Configure Kafka for TLS

This page covers procedures for configuring TLS connections Vertica, Kafka, and the scheduler.

This page covers procedures for configuring TLS connections Vertica, Kafka, and the scheduler.

Note that the following example configures TLS for a Kafka server where ssl.client.auth=required, which requires the following:

  • kafka_SSL_Certificate

  • kafka_SSL_PrivateKey_secret

  • kafka_SSL_PrivateKeyPassword_secret

  • A keystore for the Scheduler

If your configuration uses ssl.client.auth=none or ssl.client.auth=requested, these parameters and the scheduler keystore are optional.

Creating certificates for Vertica and clients

The CA certificate in this example is self-signed. In a production environment, you should instead use a trusted CA.

This example uses the same self-signed root CA to sign all of the certificates used by the scheduler, Kafka brokers, and Vertica. If you cannot use the same CA to sign the keys for all of these systems, make sure you include the entire chain of trust in your keystores.

For more information, see Generating TLS certificates and keys.

  1. Generate a private key, root.key.

    $ openssl genrsa -out root.key
    Generating RSA private key, 2048 bit long modulus
    ..............................................................................
    ............................+++
    ...............+++
    e is 65537 (0x10001)
    
  2. Generate a self-signed CA certificate.

    $ openssl req -new -x509 -key root.key -out root.crt
    You are about to be asked to enter information that will be incorporated
    into your certificate request.
    What you are about to enter is what is called a Distinguished Name or a DN.
    There are quite a few fields but you can leave some blank
    For some fields there will be a default value,
    If you enter '.', the field will be left blank.
    -----
    Country Name (2 letter code) [AU]:US
    State or Province Name (full name) [Some-State]:MA
    Locality Name (eg, city) []:Cambridge
    Organization Name (eg, company) [Internet Widgits Pty Ltd]:My Company
    Organizational Unit Name (eg, section) []:
    Common Name (e.g. server FQDN or YOUR name) []:*.mycompany.com
    Email Address []:myemail@mycompany.com
    
  3. Restrict to the owner read/write permissions for root.key and root.crt. Grant read permissions to other groups for root.crt.

    
    $ ls
    root.crt  root.key
    $ chmod 600 root.key
    $ chmod 644 root.crt
    
  4. Generate the server private key, server.key.

    $ openssl genrsa -out server.key
    Generating RSA private key, 2048 bit long modulus
    ....................................................................+++
    ......................................+++
    e is 65537 (0x10001)
    
  5. Create a certificate signing request (CSR) for your CA. Be sure to set the "Common Name" field to a wildcard (asterisk) so the certificate is accepted for all Vertica nodes in the cluster:

    $ openssl req -new -key server.key -out server_reqout.txt
    You are about to be asked to enter information that will be incorporated
    into your certificate request.
    What you are about to enter is what is called a Distinguished Name or a DN.
    There are quite a few fields but you can leave some blank
    For some fields there will be a default value,
    If you enter '.', the field will be left blank.
    -----
    Country Name (2 letter code) [AU]:US
    State or Province Name (full name) [Some-State]:MA
    Locality Name (eg, city) []:Cambridge
    Organization Name (eg, company) [Internet Widgits Pty Ltd]:My Company
    Organizational Unit Name (eg, section) []:
    Common Name (e.g. server FQDN or YOUR name) []:*.mycompany.com
    Email Address []:myemail@mycompany.com
    
    Please enter the following 'extra' attributes
    to be sent with your certificate request
    A challenge password []: server_key_password
    An optional company name []:
    
  6. Sign the server certificate with your CA. This creates the server certificate server.crt.

    $ openssl x509 -req -in server_reqout.txt -days 3650 -sha1 -CAcreateserial -CA root.crt \
        -CAkey root.key -out server.crt
        Signature ok
        subject=/C=US/ST=MA/L=Cambridge/O=My Company/CN=*.mycompany.com/emailAddress=myemail@mycompany.com
        Getting CA Private Key
    
  7. Set the appropriate permissions for the key and certificate.

    $ chmod 600 server.key
    $ chmod 644 server.crt
    

Create a client key and certificate (mutual mode only)

In Mutual Mode, clients and servers verify each other's certificates before establishing a connection. The following procedure creates a client key and certificate to present to Vertica. The certificate must be signed by a CA that Vertica trusts.

The steps for this are identical to those above for creating a server key and certificate for Vertica.

