Add security to a running cluster in Confluent Platform¶
Important
As of Confluent Platform 7.5, ZooKeeper is deprecated for new deployments. Confluent recommends KRaft mode for new deployments. For more information, see KRaft Overview for Confluent Platform.
This topic describes how to add security (TLS or SASL) to a running ZooKeeper-based cluster.
Adding security to brokers and clients running TLS or SASL authentication¶
You can secure a running cluster using one or more of the supported protocols. This is done in phases:
- Incrementally restart the cluster nodes to open additional secured port(s).
- Restart clients using the secured rather than
PLAINTEXT
port (assuming you are securing the client-broker connection). - Incrementally restart the cluster again to enable broker-to-broker security (if this is required).
- A final incremental restart to close the
PLAINTEXT
port.
The specific steps for configuring security protocols are described in the respective sections for TLS and SASL. Follow these steps to enable security for your desired protocol(s).
The security implementation lets you configure different protocols for both
broker-client and broker-broker communication. These must be enabled in separate
restarts. A PLAINTEXT
port must be left open throughout so brokers and/or
clients can continue to communicate.
When performing an incremental restart, take into consideration the recommendations for doing rolling restarts to avoid downtime for end users.
For example, if you want to encrypt both broker-client and broker-broker communication with TLS:
In the first incremental restart, open a TLS port on each node:
listeners=PLAINTEXT://broker1:9091,SSL://broker1:9092
Note
In Kafka 1.1 and later, you can update some broker configurations without restarting the broker by adding or removing listeners dynamically. When adding a new listener, provide the security configuration of the listener using the listener prefix
listener.name.{listenerName}
. If the new listener uses SASL, then provide the JAAS configuration propertysasl.jaas.config
with the listener and mechanism prefix. For more details, refer to JAAS.Then restart the clients, changing their configuration to point at the newly-opened, secured port:
bootstrap.servers=[broker1:9092,...] security.protocol=SSL ...etc
For more details, refer to Encrypt with TLS in Confluent Platform.
In the second incremental server restart, instruct Apache Kafka® to use TLS as the broker-broker protocol (which will use the same TLS port):
listeners=PLAINTEXT://broker1:9091,SSL://broker1:9092 security.inter.broker.protocol=SSL
In the final restart, secure the cluster by closing the
PLAINTEXT
port:listeners=SSL://broker1:9092 security.inter.broker.protocol=SSL
Alternatively, you might choose to open multiple ports so that different protocols can be used for broker-broker and broker-client communication. If you want to use TLS encryption throughout (i.e. for broker-broker and broker-client communication), but also want to add SASL authentication to the broker-client connection:
Open two additional ports during the first restart:
listeners=PLAINTEXT://broker1:9091,SSL://broker1:9092,SASL_SSL://broker1:9093
Again, restart the clients, changing their configuration to point at the newly-opened, SASL and TLS secured port:
bootstrap.servers=[broker1:9093,...] security.protocol=SASL_SSL ...etc
For more details, refer to Authenticate with SASL using JAAS in Confluent Platform.
The second server restart would switch the cluster to use encrypted broker-broker communication using the TLS port you previously opened on port 9092:
listeners=PLAINTEXT://broker1:9091,SSL://broker1:9092,SASL_SSL://broker1:9093 security.inter.broker.protocol=SSL
The final restart secures the cluster by closing the
PLAINTEXT
port:listeners=SSL://broker1:9092,SASL_SSL://broker1:9093 security.inter.broker.protocol=SSL
Adding security to a running ZooKeeper cluster¶
This section describes how to add SASL (with or without TLS) or mTLS security to a running ZooKeeper cluster.
Adding SASL security to ZooKeeper¶
If you are running Kafka with security disabled and you want to make the cluster secure, then you must perform the following steps to enable ZooKeeper authentication with minimal disruption to your operations:
Note
Migrating ZooKeeper security when the Kafka cluster is not running (no controller node in ZooKeeper) results in a controller node being created, but populated with a null value. In this scenario, leader election may not work properly in subsequent starts of the Kafka cluster.
In
zookeeper.properties
, add the authentication provider to enable ZooKeeper security:authProvider.sasl=org.apache.zookeeper.server.auth.SASLAuthenticationProvider
Export the ZooKeeper JAAS file before restarting ZooKeeper:
KAFKA_OPTS=-Djava.security.auth.login.config=<path>/zookeeper_server_jaas.conf
The content of
zookeeper_server_jaas.conf
should look like the following:Server { org.apache.zookeeper.server.auth.DigestLoginModule required user_super="adminsecret" user_bob="bobsecret"; };
Perform ZooKeeper rolling restarts with the JAAS login file shown above; this enables brokers to authenticate.
