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ScyllaDB Java Driver is available under the Apache v2 License. ScyllaDB Java Driver is a fork of DataStax Java Driver. See Copyright here.
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Secure the traffic between the driver and Cassandra.
advanced.ssl-engine-factory
in the configuration; defaults to none, also available:
config-based, or write your own.
or programmatically: CqlSession.builder().withSslEngineFactory() or CqlSession.builder().withSslContext().
There are two aspects to SSL:
client-to-node encryption, where the traffic is encrypted, and the client verifies the identity of the Cassandra nodes it connects to;
optionally, client certificate authentication, where Cassandra nodes also verify the identity of the client.
This section describes the driver-side configuration; it assumes that you’ve already configured SSL in Cassandra:
the Cassandra documentation covers a basic approach with self-signed certificates, which is fine for development and tests.
this blog post details a more advanced solution based on a Certificate Authority (CA).
This is required for client-to-node encryption.
If you’re using self-signed certificates, you need to export the public part of each node’s certificate from that node’s keystore:
keytool -export -alias cassandra -file cassandranode0.cer -keystore .keystore
Then add all public certificates to the client truststore:
keytool -import -v -trustcacerts -alias <cassandra_node0> -file cassandranode0.cer -keystore client.truststore
keytool -import -v -trustcacerts -alias <cassandra_node1> -file cassandranode1.cer -keystore client.truststore
...
If you’re using a Certificate Authority, the client truststore only needs to contain the CA’s certificate:
keytool -import -v -trustcacerts -alias CARoot -file ca.cer -keystore client.truststore
If you also intend to use client certificate authentication, generate the public and private key pair for the client:
keytool -genkey -keyalg RSA -alias client -keystore client.keystore
If you’re using self-signed certificates, extract the public part of the client certificate, and import it in the truststore of each Cassandra node:
keytool -export -alias client -file client.cer -keystore client.keystore
keytool -import -v -trustcacerts -alias client -file client.cer -keystore server.truststore
If you’re using a CA, sign the client certificate with it (see the blog post linked at the top of this page). Then the nodes’ truststores only need to contain the CA’s certificate (which should already be the case if you’ve followed the steps for inter-node encryption).
By default, the driver’s SSL support is based on the JDK’s built-in implementation: JSSE (Java Secure Socket Extension),.
To enable it, you need to define an engine factory in the configuration.
datastax-java-driver {
advanced.ssl-engine-factory {
class = DefaultSslEngineFactory
# This property is optional. If it is not present, the driver won't explicitly enable cipher
# suites on the engine, which according to the JDK documentations results in "a minimum quality
# of service".
// cipher-suites = [ "TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA", "TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA" ]
# Whether or not to require validation that the hostname of the server certificate's common
# name matches the hostname of the server being connected to. If not set, defaults to true.
// hostname-validation = true
# The locations and passwords used to access truststore and keystore contents.
# These properties are optional. If either truststore-path or keystore-path are specified,
# the driver builds an SSLContext from these files. If neither option is specified, the
# default SSLContext is used, which is based on system property configuration.
// truststore-path = /path/to/client.truststore
// truststore-password = password123
// keystore-path = /path/to/client.keystore
// keystore-password = password123
}
}
Alternatively to storing keystore and truststore information in your configuration, you can instead use JSSE system properties:
-Djavax.net.ssl.trustStore=/path/to/client.truststore
-Djavax.net.ssl.trustStorePassword=password123
# If you're using client authentication:
-Djavax.net.ssl.keyStore=/path/to/client.keystore
-Djavax.net.ssl.keyStorePassword=password123
If you need more control than what system properties allow, you need to write your own engine
factory. If you just need specific configuration on the SSLEngine
, you can extend the default
factory and override newSslEngine
. For example, here is how you would configure custom
AlgorithmConstraints
:
public class CustomSslEngineFactory extends DefaultSslEngineFactory {
public CustomSslEngineFactory(DriverContext context) {
super(context);
}
@Override
public SSLEngine newSslEngine(SocketAddress remoteEndpoint) {
SSLEngine engine = super.newSslEngine(remoteEndpoint);
SSLParameters parameters = engine.getSSLParameters();
parameters.setAlgorithmConstraints(...);
engine.setSSLParameters(parameters);
return engine;
}
}
Then declare your custom implementation in the configuration:
datastax-java-driver {
advanced.ssl-engine-factory {
class = com.mycompany.CustomSslEngineFactory
}
}
You can also provide a factory instance programmatically. This will take precedence over the configuration:
SslEngineFactory yourFactory = ...
CqlSession session = CqlSession.builder()
.withSslEngineFactory(yourFactory)
.build();
There is also a convenience shortcut if you just want to use an existing javax.net.ssl.SSLContext
:
SSLContext sslContext = ...
CqlSession session = CqlSession.builder()
.withSslContext(sslContext)
.build();
Netty supports native integration with OpenSSL / boringssl. The driver does not provide this out of the box, but with a bit of custom development it is fairly easy to add. See SslHandlerFactory in the developer docs.
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ScyllaDB Java Driver is available under the Apache v2 License. ScyllaDB Java Driver is a fork of DataStax Java Driver. See Copyright here.