$ openssl genrsa -out client.key
Generating RSA private key, 2048 bit long modulus
................................................................+++
..............................+++
e is 65537 (0x10001)

$ openssl req -new -key client.key -out client_reqout.txt
You are about to be asked to enter information that will be incorporated
into your certificate request.
What you are about to enter is what is called a Distinguished Name or a DN.
There are quite a few fields but you can leave some blank
For some fields there will be a default value,
If you enter '.', the field will be left blank.
-----
Country Name (2 letter code) [AU]:US
State or Province Name (full name) [Some-State]:MA
Locality Name (eg, city) []:Cambridge
Organization Name (eg, company) [Internet Widgits Pty Ltd]:My Company
Organizational Unit Name (eg, section) []:
Common Name (e.g. server FQDN or YOUR name) []:*.mycompany.com
Email Address []:myemail@mycompany.com

Please enter the following 'extra' attributes
to be sent with your certificate request
A challenge password []: server_key_password
An optional company name []:

$ openssl x509 -req -in client_reqout.txt -days 3650 -sha1 -CAcreateserial -CA root.crt \
  -CAkey root.key -out client.crt
Signature ok
subject=/C=US/ST=MA/L=Cambridge/O=My Company/CN=*.mycompany.com/emailAddress=myemail@mycompany.com
Getting CA Private Key

$ chmod 600 client.key
$ chmod 644 client.crt

Set up mutual mode client-server TLS

Configure Vertica for mutual mode

The following keys and certificates must be imported and then distributed to the nodes on your Vertica cluster with TLS Configuration for Mutual Mode:

  • root.key

  • root.crt

  • server.key

  • server.crt

You can view existing keys and certificates by querying CRYPTOGRAPHIC_KEYS and CERTIFICATES.

  1. Import the server and root keys and certificates into Vertica with CREATE KEY and CREATE CERTIFICATE. See Generating TLS certificates and keys for details.

    => CREATE KEY imported_key TYPE 'RSA' AS '-----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----...-----END PRIVATE KEY-----';
    => CREATE CA CERTIFICATE imported_ca AS '-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----...-----END CERTIFICATE-----';
    => CREATE CERTIFICATE imported_cert AS '-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----...-----END CERTIFICATE-----';
    

    In this example, \set is used to retrieve the contents of root.key, root.crt, server.key, and server.crt.

    => \set ca_cert ''''`cat root.crt`''''
    => \set serv_key ''''`cat server.key`''''
    => \set serv_cert ''''`cat server.crt`''''
    
    => CREATE CA CERTIFICATE root_ca AS :ca_cert;
    CREATE CERTIFICATE
    => CREATE KEY server_key TYPE 'RSA' AS :serv_key;
    CREATE KEY
    => CREATE CERTIFICATE server_cert AS :serv_cert;
    CREATE CERTIFICATE
    
  2. Follow the steps for Mutual Mode in Configuring client-server TLS to set the proper TLSMODE and TLS Configuration parameters.

Configure a client for mutual mode

Clients must have their private key, certificate, and CA certificate. The certificate will be presented to Vertica when establishing a connection, and the CA certificate will be used to verify the server certificate from Vertica.

This example configures the vsql client for mutual mode.

  1. Create a .vsql directory in the user's home directory.

    $ mkdir ~/.vsql
    
  2. Copy client.key, client.crt, and root.crt to the vsql directory.

    $ cp client.key client.crt root.crt ~/.vsql
    
  3. Log into Vertica with vsql and query the SESSIONS system table to verify that the connection is using mutual mode:

    $ vsql
    Password: user-password
    Welcome to vsql, the Vertica Analytic Database interactive terminal.
    
    Type:  \h or \? for help with vsql commands
           \g or terminate with semicolon to execute query
           \q to quit
    
    SSL connection (cipher: DHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384, bits: 256, protocol: TLSv1.2)
    
    => select user_name,ssl_state from sessions;
     user_name | ssl_state
    -----------+-----------
     dbadmin   | Mutual
    (1 row)
    

Configure Kafka for TLS

Configure the Kafka brokers

This procedure configures Kafka to use TLS with client connections. You can also configure Kafka to use TLS to communicate between brokers. However, inter-broker TLS has no impact on establishing an encrypted connection between Vertica and Kafka.

  1. Create a truststore file for all of your Kafka brokers, importing your CA certificate. This example uses the self-signed root.crt created above.

    => $ keytool -keystore kafka.truststore.jks -alias CARoot -import \
                   -file root.crt
    Enter keystore password: some_password
    Re-enter new password: some_password
    Owner: EMAILADDRESS=myemail@mycompany.com, CN=*.mycompany.com, O=MyCompany, L=Cambridge, ST=MA, C=US
    Issuer: EMAILADDRESS=myemail@mycompany.com, CN=*.mycompany.com, O=MyCompany, L=Cambridge, ST=MA, C=US
    Serial number: c3f02e87707d01aa
    Valid from: Fri Mar 22 13:37:37 EDT 2019 until: Sun Apr 21 13:37:37 EDT 2019
    Certificate fingerprints:
             MD5:  73:B1:87:87:7B:FE:F1:6E:94:55:FD:AF:5D:D0:C3:0C
             SHA1: C0:69:1C:93:54:21:87:C7:03:93:FE:39:45:66:DE:22:18:7E:CD:94
             SHA256: 23:03:BB:B7:10:12:50:D9:C5:D0:B7:58:97:41:1E:0F:25:A0:DB:
                     D0:1E:7D:F9:6E:60:8F:79:A6:1C:3F:DD:D5
    Signature algorithm name: SHA256withRSA
    Subject Public Key Algorithm: 2048-bit RSA key
    Version: 3
    
    Extensions:
    
    #1: ObjectId: 2.5.29.35 Criticality=false
    AuthorityKeyIdentifier [
    KeyIdentifier [
    0000: 50 69 11 64 45 E9 CC C5   09 EE 26 B5 3E 71 39 7C  Pi.dE.....&.>q9.
    0010: E5 3D 78 16                                        .=x.
    ]
    ]
    
    #2: ObjectId: 2.5.29.19 Criticality=false
    BasicConstraints:[
      CA:true
      PathLen:2147483647
    ]
    
    #3: ObjectId: 2.5.29.14 Criticality=false
    SubjectKeyIdentifier [
    KeyIdentifier [
    0000: 50 69 11 64 45 E9 CC C5   09 EE 26 B5 3E 71 39 7C  Pi.dE.....&.>q9.
    0010: E5 3D 78 16                                        .=x.
    ]
    ]
    
    Trust this certificate? [no]:  yes
    Certificate was added to keystore
    
  2. Create a keystore file for the Kafka broker named kafka01. Each broker's keystore should be unique.

    The keytool command adds the a Subject Alternative Name (SAN) used as a fallback when establishing a TLS connection. Use your Kafka' broker's fully-qualified domain name (FQDN) as the value for the SAN and "What is your first and last name?" prompt.

    In this example, the FQDN is kafka01.example.com. The alias for keytool is set to localhost, so local connections to the broker use TLS.

    $ keytool -keystore kafka01.keystore.jks -alias localhost -validity 365 -genkey -keyalg RSA \
          -ext SAN=DNS:kafka01.mycompany.com
    Enter keystore password: some_password
    Re-enter new password: some_password
    What is your first and last name?
      [Unknown]:  kafka01.mycompany.com
    What is the name of your organizational unit?
      [Unknown]:
    What is the name of your organization?
      [Unknown]: MyCompany
    What is the name of your City or Locality?
      [Unknown]:  Cambridge
    What is the name of your State or Province?
      [Unknown]:  MA
    What is the two-letter country code for this unit?
      [Unknown]:  US
    Is CN=Database Admin, OU=MyCompany, O=Unknown, L=Cambridge, ST=MA, C=US correct?
      [no]:  yes
    
    Enter key password for <localhost>
            (RETURN if same as keystore password):
    
  3. Export the Kafka broker's certificate. In this example, the certificate is exported as kafka01.unsigned.crt.

    $ keytool -keystore kafka01.keystore.jks -alias localhost \
                    -certreq -file kafka01.unsigned.crt
     Enter keystore password: some_password
    
  4. Sign the broker's certificate with the CA certificate.

    $ openssl x509 -req -CA root.crt -CAkey root.key -in kafka01.unsigned.crt \
                 -out kafka01.signed.crt -days 365 -CAcreateserial
    Signature ok
    subject=/C=US/ST=MA/L=Cambridge/O=Unknown/OU=MyCompany/CN=Database Admin
    Getting CA Private Key
    
  5. Import the CA certificate into the broker's keystore.

    $ keytool -keystore kafka01.keystore.jks -alias CARoot -import -file root.crt
    Enter keystore password: some_password
    Owner: EMAILADDRESS=myemail@mycompany.com, CN=*.mycompany.com, O=MyCompany, L=Cambridge, ST=MA, C=US
    Issuer: EMAILADDRESS=myemail@mycompany.com, CN=*.mycompany.com, O=MyCompany, L=Cambridge, ST=MA, C=US
    Serial number: c3f02e87707d01aa
    Valid from: Fri Mar 22 13:37:37 EDT 2019 until: Sun Apr 21 13:37:37 EDT 2019
    Certificate fingerprints:
             MD5:  73:B1:87:87:7B:FE:F1:6E:94:55:FD:AF:5D:D0:C3:0C
             SHA1: C0:69:1C:93:54:21:87:C7:03:93:FE:39:45:66:DE:22:18:7E:CD:94
             SHA256: 23:03:BB:B7:10:12:50:D9:C5:D0:B7:58:97:41:1E:0F:25:A0:DB:D0:1E:7D:F9:6E:60:8F:79:A6:1C:3F:DD:D5
    Signature algorithm name: SHA256withRSA
    Subject Public Key Algorithm: 2048-bit RSA key
    Version: 3
    
    Extensions:
    
    #1: ObjectId: 2.5.29.35 Criticality=false
    AuthorityKeyIdentifier [
    KeyIdentifier [
    0000: 50 69 11 64 45 E9 CC C5   09 EE 26 B5 3E 71 39 7C  Pi.dE.....&.>q9.
    0010: E5 3D 78 16                                        .=x.
    ]
    ]
    