Create the JAAS file for the brokers to authenticate with ZooKeeper. Add the Client information to the broker JAAS configuration and then export the JAAS file:
export KAFKA_OPTS=-Djava.security.auth.login.config=<path>/kafka_server_jaas.conf
The content of the broker JAAS file (
kafka_server_jaas.conf
) should look like the following:Client { org.apache.zookeeper.server.auth.DigestLoginModule required username="bob" password="bobsecret"; };
Perform a rolling restart of brokers, this time setting the configuration parameter
zookeeper.set.acl
to true, which enables the use of secure ACLs when creating znodes.Execute the ZkSecurityMigrator tool using the script:
zookeeper-security-migration
withzookeeper.acl
set tosecure
. This tool traverses the corresponding sub-trees, changing the ACLs of the znodes.
If you wish to validate that security has been enabled between the broker and ZooKeeper:
Export the broker JAAS configuration:
export KAFKA_OPTS=-Djava.security.auth.login.config=<path>/kafka_server_jaas.conf
Create a new topic named
test
using thekafka-topic
command:kafka-topics --bootstrap-server localhost:9092 --create --topic test --partitions 2 --replication-factor 2
Log in to the
zookeeper-shell
and check the ACL of the newly-created znode, which should have the ACL enabled:zookeeper-shell <zk_host>:<zk_port> [zk: localhost:12181(CONNECTED) 9] getAcl /config/topics/test 'world,'anyone : r 'sasl,'bob : cdrwa
If you want to turn off authentication in a secure cluster:
- Perform a rolling restart of brokers setting the JAAS login file, which
enables brokers to authenticate, but setting
zookeeper.set.acl
tofalse
. At the end of the rolling restart, brokers stop creating znodes with secure ACLs, but are still able to authenticate and manipulate all znodes. - Run the ZkSecurityMigrator tool using the script
zookeeper-security-migration
withzookeeper.acl
set tounsecure
. This tool traverses the corresponding sub-trees, changing the ACLs of the znodes. - Perform a second rolling restart of brokers, this time omitting the system property that sets the JAAS login file.
Here is an example of how to run the migration tool:
zookeeper-security-migration --zookeeper.acl=secure --zookeeper.connect=localhost:2181
Run this command to see the full list of parameters:
zookeeper-security-migration --help
Configuring TLS encryption for SASL security¶
To configure TLS encryption for SASL security:
In
zookeeper.properties
, add the authentication provider to enable ZooKeeper security:authProvider.sasl=org.apache.zookeeper.server.auth.SASLAuthenticationProvider
Optionally, to enable TLS encryption, specify the following configurations (be sure to use camel case for
keyStore
andtrustStore
). You will have both aclientPort
and asecureClientPort
at this point:authProvider.x509=org.apache.zookeeper.server.auth.X509AuthenticationProvider secureClientPort=2182 serverCnxnFactory=org.apache.zookeeper.server.NettyServerCnxnFactory ssl.keyStore.location=<path-to-zookeeper-keystore> ssl.keyStore.password=<zookeeper-keystore-password> ssl.trustStore.location=<path-to-zookeeper-truststore> ssl.trustStore.password=<zookeeper-truststore-password> ssl.clientAuth=none
Important
ZooKeeper does not support setting the key password in the ZooKeeper server keystore to a value different from the keystore password itself. Be sure to set the key password to be the same as the keystore password.
Export the ZooKeeper JAAS file before restarting ZooKeeper:
KAFKA_OPTS=-Djava.security.auth.login.config=<path>/zookeeper_server_jaas.conf
The content of
zookeeper_server_jaas.conf
should look like the following:Server { org.apache.zookeeper.server.auth.DigestLoginModule required user_super="adminsecret" user_bob="bobsecret"; };
Perform ZooKeeper rolling restarts with the JAAS login file shown above; this enables brokers to authenticate.
