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HBASE-23347 Allow custom authentication methods for RPCs
Decouple the HBase internals such that someone can implement their own SASL-based authentication mechanism and plug it into HBase RegionServers/Masters. Comes with a design doc in dev-support/design-docs and an example in hbase-examples known as "Shade" which uses a flat-password file for authenticating users. Closes #884 Signed-off-by: Wellington Chevreuil <wchevreuil@apache.org> Signed-off-by: Andrew Purtell <apurtell@apache.org> Signed-off-by: Reid Chan <reidchan@apache.org>
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dev-support/design-docs/HBASE-23347-pluggable-authentication.md
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# Pluggable Authentication for HBase RPCs | ||
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## Background | ||
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As a distributed database, HBase must be able to authenticate users and HBase | ||
services across an untrusted network. Clients and HBase services are treated | ||
equivalently in terms of authentication (and this is the only time we will | ||
draw such a distinction). | ||
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There are currently three modes of authentication which are supported by HBase | ||
today via the configuration property `hbase.security.authentication` | ||
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1. `SIMPLE` | ||
2. `KERBEROS` | ||
3. `TOKEN` | ||
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`SIMPLE` authentication is effectively no authentication; HBase assumes the user | ||
is who they claim to be. `KERBEROS` authenticates clients via the KerberosV5 | ||
protocol using the GSSAPI mechanism of the Java Simple Authentication and Security | ||
Layer (SASL) protocol. `TOKEN` is a username-password based authentication protocol | ||
which uses short-lived passwords that can only be obtained via a `KERBEROS` authenticated | ||
request. `TOKEN` authentication is synonymous with Hadoop-style [Delegation Tokens](https://steveloughran.gitbooks.io/kerberos_and_hadoop/content/sections/hadoop_tokens.html#delegation-tokens). `TOKEN` authentication uses the `DIGEST-MD5` | ||
SASL mechanism. | ||
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[SASL](https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/technotes/guides/security/sasl/sasl-refguide.html) | ||
is a library which specifies a network protocol that can authenticate a client | ||
and a server using an arbitrary mechanism. SASL ships with a [number of mechanisms](https://www.iana.org/assignments/sasl-mechanisms/sasl-mechanisms.xhtml) | ||
out of the box and it is possible to implement custom mechanisms. SASL is effectively | ||
decoupling an RPC client-server model from the mechanism used to authenticate those | ||
requests (e.g. the RPC code is identical whether username-password, Kerberos, or any | ||
other method is used to authenticate the request). | ||
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RFC's define what [SASL mechanisms exist](https://www.iana.org/assignments/sasl-mechanisms/sasl-mechanisms.xml), | ||
but what RFC's define are a superset of the mechanisms that are | ||
[implemented in Java](https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/technotes/guides/security/sasl/sasl-refguide.html#SUN). | ||
This document limits discussion to SASL mechanisms in the abstract, focusing on those which are well-defined and | ||
implemented in Java today by the JDK itself. However, it is completely possible that a developer can implement | ||
and register their own SASL mechanism. Writing a custom mechanism is outside of the scope of this document, but | ||
not outside of the realm of possibility. | ||
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The `SIMPLE` implementation does not use SASL, but instead has its own RPC logic | ||
built into the HBase RPC protocol. `KERBEROS` and `TOKEN` both use SASL to authenticate, | ||
relying on the `Token` interface that is intertwined with the Hadoop `UserGroupInformation` | ||
class. SASL decouples an RPC from the mechanism used to authenticate that request. | ||
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## Problem statement | ||
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Despite HBase already shipping authentication implementations which leverage SASL, | ||
it is (effectively) impossible to add a new authentication implementation to HBase. The | ||
use of the `org.apache.hadoop.hbase.security.AuthMethod` enum makes it impossible | ||
to define a new method of authentication. Also, the RPC implementation is written | ||
to only use the methods that are expressly shipped in HBase. Adding a new authentication | ||
method would require copying and modifying the RpcClient implementation, in addition | ||
to modifying the RpcServer to invoke the correct authentication check. | ||
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While it is possible to add a new authentication method to HBase, it cannot be done | ||
cleanly or sustainably. This is what is meant by "impossible". | ||
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## Proposal | ||
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HBase should expose interfaces which allow for pluggable authentication mechanisms | ||
such that HBase can authenticate against external systems. Because the RPC implementation | ||
can already support SASL, HBase can standardize on SASL, allowing any authentication method | ||
which is capable of using SASL to negotiate authentication. `KERBEROS` and `TOKEN` methods | ||
will naturally fit into these new interfaces, but `SIMPLE` authentication will not (see the following | ||
chapter for a tangent on SIMPLE authentication today) | ||
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### Tangent: on SIMPLE authentication | ||
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`SIMPLE` authentication in HBase today is treated as a special case. My impression is that | ||
this stems from HBase not originally shipping an RPC solution that had any authentication. | ||
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Re-implementing `SIMPLE` authentication such that it also flows through SASL (e.g. via | ||
the `PLAIN` SASL mechanism) would simplify the HBase codebase such that all authentication | ||
occurs via SASL. This was not done for the initial implementation to reduce the scope | ||