    #2: ObjectId: 2.5.29.19 Criticality=false
    BasicConstraints:[
      CA:true
      PathLen:2147483647
    ]
    
    #3: ObjectId: 2.5.29.14 Criticality=false
    SubjectKeyIdentifier [
    KeyIdentifier [
    0000: 50 69 11 64 45 E9 CC C5   09 EE 26 B5 3E 71 39 7C  Pi.dE.....&.>q9.
    0010: E5 3D 78 16                                        .=x.
    ]
    ]
    
    Trust this certificate? [no]:  yes
    Certificate was added to keystore
    
  6. Import the signed Kafka broker certificate into the keystore.

    $ keytool -keystore kafka01.keystore.jks -alias localhost \
                    -import -file kafka01.signed.crt
    Enter keystore password: some_password
    Owner: CN=Database Admin, OU=MyCompany, O=Unknown, L=Cambridge, ST=MA, C=US
    Issuer: EMAILADDRESS=myemail@mycompany.com, CN=*.mycompany.com, O=MyCompany, L=Cambridge, ST=MA, C=US
    Serial number: b4bba9a1828ecaaf
    Valid from: Tue Mar 26 12:26:34 EDT 2019 until: Wed Mar 25 12:26:34 EDT 2020
    Certificate fingerprints:
                MD5:  17:EA:3E:15:B4:15:E9:93:67:EE:59:C0:4F:D1:4C:01
                SHA1: D5:35:B7:F7:44:7C:D6:B4:56:6F:38:2D:CD:3A:16:44:19:C1:06:B7
                SHA256: 25:8C:46:03:60:A7:4C:10:A8:12:8E:EA:4A:FA:42:1D:A8:C5:FB:65:81:74:CB:46:FD:B1:33:64:F2:A3:46:B0
    Signature algorithm name: SHA256withRSA
    Subject Public Key Algorithm: 2048-bit RSA key
    Version: 1
    Trust this certificate? [no]:  yes
    Certificate was added to keystore
    
  7. If you are not logged into the Kafka broker for which you prepared the keystore, copy the truststore and keystore to it using scp. If you have already decided where to store the keystore and truststore files in the broker's filesystem, you can directly copy them to their final destination. This example just copies them to the root user's home directory temporarily. The next step moves them into their final location.

    $ scp kafka.truststore.jks kafka01.keystore.jks root@kafka01.mycompany.com:
    root@kafka01.mycompany.com's password: root_password
    kafka.truststore.jks                              100% 1048     1.0KB/s   00:00
    kafka01.keystore.jks                              100% 3277     3.2KB/s   00:00
    
  8. Repeat steps 2 through 7 for the remaining Kafka brokers.

Allow Kafka to read the keystore and truststore

If you did not copy the truststore and keystore to directory where Kafka can read them in the previous step, you must copy them to a final location on the broker. You must also allow the user account you use to run Kafka to read these files. The easiest way to ensure the user's access is to give this user ownership of these files.

In this example, Kafka is run by a Linux user kafka. If you use another user to run Kafka, be sure to set the permissions on the truststore and keystore files appropriately.

  1. Log into the Kafka broker as root.

  2. Copy the truststore and keystore to a directory where Kafka can access them. There is no set location for these files: you can choose a directory under /etc, or some other location where configuration files are usually stored. This example copies them from root's home directory to Kafka's configuration directory named /opt/kafka/config/. In your own system, this configuration directory may be in a different location depending on how you installed Kafka.

  3. Copy the truststore and keystore to a directory where Kafka can access them. There is no set location for these files: you can choose a directory under /etc, or some other location where configuration files are usually stored. This example copies them from root's home directory to Kafka's configuration directory named /opt/kafka/config/. In your own system, this configuration directory may be in a different location depending on how you installed Kafka.

    ~# cd /opt/kafka/config/
    /opt/kafka/config# cp /root/kafka01.keystore.jks /root/kafka.truststore.jks .
    
  4. If you aren't logged in as a user account that runs Kafka, change the ownership of the truststore and keystore files. This example changes the ownership from root (which is the user currently logged in) to the kafka user:

    /opt/kafka/config# ls -l
    total 80
    ...
    -rw-r--r-- 1 kafka nogroup 1221 Feb 21  2018 consumer.properties
    -rw------- 1 root  root    3277 Mar 27 08:03 kafka01.keystore.jks
    -rw-r--r-- 1 root  root    1048 Mar 27 08:03 kafka.truststore.jks
    -rw-r--r-- 1 kafka nogroup 4727 Feb 21  2018 log4j.properties
    ...
    /opt/kafka/config# chown kafka kafka01.keystore.jks kafka.truststore.jks
    /opt/kafka/config# ls -l
    total 80
    ...
    -rw-r--r-- 1 kafka nogroup 1221 Feb 21  2018 consumer.properties
    -rw------- 1 kafka root    3277 Mar 27 08:03 kafka01.keystore.jks
    -rw-r--r-- 1 kafka root    1048 Mar 27 08:03 kafka.truststore.jks
    -rw-r--r-- 1 kafka nogroup 4727 Feb 21  2018 log4j.properties
    ...
    
  5. Repeat steps 1 through 3 for the remaining Kafka brokers.

Configure Kafka to use TLS

With the truststore and keystore in place, your next step is to edit the Kafka's server.properties configuration file to tell Kafka to use TLS/SSL encryption. This file is usually stored in the Kafka config directory. The location of this directory depends on how you installed Kafka. In this example, the file is located in /opt/kafka/config.

When editing the files, be sure you do not change their ownership. The best way to ensure Linux does not change the file's ownership is to use su to become the user account that runs Kafka, assuming you are not already logged in as that user:

$ /opt/kafka/config# su -s /bin/bash kafka

The server.properties file contains Kafka broker settings in a property=value format. To configure the Kafka broker to use SSL, alter or add the following property settings:

listeners
Host names and ports on which the Kafka broker listens. If you are not using SSL for connections between brokers, you must supply both a PLANTEXT and SSL option. For example:

listeners=PLAINTEXT://hostname:9092,SSL://hostname:9093

ssl.keystore.location
Absolute path to the keystore file.
ssl.keystore.password
Password for the keystore file.
ssl.key.password
Password for the Kafka broker's key in the keystore. You can make this password different than the keystore password if you choose.
ssl.truststore.location
Location of the truststore file.
ssl.truststore.password
Password to access the truststore.
ssl.enabled.protocols
TLS/SSL protocols that Kafka allows clients to use.
ssl.client.auth
Specifies whether SSL authentication is required or optional. The most secure setting for this setting is required to verify the client's identity.

This example configures Kafka to verify client identities via SSL authentication. It does not use SSL to communicate with other brokers, so the server.properties file defines both SSL and PLAINTEXT listener ports. It does not supply a host name for listener ports which tells Kafka to listen on the default network interface.

The lines added to the kafka01 broker's copy of server.properties for this configuration are:

listeners=PLAINTEXT://:9092,SSL://:9093
ssl.keystore.location=/opt/kafka/config/kafka01.keystore.jks
ssl.keystore.password=vertica
ssl.key.password=vertica
ssl.truststore.location=/opt/kafka/config/kafka.truststore.jks
ssl.truststore.password=vertica
ssl.enabled.protocols=TLSv1.2,TLSv1.1,TLSv1
ssl.client.auth=required

You must make these changes to the server.properties file on all of your brokers.

After making your changes to your broker's server.properties files, restart Kafka. How you restart Kafka depends on your installation:

  • If Kafka is running as part of a Hadoop cluster, you can usually restart it from within whatever interface you use to control Hadoop (such as Ambari).

  • If you installed Kafka directly, you can restart it either by directly running the kafka-server-stop.sh and kafka-server-start.sh scripts or via the Linux system's service control commands (such as systemctl). You must run this command on each broker.

Test the configuration

If you have not configured client authentication, you can quickly test whether Kafka can access its keystore by running the command:

$ openssl s_client -debug -connect broker_host_name:9093 -tls1

If Kafka is able to access its keystore, this command will output a dump of the broker's certificate (exit with CTRL+C):

=> # openssl s_client -debug -connect kafka01.mycompany.com:9093 -tls1
CONNECTED(00000003)
write to 0xa4e4f0 [0xa58023] (197 bytes => 197 (0xC5))
0000 - 16 03 01 00 c0 01 00 00-bc 03 01 76 85 ed f0 fe   ...........v....
0010 - 60 60 7e 78 9d d4 a8 f7-e6 aa 5c 80 b9 a7 37 61   ``~x......\...7a
0020 - 8e 04 ac 03 6d 52 86 f5-84 4b 5c 00 00 62 c0 14   ....mR...K\..b..
0030 - c0 0a 00 39 00 38 00 37-00 36 00 88 00 87 00 86   ...9.8.7.6......
0040 - 00 85 c0 0f c0 05 00 35-00 84 c0 13 c0 09 00 33   .......5.......3
0050 - 00 32 00 31 00 30 00 9a-00 99 00 98 00 97 00 45   .2.1.0.........E
0060 - 00 44 00 43 00 42 c0 0e-c0 04 00 2f 00 96 00 41   .D.C.B...../...A
0070 - c0 11 c0 07 c0 0c c0 02-00 05 00 04 c0 12 c0 08   ................
0080 - 00 16 00 13 00 10 00 0d-c0 0d c0 03 00 0a 00 ff   ................
0090 - 01 00 00 31 00 0b 00 04-03 00 01 02 00 0a 00 1c   ...1............
00a0 - 00 1a 00 17 00 19 00 1c-00 1b 00 18 00 1a 00 16   ................
00b0 - 00 0e 00 0d 00 0b 00 0c-00 09 00 0a 00 23 00 00   .............#..
00c0 - 00 0f 00 01 01                                    .....
read from 0xa4e4f0 [0xa53ad3] (5 bytes => 5 (0x5))
0000 - 16 03 01 08 fc                                    .....
             . . .

The above method is not conclusive, however; it only tells you if Kafka is able to find its keystore.

The best test of whether Kafka is able to accept TLS connections is to configure the command-line Kafka producer and consumer. In order to configure these tools, you must first create a client keystore. These steps are identical to creating a broker keystore.

  1. Create the client keystore:

    keytool -keystore client.keystore.jks -alias localhost -validity 365 -genkey -keyalg RSA -ext SAN=DNS:fqdn_of_client_system
    
  2. Respond to the "What is your first and last name?" with the FQDN of the system you will use to run the producer and/or consumer. Answer the rest of the prompts with the details of your organization.

  3. Export the client certificate so it can be signed:

    keytool -keystore client.keystore.jks -alias localhost -certreq -file client.unsigned.cert
    
  4. Sign the client certificate with the root CA:

    openssl x509 -req -CA root.crt -CAkey root.key -in client.unsigned.cert -out client.signed.cert \
            -days 365 -CAcreateserial
    
  5. Add the root CA to keystore:

    keytool -keystore client.keystore.jks -alias CARoot -import -file root.crt
    
  6. Add the signed client certificate to the keystore:

    keytool -keystore client.keystore.jks -alias localhost -import -file client.signed.cert
    
  7. Copy the keystore to a location where you will use it. For example, you could choose to copy it to the same directory where you copied the keystore for the Kafka broker. If you choose to copy it to some other location, or intend to use some other user to run the command-line clients, be sure to add a copy of the truststore file you created for the brokers. Clients can reuse this truststore file for authenticating the Kafka brokers because the same CA is used to sign all of the certificates. Also set the file's ownership and permissions accordingly.

Next, you must create a properties file (similar to the broker's server.properties file) that configures the command-line clients to use TLS. For a client running on the Kafka broker named kafka01, your configuration file could would look like this:

security.protocol=SSL
ssl.truststore.location=/opt/kafka/config/kafka.truststore.jks
ssl.truststore.password=trustore_password
ssl.keystore.location=/opt/kafka/config/client.keystore.jks
ssl.keystore.password=keystore_password
ssl.key.password=key_password
ssl.enabled.protocols=TLSv1.2,TLSv1.1,TLSv1
ssl.client.auth=required

This property file assumes the keystore file is located in the Kafka configuration directory.

Finally, you can run the command line producer or consumer to ensure they can connect and process data. You supply these clients the properties file you just created. The following example assumes you stored the properties file in the Kafka configuration directory, and that Kafka is installed in /opt/kafka:

~# cd /opt/kafka


/opt/kafka# bin/kafka-console-producer.sh --broker-list kafka01.mycompany.com:9093  \
                                          --topic test --producer.config config/client.properties
>test
>test again
>More testing. These messages seem to be getting through!
^D
/opt/kafka# bin/kafka-console-consumer.sh --bootstrap-server kafaka01.mycompany.com:9093  --topic test \
                                          --consumer.config config/client.properties --from-beginning
test
test again
More testing. These messages seem to be getting through!
^C
Processed a total of 3 messages

Loading data from Kafka

After you configure Kafka to accept TLS connections, verify that you can directly load data from it into Vertica. You should perform this step even if you plan to create a scheduler to automatically stream data.

You can choose to create a separate key and certificate for directly loading data from Kafka. This example re-uses the key and certificate created for the Vertica server in part 2 of this example.

You directly load data from Kafka by using the KafkaSource data source function with the COPY statement (see Manually consume data from Kafka). The KafkaSource function creates the connection to Kafka, so it needs a key, certificate, and related passwords to create an encrypted connection. You pass this information via session parameters. See Kafka user-defined session parameters for a list of these parameters.

The easiest way to get the key and certificate into the parameters is by first reading them into vsql variables. You get their contents by using back quotes to read the file contents via the Linux shell. Then you set the session parameters from the variables. Before setting the session parameters, increase the MaxSessionUDParameterSize session parameter to add enough storage space in the session variables for the key and the certificates. They can be larger than the default size limit for session variables (1000 bytes).

The following example reads the server key and certificate and the root CA from the a directory named /home/dbadmin/SSL. Because the server's key password is not saved in a file, the example sets it in a Linux environment variable named KVERTICA_PASS before running vsql. The example sets MaxSessionUDParameterSize to 100000 before setting the session variables. Finally, it enables TLS for the Kafka connection and streams data from the topic named test.

$ export KVERTICA_PASS=server_key_password
$ vsql
Password:
Welcome to vsql, the Vertica Analytic Database interactive terminal.