Create the JAAS file for the brokers to authenticate with ZooKeeper. Add the Client information to the broker JAAS configuration and then export the JAAS file:
export KAFKA_OPTS=-Djava.security.auth.login.config=<path-to-kafka_server_jaas.conf>
The content of the broker JAAS file (
kafka_server_jaas.conf
) should look like the following:Client { org.apache.zookeeper.server.auth.DigestLoginModule required username="bob" password="bobsecret"; };
Optionally, if enabling TLS encryption to ZooKeeper, add these broker configurations
(do not use camel case in truststore
):
# Connect to the ZooKeeper port configured for TLS
zookeeper.connect=zk1:2182,zk2:2182,zk3:2182
# Required to use TLS to ZooKeeper (default is false)
zookeeper.ssl.client.enable=true
# Required to use TLS to ZooKeeper
zookeeper.clientCnxnSocket=org.apache.zookeeper.ClientCnxnSocketNetty
# Define trust store to use TLS to ZooKeeper; ignored unless zookeeper.ssl.client.enable=true
zookeeper.ssl.truststore.location=<path-to-kafka-truststore>
zookeeper.ssl.truststore.password=<kafka-truststore-password>
- Perform a rolling restart of brokers, this time setting
zookeeper.set.acl=true
, which enables the use of secure ACLs when creating znodes. - Execute the ZkSecurityMigrator tool using the scriptv
zookeeper-security-migration
withzookeeper.acl
set tosecure
. This tool traverses the corresponding sub-trees, changing the ACLs of the znodes.
Optionally, if enabling TLS encryption to ZooKeeper, connect to the TLS-encrypted
port on ZooKeeper (for example, 2182) and specify --zk-tls-config-file <path-to-tls-configs>
(note the double-dash) with this content for the file (do not use camel case
in truststore
):
zookeeper.ssl.client.enable=true
zookeeper.clientCnxnSocket=org.apache.zookeeper.ClientCnxnSocketNetty
zookeeper.ssl.truststore.location=<path-to-kafka-truststore>
zookeeper.ssl.truststore.password=<kafka-truststore-password>
To validate that security has been enabled between the broker and ZooKeeper:
Export the broker JAAS configuration:
export KAFKA_OPTS=-Djava.security.auth.login.config=<path-to-kafka_server_jaas.conf>
Create a new topic named
test
:kafka-topics --bootstrap-server <kafka-host>:<kafka-port> --create --topic test --partitions 2 --replication-factor 2
Log in to the
zookeeper-shell
and check the ACL of the newly-created znode, which should have the ACL enabled:zookeeper-shell <zk_host>:<zk_port> [zk: localhost:12181(CONNECTED) 9] getAcl /config/topics/test 'world,'anyone : r 'sasl,'bob : cdrwa
Optionally, if enabling TLS encryption to ZooKeeper you can connect to the TLS port
with zookeeper-shell
by including the command line flags -zk-tls-config-file <path-to-tls-configs>
(use a single dash) with this content for the file (do not use camel case in
truststore
):
zookeeper.ssl.client.enable=true
zookeeper.clientCnxnSocket=org.apache.zookeeper.ClientCnxnSocketNetty
zookeeper.ssl.truststore.location=<path-to-kafka-truststore>
zookeeper.ssl.truststore.password=<kafka-truststore-password>
If you have enabled TLS encryption, then you can now remove the clientPort
configuration in ZooKeeper.
Adding mTLS security to ZooKeeper¶
To add mTLS security to a running cluster with minimal disruption to operations:
Enable SASL and/or mTLS authentication on ZooKeeper. If enabling mTLS, you would have both a non-TLS port and a TLS port, as shown here:
clientPort=2181 secureClientPort=2182 serverCnxnFactory=org.apache.zookeeper.server.NettyServerCnxnFactory authProvider.x509=org.apache.zookeeper.server.auth.X509AuthenticationProvider ssl.keyStore.location=<path-to-zookeeper-keystore> ssl.keyStore.password=<zookeeper-keystore-password> ssl.trustStore.location=<path-to-zookeeper-truststore> ssl.trustStore.password=<zookeeper-truststore-password>
Important
ZooKeeper does not support setting the key password in the ZooKeeper server keystore to a value different from the keystore password itself. Be sure to set the key password to be the same as the keystore password.
Perform a rolling restart of brokers.
Specify the JAAS login file and/or defining ZooKeeper mTLS configurations (including connections to the TLS-enabled ZooKeeper port) as required. This enables brokers to authenticate to ZooKeeper.
