[openstack-dev] [Neutron][LBaaS] Barbican Neutron LBaaS Integration Ideas
Vijay Venkatachalam
Vijay.Venkatachalam at citrix.com
Wed Jun 11 13:47:02 UTC 2014
>>>the backend it what's responsible for handling it from that point
Right! For ex. NetScaler handles cert sync across HA nodes via its proprietary mechanisms.
Since shadow copying is not required for every driver, the functionality can be implemented by the driver that needs it.
Thanks,
Vijay V.
From: Adam Harwell [mailto:adam.harwell at RACKSPACE.COM]
Sent: Wednesday, June 11, 2014 2:48 AM
To: OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)
Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] [Neutron][LBaaS] Barbican Neutron LBaaS Integration Ideas
Doug: Right, we actually have a blueprint draft for EXACTLY this, but the Barbican team gave us a flat "not happening, we reject this change" on causing a delete to fail. The shadow-copy solution I proposed only came about because the option you are proposing is not possible. :(
I also realized that really, this whole thing is an issue for the backend, not really for the API itself - the LBaaS API will be retrieving the key/cert from Barbican and passing it to the backend, and the backend it what's responsible for handling it from that point (F5, Stingray etc would never actually call back to Barbican). So, really, the Service-VM solution we're architecting is where the shadow-copy solution needs to live, at which point it no longer is really an issue we'd need to discuss on this mailing list, I think. Stephen, does that make sense to you?
--Adam
https://keybase.io/rm_you
From: Doug Wiegley <dougw at a10networks.com<mailto:dougw at a10networks.com>>
Reply-To: "OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)" <openstack-dev at lists.openstack.org<mailto:openstack-dev at lists.openstack.org>>
Date: Tuesday, June 10, 2014 4:10 PM
To: "OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)" <openstack-dev at lists.openstack.org<mailto:openstack-dev at lists.openstack.org>>
Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] [Neutron][LBaaS] Barbican Neutron LBaaS Integration Ideas
A third option, that is neither shadow copying nor policy enforcement:
Ask the Barbican team to put in a small api that is effectively, "hey, I'm using this container" and "hey, I'm done with this container", and the have their delete fail if someone is still using it. This isn't calling into other services, it's simply getting informed of who's using what, and not stomping it. That seems pretty core to me, and the workarounds if we can't trust the store to store things are pretty hacky.
Doug
From: Adam Harwell <adam.harwell at RACKSPACE.COM<mailto:adam.harwell at RACKSPACE.COM>>
Reply-To: "OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)" <openstack-dev at lists.openstack.org<mailto:openstack-dev at lists.openstack.org>>
Date: Tuesday, June 10, 2014 at 3:04 PM
To: "OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)" <openstack-dev at lists.openstack.org<mailto:openstack-dev at lists.openstack.org>>
Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] [Neutron][LBaaS] Barbican Neutron LBaaS Integration Ideas
Right, service VMs are the biggest case for this, because then we WILL need to be tracking the barbicanID even in the backend. I also agree that it would be more useful for OpenStack as a whole if it were managed by a central service (i.e., Barbican handles this issue) rather than having to duplicate all of this logic in every service that utilizes the containers (VPN/FW would have to use essentially the same strategy, or else fragment and do something entirely different - the first of which is a lot of duplicated effort, and the second is just generally bad, already way too much fragmentation going on). On the other hand, the Barbican team is very opposed to doing policy enforcement within Barbican, and I can't say I fault them for that opinion (Barbican was never designed to include a policy enforcement engine). The shadow-copy strategy is the best alternative I can think of given the current project/political landscape. :(
--Adam
https://keybase.io/rm_you
From: Doug Wiegley <dougw at a10networks.com<mailto:dougw at a10networks.com>>
Reply-To: "OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)" <openstack-dev at lists.openstack.org<mailto:openstack-dev at lists.openstack.org>>
Date: Tuesday, June 10, 2014 3:42 PM
To: "OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)" <openstack-dev at lists.openstack.org<mailto:openstack-dev at lists.openstack.org>>
Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] [Neutron][LBaaS] Barbican Neutron LBaaS Integration Ideas
> Doug: The reasons a LB might be reprovisioned are fairly important - mostly around HA, for fail overs or capacity - exactly the times we're trying avoid a failure.
Certainly the ticking time bomb is a bad idea, but HA seems cleaner to do in the backend, rather than at the openstack API level (the dangling reference doesn't kick in until the lbaas api is used to accomplish that failover.) And the lbaas api also doesn't have any provisions for helping to shuffle for capacity, so that also becomes a backend issue. And the backend won't be natively dealing with a barbican reference.
