported.
Support with tunneling mode is tracked at #13663.
Validate the Setup
Run a bash
shell in one of the Cilium pods with kubectl -n <k8s namespace> exec -ti <cilium pod> -- bash
and execute the following commands:
- Install tcpdump
apt-get update
apt-get -y install tcpdump
- Check that traffic is encrypted:
tcpdump -n -i cilium_vxlan
tcpdump: verbose output suppressed, use -v or -vv for full protocol decode
listening on cilium_vxlan, link-type EN10MB (Ethernet), capture size 262144 bytes
15:16:21.626416 IP 10.60.1.1 > 10.60.0.1: ESP(spi=0x00000001,seq=0x57e2), length 180
15:16:21.626473 IP 10.60.1.1 > 10.60.0.1: ESP(spi=0x00000001,seq=0x57e3), length 180
15:16:21.627167 IP 10.60.0.1 > 10.60.1.1: ESP(spi=0x00000001,seq=0x579d), length 100
15:16:21.627296 IP 10.60.0.1 > 10.60.1.1: ESP(spi=0x00000001,seq=0x579e), length 100
15:16:21.627523 IP 10.60.0.1 > 10.60.1.1: ESP(spi=0x00000001,seq=0x579f), length 180
15:16:21.627699 IP 10.60.1.1 > 10.60.0.1: ESP(spi=0x00000001,seq=0x57e4), length 100
15:16:21.628408 IP 10.60.1.1 > 10.60.0.1: ESP(spi=0x00000001,seq=0x57e5), length 100
Key Rotation
To replace cilium-ipsec-keys secret with a new keys,
KEYID=$(kubectl get secret -n kube-system cilium-ipsec-keys -o yaml | awk '/^\s*keys:/ {print $2}' | base64 -d | awk '{print $1}')
if [[ $KEYID -gt 15 ]]; then KEYID=0; fi
data=$(echo "{\"stringData\":{\"keys\":\"$((($KEYID+1))) "rfc4106\(gcm\(aes\)\)" $(echo $(dd if=/dev/urandom count=20 bs=1 2> /dev/null| xxd -p -c 64)) 128\"}}")
kubectl patch secret -n kube-system cilium-ipsec-keys -p="${data}" -v=1
Then restart Cilium agents to transition to the new key. During transition the new and old keys will be in use. The Cilium agent keeps per endpoint data on which key is used by each endpoint and will use the correct key if either side has not yet been updated. In this way encryption will work as new keys are rolled out.
The KEYID environment variable in the above example stores the current key ID used by Cilium. The key variable is a uint8 with value between 0-16 and should be monotonically increasing every re-key with a rollover from 16 to 0. The Cilium agent will default to KEYID of zero if its not specified in the secret.
Troubleshooting
Make sure that the Cilium pods have kvstore connectivity:
cilium status
KVStore: Ok etcd: 1/1 connected: http://127.0.0.1:31079 - 3.3.2 (Leader)
[...]
Check for
level=warning
andlevel=error
messages in the Cilium log filesRun a
bash
in a Cilium and validate the following:
Routing rules matching on fwmark:
ip rule list
1: from all fwmark 0xd00/0xf00 lookup 200
1: from all fwmark 0xe00/0xf00 lookup 200
[...]
Content of routing table 200
ip route list table 200
local 10.60.0.0/24 dev cilium_vxlan proto 50 scope host
10.60.1.0/24 via 10.60.0.1 dev cilium_host
XFRM policy:
ip xfrm p
src 10.60.1.1/24 dst 10.60.0.1/24
dir fwd priority 0
mark 0xd00/0xf00
tmpl src 10.60.1.1 dst 10.60.0.1
proto esp spi 0x00000001 reqid 1 mode tunnel
src 10.60.1.1/24 dst 10.60.0.1/24
dir in priority 0
mark 0xd00/0xf00
tmpl src 10.60.1.1 dst 10.60.0.1
proto esp spi 0x00000001 reqid 1 mode tunnel
src 10.60.0.1/24 dst 10.60.1.1/24
dir out priority 0
mark 0xe00/0xf00
tmpl src 10.60.0.1 dst 10.60.1.1
proto esp spi 0x00000001 reqid 1 mode tunnel
XFRM state:
ip xfrm s
src 10.60.0.1 dst 10.60.1.1
proto esp spi 0x00000001 reqid 1 mode tunnel
replay-window 0
auth-trunc hmac(sha256) 0x6162636465666768696a6b6c6d6e6f70717273747576777a797a414243444546 96
enc cbc(aes) 0x6162636465666768696a6b6c6d6e6f70717273747576777a797a414243444546
anti-replay context: seq 0x0, oseq 0xe0c0, bitmap 0x00000000
sel src 0.0.0.0/0 dst 0.0.0.0/0
src 10.60.1.1 dst 10.60.0.1
proto esp spi 0x00000001 reqid 1 mode tunnel
replay-window 0
auth-trunc hmac(sha256) 0x6162636465666768696a6b6c6d6e6f70717273747576777a797a414243444546 96
enc cbc(aes) 0x6162636465666768696a6b6c6d6e6f70717273747576777a797a414243444546
anti-replay context: seq 0x0, oseq 0x0, bitmap 0x00000000
sel src 0.0.0.0/0 dst 0.0.0.0/0
Disabling Encryption
To disable the encryption, regenerate the YAML with the option global.encryption.enabled=false