At the end of the rolling restart, brokers can manipulate znodes with strict ACLs, but will not create znodes with those ACLs. Note that unlike ZooKeeper, Kafka does not use camel case names for TLS-related configurations (for example, Kafka uses
zookeeper.ssl.keystore.location
, while ZooKeeper usesssl.keyStore.location
.# Connect to the ZooKeeper port configured for TLS zookeeper.connect=zk1:2182,zk2:2182,zk3:2182 # Required to use TLS to ZooKeeper (default is false) zookeeper.ssl.client.enable=true # Required to use TLS to ZooKeeper zookeeper.clientCnxnSocket=org.apache.zookeeper.ClientCnxnSocketNetty # Define key/trust stores to use TLS to ZooKeeper; ignored unless zookeeper.ssl.client.enable=true zookeeper.ssl.keystore.location=<path-to-kafka-keystore> zookeeper.ssl.keystore.password=<kafka-keystore-password> zookeeper.ssl.truststore.location=<path-to-kafka-truststore> zookeeper.ssl.truststore.password=<kafka-truststore-password>
If you enabled mTLS, disable the non-TLS port in ZooKeeper:
secureClientPort=2182 serverCnxnFactory=org.apache.zookeeper.server.NettyServerCnxnFactory authProvider.x509=org.apache.zookeeper.server.auth.X509AuthenticationProvider ssl.keyStore.location=<path-to-zookeeper-keystore> ssl.keyStore.password=<zookeeper-keystore-password> ssl.trustStore.location=<path-to-zookeeper-truststore> ssl.trustStore.password=<zookeeper-truststore-password>
Perform a second rolling restart of brokers, this time setting
zookeeper.set.acl=true
, which enables the use of secure ACLs when creating znodes.# Connect to the ZooKeeper port configured for TLS zookeeper.connect=zk1:2182,zk2:2182,zk3:2182 # Required to use TLS to ZooKeeper (default is false) zookeeper.ssl.client.enable=true # Required to use TLS to ZooKeeper zookeeper.clientCnxnSocket=org.apache.zookeeper.ClientCnxnSocketNetty # Define key/trust stores to use TLS to ZooKeeper; ignored unless zookeeper.ssl.client.enable=true zookeeper.ssl.keystore.location=<path-to-kafka-keystore> zookeeper.ssl.keystore.password=<kafka-keystore-password> zookeeper.ssl.truststore.location=<path-to-kafka-truststore> zookeeper.ssl.truststore.password=<kafka-truststore-password> # Tell broker to create ACLs on znodes zookeeper.set.acl=true
Run the ZkSecurityMigrator tool using the script:
zookeeper-security-migration
withzookeeper.acl
set tosecure
. This tool traverses the corresponding sub-trees, changing the ACLs of the znodes. Because you are enabling mTLS, specify the--zk-tls-config-file <file>
option.zookeeper-security-migration.sh --zookeeper.acl=secure --zookeeper.connect=localhost:2182 --zk-tls-config-file <path-to-tls-config-file.properties>
The TLS configuration should look like this:
zookeeper.ssl.client.enable=true zookeeper.clientCnxnSocket=org.apache.zookeeper.ClientCnxnSocketNetty zookeeper.ssl.truststore.location=<path-to-kafka-truststore> zookeeper.ssl.truststore.password=<kafka-truststore-password> zookeeper.ssl.keystore.password-<encrypted-keystore-password>
To turn off mTLS authentication in this secure cluster:
Perform a rolling restart of brokers setting the JAAS login file and/or defining ZooKeeper mTLS configurations, which enables brokers to authenticate, but setting
zookeeper.set.acl
tofalse
. At the end of the rolling restart, brokers stop creating znodes with secure ACLs, but are still able to authenticate and manipulate all znodes.Run the ZkSecurityMigrator tool using the script
zookeeper-security-migration
withzookeeper.acl
set tounsecure
. This tool traverses the corresponding sub-trees, changing the ACLs of the znodes. Specify--zk-tls-config-file <file>
if you need to set TLS configuration.--zookeeper.connect=localhost:2182
If you are disabling mTLS, enable the non-TLS port in ZooKeeper:
clientPort=2181 secureClientPort=2182 serverCnxnFactory=org.apache.zookeeper.server.NettyServerCnxnFactory authProvider.x509=org.apache.zookeeper.server.auth.X509AuthenticationProvider ssl.keyStore.location=<path-to-zookeeper-keystore> ssl.keyStore.password=<zookeeper-keystore-password> ssl.trustStore.location=<path-to-zookeeper-truststore> ssl.trustStore.password=<zookeeper-truststore-password>
Perform a second rolling restart of brokers, this time omitting the system property that sets the JAAS login file and/or removes ZooKeeper mTLS configuration (including connection to the non-TLS-enabled ZooKeeper port) as required.
If you are disabling mTLS, disable the TLS port in Kafka:
clientPort=2181
Migrating the ZooKeeper ensemble¶
You must also enable authentication on the ZooKeeper ensemble. This requires that you perform a rolling restart of the ensemble and set a few properties. Refer to the ZooKeeper documentation for more detail: