Turns out, we *care* about the path, and object paths *don't follow
filesystem semantics*!
Be explicit: /<account>/<container>/<object>
Bump the key version number so we know whether we can trust the full path
or not.
Change-Id: Ide9d44cc18575306363126a93d91f662c6ee23e0
Related-Bug: 1813725
For some use cases operators would like to periodically introduce a
new encryption root secret that would be used when new object data is
written. However, existing encrypted data does not need to be
re-encrypted with keys derived from the new root secret. Older root
secret(s) would still be used as necessary to decrypt older object
data.
This patch modifies the KeyMaster class to support multiple root
secrets indexed via unique secret_id's, and to store the id of the
root secret used for an encryption operation in the crypto meta. The
decrypter is modified to fetch appropriate keys based on the secret id
in retrieved crypto meta.
The changes are backwards compatible with previous crypto middleware
configurations and existing encrypted object data.
Change-Id: I40307acf39b6c1cc9921f711a8da55d03924d232
Currently, our integrity checking for objects is pretty weak when it
comes to object metadata. If the extended attributes on a .data or
.meta file get corrupted in such a way that we can still unpickle it,
we don't have anything that detects that.
This could be especially bad with encrypted etags; if the encrypted
etag (X-Object-Sysmeta-Crypto-Etag or whatever it is) gets some bits
flipped, then we'll cheerfully decrypt the cipherjunk into plainjunk,
then send it to the client. Net effect is that the client sees a GET
response with an ETag that doesn't match the MD5 of the object *and*
Swift has no way of detecting and quarantining this object.
Note that, with an unencrypted object, if the ETag metadatum gets
mangled, then the object will be quarantined by the object server or
auditor, whichever notices first.
As part of this commit, I also ripped out some mocking of
getxattr/setxattr in tests. It appears to be there to allow unit tests
to run on systems where /tmp doesn't support xattrs. However, since
the mock is keyed off of inode number and inode numbers get re-used,
there's lots of leakage between different test runs. On a real FS,
unlinking a file and then creating a new one of the same name will
also reset the xattrs; this isn't the case with the mock.
The mock was pretty old; Ubuntu 12.04 and up all support xattrs in
/tmp, and recent Red Hat / CentOS releases do too. The xattr mock was
added in 2011; maybe it was to support Ubuntu Lucid Lynx?
Bonus: now you can pause a test with the debugger, inspect its files
in /tmp, and actually see the xattrs along with the data.
Since this patch now uses a real filesystem for testing filesystem
operations, tests are skipped if the underlying filesystem does not
support setting xattrs (eg tmpfs or more than 4k of xattrs on ext4).
References to "/tmp" have been replaced with calls to
tempfile.gettempdir(). This will allow setting the TMPDIR envvar in
test setup and getting an XFS filesystem instead of ext4 or tmpfs.
THIS PATCH SIGNIFICANTLY CHANGES TESTING ENVIRONMENTS
With this patch, every test environment will require TMPDIR to be
using a filesystem that supports at least 4k of extended attributes.
Neither ext4 nor tempfs support this. XFS is recommended.
So why all the SkipTests? Why not simply raise an error? We still need
the tests to run on the base image for OpenStack's CI system. Since
we were previously mocking out xattr, there wasn't a problem, but we
also weren't actually testing anything. This patch adds functionality
to validate xattr data, so we need to drop the mock.
`test.unit.skip_if_no_xattrs()` is also imported into `test.functional`
so that functional tests can import it from the functional test
namespace.
The related OpenStack CI infrastructure changes are made in
https://review.openstack.org/#/c/394600/.
Co-Authored-By: John Dickinson <me@not.mn>
Change-Id: I98a37c0d451f4960b7a12f648e4405c6c6716808
It was deprecated and we discussed on this topic in Denver PTG
for Queen cycle. Main motivation for this work is that deprecated
post_as_copy option and its gate blocks future symlink work.
Change-Id: I411893db1565864ed5beb6ae75c38b982a574476
Adds encryption middlewares.
All object servers and proxy servers should be upgraded before
introducing encryption middleware.
Encryption middleware should be first introduced with the
encryption middleware disable_encryption option set to True.
Once all proxies have encryption middleware installed this
option may be set to False (the default).
Increases constraints.py:MAX_HEADER_COUNT by 4 to allow for
headers generated by encryption-related middleware.
Co-Authored-By: Tim Burke <tim.burke@gmail.com>
Co-Authored-By: Christian Cachin <cca@zurich.ibm.com>
Co-Authored-By: Mahati Chamarthy <mahati.chamarthy@gmail.com>
Co-Authored-By: Peter Chng <pchng@ca.ibm.com>
Co-Authored-By: Alistair Coles <alistair.coles@hpe.com>
Co-Authored-By: Jonathan Hinson <jlhinson@us.ibm.com>
Co-Authored-By: Hamdi Roumani <roumani@ca.ibm.com>
UpgradeImpact
Change-Id: Ie6db22697ceb1021baaa6bddcf8e41ae3acb5376