of the changeset. Changing `SIMPLE` authentication to use SASL may result in some | ||
performance impact in setting up a new RPC. The same conditional logic to determine | ||
`if (sasl) ... else SIMPLE` logic is propagated in this implementation. | ||
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## Implementation Overview | ||
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HBASE-23347 includes a refactoring of HBase RPC authentication where all current methods | ||
are ported to a new set of interfaces, and all RPC implementations are updated to use | ||
the new interfaces. In the spirit of SASL, the expectation is that users can provide | ||
their own authentication methods at runtime, and HBase should be capable of negotiating | ||
a client who tries to authenticate via that custom authentication method. The implementation | ||
refers to this "bundle" of client and server logic as an "authentication provider". | ||
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### Providers | ||
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One authentication provider includes the following pieces: | ||
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1. Client-side logic (providing a credential) | ||
2. Server-side logic (validating a credential from a client) | ||
3. Client selection logic to choose a provider (from many that may be available) | ||
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A provider's client and server side logic are considered to be one-to-one. A `Foo` client-side provider | ||
should never be used to authenticate against a `Bar` server-side provider. | ||
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We do expect that both clients and servers will have access to multiple providers. A server may | ||
be capable of authenticating via methods which a client is unaware of. A client may attempt to authenticate | ||
against a server which the server does not know how to process. In both cases, the RPC | ||
should fail when a client and server do not have matching providers. The server identifies | ||
client authentication mechanisms via a `byte authCode` (which is already sent today with HBase RPCs). | ||
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A client may also have multiple providers available for it to use in authenticating against | ||
HBase. The client must have some logic to select which provider to use. Because we are | ||
allowing custom providers, we must also allow a custom selection logic such that the | ||
correct provider can be chosen. This is a formalization of the logic already present | ||
in `org.apache.hadoop.hbase.security.token.AuthenticationTokenSelector`. | ||
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To enable the above, we have some new interfaces to support the user extensibility: | ||
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1. `interface SaslAuthenticationProvider` | ||
2. `interface SaslClientAuthenticationProvider extends SaslAuthenticationProvider` | ||
3. `interface SaslServerAuthenticationProvider extends SaslAuthenticationProvider` | ||
4. `interface AuthenticationProviderSelector` | ||
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The `SaslAuthenticationProvider` shares logic which is common to the client and the | ||
server (though, this is up to the developer to guarantee this). The client and server | ||
interfaces each have logic specific to the HBase RPC client and HBase RPC server | ||
codebase, as their name implies. As described above, an implementation | ||
of one `SaslClientAuthenticationProvider` must match exactly one implementation of | ||
`SaslServerAuthenticationProvider`. Each Authentication Provider implementation is | ||
a singleton and is intended to be shared across all RPCs. A provider selector is | ||
chosen per client based on that client's configuration. | ||
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A client authentication provider is uniquely identified among other providers | ||
by the following characteristics: | ||
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1. A name, e.g. "KERBEROS", "TOKEN" | ||
2. A byte (a value between 0 and 255) | ||
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In addition to these attributes, a provider also must define the following attributes: | ||
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3. The SASL mechanism being used. | ||
4. The Hadoop AuthenticationMethod, e.g. "TOKEN", "KERBEROS", "CERTIFICATE" | ||
5. The Token "kind", the name used to identify a TokenIdentifier, e.g. `HBASE_AUTH_TOKEN` | ||
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It is allowed (even expected) that there may be multiple providers that use `TOKEN` authentication. | ||
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N.b. Hadoop requires all `TokenIdentifier` implements to have a no-args constructor and a `ServiceLoader` | ||
entry in their packaging JAR file (e.g. `META-INF/services/org.apache.hadoop.security.token.TokenIdentifier`). | ||
Otherwise, parsing the `TokenIdentifier` on the server-side end of an RPC from a Hadoop `Token` will return | ||
`null` to the caller (often, in the `CallbackHandler` implementation). | ||
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### Factories | ||
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To ease development with these unknown set of providers, there are two classes which | ||
find, instantiate, and cache the provider singletons. | ||
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1. Client side: `class SaslClientAuthenticationProviders` | ||
2. Server side: `class SaslServerAuthenticationProviders` | ||
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These classes use [Java ServiceLoader](https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/util/ServiceLoader.html) | ||
to find implementations available on the classpath. The provided HBase implementations | ||
for the three out-of-the-box implementations all register themselves via the `ServiceLoader`. | ||
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Each class also enables providers to be added via explicit configuration in hbase-site.xml. | ||
This enables unit tests to define custom implementations that may be toy/naive/unsafe without | ||
any worry that these may be inadvertently deployed onto a production HBase cluster. |
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