Type:  \h or \? for help with vsql commands
       \g or terminate with semicolon to execute query
       \q to quit

SSL connection (cipher: DHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384, bits: 256, protocol: TLSv1.2)

=> \set cert '\''`cat /home/dbadmin/SSL/server.crt`'\''
=> \set pkey '\''`cat /home/dbadmin/SSL/server.key`'\''
=> \set ca '\''`cat /home/dbadmin/SSL/root.crt`'\''
=> \set pass '\''`echo $KVERTICA_PASS`'\''
=> alter session set MaxSessionUDParameterSize=100000;
ALTER SESSION
=> ALTER SESSION SET UDPARAMETER kafka_SSL_Certificate=:cert;
ALTER SESSION
=> ALTER SESSION SET UDPARAMETER kafka_SSL_PrivateKey_secret=:pkey;
ALTER SESSION
=> ALTER SESSION SET UDPARAMETER kafka_SSL_PrivateKeyPassword_secret=:pass;
ALTER SESSION
=> ALTER SESSION SET UDPARAMETER kafka_SSL_CA=:ca;
ALTER SESSION
=> ALTER SESSION SET UDPARAMETER kafka_Enable_SSL=1;
ALTER SESSION
=> CREATE TABLE t (a VARCHAR);
CREATE TABLE
=> COPY t SOURCE KafkaSource(brokers='kafka01.mycompany.com:9093',
                             stream='test|0|-2', stop_on_eof=true,
                             duration=interval '5 seconds')
          PARSER KafkaParser();
 Rows Loaded
-------------
           3
(1 row)

=> SELECT * FROM t;
                            a
---------------------------------------------------------
 test again
 More testing. These messages seem to be getting through!
 test

(3 rows)

Configure the scheduler

The final piece of the configuration is to set up the scheduler to use SSL when communicating with Kafka (and optionally with Vertica). When the scheduler runs a COPY command to get data from Kafka, it uses its own key and certificate to authenticate with Kafka. If you choose to have the scheduler use TLS/SSL to connect to Vertica, it can reuse the same keystore and truststore to make this connection.

Create a truststore and keystore for the scheduler

Because the scheduler is a separate component, it must have its own key and certificate. The scheduler runs in Java and uses the JDBC interface to connect to Vertica. Therefore, you must create a keystore (when ssl.client.auth=required ) and truststore for it to use when making a TLS-encrypted connection to Vertica.

Keep in mind that creating a keystore is optional if your Kafka server sets ssl.client.auth to none or requested.

This process is similar to creating the truststores and keystores for Kafka brokers. The main difference is using the the -dname option for keytool to set the Common Name (CN) for the key to a domain wildcard. Using this setting allows the key and certificate to match any host in the network. This option is especially useful if you run multiple schedulers on different servers to provide redundancy. The schedulers can use the same key and certificate, no matter which server they are running on in your domain.

  1. Create a truststore file for the scheduler. Add the CA certificate that you used to sign the keystore of the Kafka cluster and Vertica cluster. If you are using more than one CA to sign your certificates, add all of the CAs you used.

    $ keytool -keystore scheduler.truststore.jks -alias CARoot -import \
                   -file root.crt
    Enter keystore password: some_password
    Re-enter new password: some_password
    Owner: EMAILADDRESS=myemail@mycompany.com, CN=*.mycompany.com, O=MyCompany, L=Cambridge, ST=MA, C=US
    Issuer: EMAILADDRESS=myemail@mycompany.com, CN=*.mycompany.com, O=MyCompany, L=Cambridge, ST=MA, C=US
    Serial number: c3f02e87707d01aa
    Valid from: Fri Mar 22 13:37:37 EDT 2019 until: Sun Apr 21 13:37:37 EDT 2019
    Certificate fingerprints:
             MD5:  73:B1:87:87:7B:FE:F1:6E:94:55:FD:AF:5D:D0:C3:0C
             SHA1: C0:69:1C:93:54:21:87:C7:03:93:FE:39:45:66:DE:22:18:7E:CD:94
             SHA256: 23:03:BB:B7:10:12:50:D9:C5:D0:B7:58:97:41:1E:0F:25:A0:DB:
                     D0:1E:7D:F9:6E:60:8F:79:A6:1C:3F:DD:D5
    Signature algorithm name: SHA256withRSA
    Subject Public Key Algorithm: 2048-bit RSA key
    Version: 3
    
    Extensions:
    
    #1: ObjectId: 2.5.29.35 Criticality=false
    AuthorityKeyIdentifier [
    KeyIdentifier [
    0000: 50 69 11 64 45 E9 CC C5   09 EE 26 B5 3E 71 39 7C  Pi.dE.....&.>q9.
    0010: E5 3D 78 16                                        .=x.
    ]
    ]
    
    #2: ObjectId: 2.5.29.19 Criticality=false
    BasicConstraints:[
      CA:true
      PathLen:2147483647
    ]
    
    #3: ObjectId: 2.5.29.14 Criticality=false
    SubjectKeyIdentifier [
    KeyIdentifier [
    0000: 50 69 11 64 45 E9 CC C5   09 EE 26 B5 3E 71 39 7C  Pi.dE.....&.>q9.
    0010: E5 3D 78 16                                        .=x.
    ]
    ]
    
    Trust this certificate? [no]:  yes
    Certificate was added to keystore
    
  2. Initialize the keystore, passing it a wildcard host name as the Common Name. The alias parameter in this command is important, as you use it later to identify the key the scheduler must use when creating SSL conections:

    keytool -keystore scheduler.keystore.jks -alias vsched -validity 365 -genkey \
            -keyalg RSA  -dname CN=*.mycompany.com
    
  3. Export the scheduler's key so you can sign it with the root CA:

    $ keytool -keystore scheduler.keystore.jks -alias vsched -certreq \
            -file scheduler.unsigned.cert
    
  4. Sign the scheduler key with the root CA:

    $ openssl x509 -req -CA root.crt -CAkey root.key -in scheduler.unsigned.cert \
            -out scheduler.signed.cert -days 365 -CAcreateserial
    
  5. Re-import the scheduler key into the keystore:

    $ keytool -keystore scheduler.keystore.jks -alias localhost -import -file scheduler.signed.cert
    

Set environment variable VKCONFIG_JVM_OPTS

You must pass several settings to the JDBC interface of the Java Virtual Machine (JVM) that runs the scheduler. These settings tell the JDBC driver where to find the keystore and truststore, as well as the key's password. The easiest way to pass in these settings is to set a Linux environment variable named VKCONFIG_JVM_OPTS. As it starts, the scheduler checks this environment variable and passes any properties defined in it to the JVM.

The properties that you need to set are:

  • javax.net.ssl.keystore: the absolute path to the keystore file to use.

  • javax.net.ssl.keyStorePassword: the password for the scheduler's key.

  • javax.net.ssl.trustStore: The absolute path to the truststore file.

The Linux command line to set the environment variable is:

export VKCONFIG_JVM_OPTS="$VKCONFIG_JVM_OPTS -Djavax.net.ssl.trustStore=/path/to/truststore \
                          -Djavax.net.ssl.keyStore=/path/to/keystore \
                          -Djavax.net.ssl.keyStorePassword=keystore_password"

For example, suppose the scheduler's truststore and keystore are located in the directory /home/dbadmin/SSL. Then you could use the following command to set the VKCONFIG_JVM_OPTS variable:

$ export VKCONFIG_JVM_OPTS="$VKCONFIG_JVM_OPTS \
                           -Djavax.net.ssl.trustStore=/home/dbadmin/SSL/scheduler.truststore.jks \
                           -Djavax.net.ssl.keyStore=/home/dbadmin/SSL/scheduler.keystore.jks \
                           -Djavax.net.ssl.keyStorePassword=key_password"

To ensure that this variable is always set, add the command to the ~/.bashrc or other startup file of the user account that runs the scheduler.

If you require TLS on the JDBC connection to Vertica, add TLSmode=require to the JDBC URL that the scheduler uses. The easiest way to add this is to use the scheduler's --jdbc-url option. Assuming that you use a configuration file for your scheduler, you can add this line to it:

--jdbc-url=jdbc:vertica://VerticaHost:portNumber/databaseName?user=username&password=password&TLSmode=require

For more information about using the JDBC with Vertica, see Java.

Enable TLS in the scheduler configuration

Lastly, enable TLS. Every time you run vkconfig, you must pass it the following options:

--enable-ssl
true, to enable the scheduler to use SSL when connecting to Kafka.
--ssl-ca-alias
Alias for the CA you used to sign your Kafka broker's keys. This must match the value you supplied to the -alias argument of the keytool command to import the CA into the truststore.
--ssl-key-alias
Alias assigned to the schedule key. This value must match the value you supplied to the -alias you supplied to the keytool command when creating the scheduler's keystore.
--ssl-key-password
Password for the scheduler key.

See Common vkconfig script options for details of these options. For convenience and security, add these options to a configuration file that you pass to vkconfig. Otherwise, you run the risk of exposing the key password via the process list which can be viewed by other users on the same system. See Configuration File Format for more information on setting up a configuration file.

Add the following to the scheduler configuration file to allow it to use the keystore and truststore and enable TLS when connecting to Vertica:

enable-ssl=true
ssl-ca-alias=CAroot
ssl-key-alias=vsched
ssl-key-password=vertica
jdbc-url=jdbc:vertica://VerticaHost:portNumber/databaseName?user=username&password=password&TLSmode=require

Start the scheduler

Once you have configured the scheduler to use SSL, start it and verify that it can load data. For example, to start the scheduler with a configuration file named weblog.conf, use the command:

$ nohup vkconfig launch --conf weblog.conf >/dev/null 2>&1 &