However, couple this with service VM's, and I guess the issue pops back into the forefront. This is going to be an issue that everyone using ssl certs in barbican is going to have, so it seems we're applying a band-aid in the wrong place.
Doug
From: Adam Harwell <adam.harwell at RACKSPACE.COM<mailto:adam.harwell at RACKSPACE.COM>>
Reply-To: "OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)" <openstack-dev at lists.openstack.org<mailto:openstack-dev at lists.openstack.org>>
Date: Tuesday, June 10, 2014 at 2:19 PM
To: "OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)" <openstack-dev at lists.openstack.org<mailto:openstack-dev at lists.openstack.org>>
Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] [Neutron][LBaaS] Barbican Neutron LBaaS Integration Ideas
Doug: The reasons a LB might be reprovisioned are fairly important - mostly around HA, for fail overs or capacity - exactly the times we're trying avoid a failure.
Stephen: yes, I am talking about storing the copy in a non-tenant way (on the tenant-id for the LBaaS Service Account, not visible to the user). We would have to delete our shadow-copy when the loadbalancer was updated with a new barbicanID by the user, and make a copy of the new container to take its place.
Also, yes, I think it would be quite surprising (and far from ideal) when the LB you set up breaks weeks or months later when an HA event occurs and you haven't actually made any "changes" in quite a long time. Unfortunately, "making the key unusable in all other contexts" on a Barbican delete isn't really an option, so this is the best fallback I can think of.
--Adam
https://keybase.io/rm_you
From: Doug Wiegley <dougw at a10networks.com<mailto:dougw at a10networks.com>>
Reply-To: "OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)" <openstack-dev at lists.openstack.org<mailto:openstack-dev at lists.openstack.org>>
Date: Tuesday, June 10, 2014 2:53 PM
To: "OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)" <openstack-dev at lists.openstack.org<mailto:openstack-dev at lists.openstack.org>>
Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] [Neutron][LBaaS] Barbican Neutron LBaaS Integration Ideas
> In any case, it strikes me as misleading to have an explicit delete command sent to Barbican not have the effect of making the key unusable in all other contexts. It would be less surprising behavior, IMO, to have a deleted barbican container result in connected load balancing services breaking. (Though without notification to LBaaS, the connected service might break weeks or months after the key disappeared from barbican, which would be more surprising behavior.)
Since a delete in barbican will not affect neutron/lbaas, and since most backends will have had to make their own copy of the key at lb provision time, the barbican delete will not result in lbaas breaking, I think. The shadow copy would only get used if the lb had to be re-provisioned for some reason before it was given a new key id, which seems a fair bit of complexity for what is gained.
doug
From: Stephen Balukoff <sbalukoff at bluebox.net<mailto:sbalukoff at bluebox.net>>
Reply-To: "OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)" <openstack-dev at lists.openstack.org<mailto:openstack-dev at lists.openstack.org>>
Date: Tuesday, June 10, 2014 at 1:47 PM
To: "OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)" <openstack-dev at lists.openstack.org<mailto:openstack-dev at lists.openstack.org>>
Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] [Neutron][LBaaS] Barbican Neutron LBaaS Integration Ideas
Adam--
Wouldn't the user see the duplicate key/cert copy in their barbican interface, or are you proposing storing these secrets in a not-assigned-to-the-tenant kind of way?
In any case, it strikes me as misleading to have an explicit delete command sent to Barbican not have the effect of making the key unusable in all other contexts. It would be less surprising behavior, IMO, to have a deleted barbican container result in connected load balancing services breaking. (Though without notification to LBaaS, the connected service might break weeks or months after the key disappeared from barbican, which would be more surprising behavior.)
Personally, I like your idea, as I think most of our users would rather have LBaaS issue warnings when the user has done something stupid like this rather than break entirely. I know our support staff would rather it behaved this way.
What's your proposal for cleaning up copied secrets when they're actually no longer in use by any LB?
Stephen
On Tue, Jun 10, 2014 at 12:04 PM, Adam Harwell <adam.harwell at rackspace.com<mailto:adam.harwell at rackspace.com>> wrote:
So, it looks like any sort of validation on Deletes in Barbican is going
to be a no-go. I'd like to propose a third option, which might be the
safest route to take for LBaaS while still providing some of the
convenience of using Barbican as a central certificate store. Here is a
diagram of the interaction sequence to create a loadbalancer:
http://bit.ly/1pgAC7G
Summary: Pass the Barbican "TLS Container ID" to the LBaaS create call,
get the container from Barbican, and store a "shadow-copy" of the
container again in Barbican, this time on the LBaaS service account.
The secret will now be duplicated (it still exists on the original tenant,
but also exists on the LBaaS tenant), but we're not talking about a huge
amount of data here -- just a few kilobytes. With this approach, we retain
most of the advantages we wanted to get from using Barbican -- we don't
need to worry about taking secret data through the LBaaS API (we still
just take a barbicanID from the user), and the user can still use a single
barbicanID (the original one they created -- the copies are invisible to
them) when passing their TLS info to other services. We gain the
additional advantage that it no longer matters what happens to the
original TLS container -- it could be deleted and it would not impact our
service.
What do you guys think of that option?
As an addendum (not saying we necessarily want to do this, but it's an
option), we COULD retain both the original and the copied barbicanID in
our database and attempt to fetch them in that order when we need the TLS
info again, which would allow us to do some alerting if the user does
delete their key. For example: the user has deleted their key because it
was compromised, but they forgot they used it on their loadbalancer -> a
failover event occurs and we attempt to fetch the info from Barbican ->
the first fetch fails, but the second fetch to our copy succeeds -> the
failover of the LB is successful, and we send an alert to notify the user
that their LB is using TLS info that has been deleted from Barbican.
--Adam
https://keybase.io/rm_you
On 6/10/14 6:21 AM, "Clark, Robert Graham" <robert.clark at hp.com<mailto:robert.clark at hp.com>> wrote:
>It looks like this has come full circle and we are back at the simplest
>case.
>
># Containers are immutable
># Changing a cert means creating a new container and, when ready,
>pointing LBaaS at the new container
>
>This makes a lot of sense to me, it removes a lot of handholding and
>keeps Barbican and LBaaS nicely decoupled. It also keeps certificate
>lifecycle management firmly in the hands of the user, which imho is a
>good thing. With this model it¹s fairly trivial to provide guidance /
>additional tooling for lifecycle management if required but at the same
>time the simplest case (I want a cert and I want LBaaS) is met without
>massive code overhead for edge-cases.
>
>
>From: Vijay Venkatachalam
><Vijay.Venkatachalam at citrix.com<mailto:Vijay.Venkatachalam at citrix.com><mailto:Vijay.Venkatachalam at citrix.com<mailto:Vijay.Venkatachalam at citrix.com>>>
>Reply-To: OpenStack List
><openstack-dev at lists.openstack.org<mailto:openstack-dev at lists.openstack.org><mailto:openstack-dev at lists.openstack.or<mailto:openstack-dev at lists.openstack.or>
>g>>
>Date: Tuesday, 10 June 2014 05:48
>To: OpenStack List
><openstack-dev at lists.openstack.org<mailto:openstack-dev at lists.openstack.org><mailto:openstack-dev at lists.openstack.or<mailto:openstack-dev at lists.openstack.or>
>g>>
>Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] [Neutron][LBaaS] Barbican Neutron LBaaS
>Integration Ideas
>
>
>My vote is for option #2 (without the registration). It is simpler to
>start with this approach. How is delete handled though?
>
>Ex. What is the expectation when user attempts to delete a
>certificate/container which is referred by an entity like LBaaS listener?
>
>
>1. Will there be validation in Barbican to prevent this? *OR*
>
>2. LBaaS listener will have a dangling reference/pointer to
>certificate?
>
>Thanks,
>Vijay V.
>
>From: Stephen Balukoff [mailto:sbalukoff at bluebox.net<mailto:sbalukoff at bluebox.net>]
>Sent: Tuesday, June 10, 2014 7:43 AM
>To: OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)
>Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] [Neutron][LBaaS] Barbican Neutron LBaaS
>Integration Ideas
>
>Weighing in here:
>
>I'm all for option #2 as well.
>
>Stephen
>
>On Mon, Jun 9, 2014 at 4:42 PM, Clint Byrum
><clint at fewbar.com<mailto:clint at fewbar.com><mailto:clint at fewbar.com<mailto:clint at fewbar.com>>> wrote:
>Excerpts from Douglas Mendizabal's message of 2014-06-09 16:08:02 -0700:
>> Hi all,
>>
>> I¹m strongly in favor of having immutable TLS-typed containers, and very
>> much opposed to storing every revision of changes done to a container.
>>I
>> think that storing versioned containers would add too much complexity to
>> Barbican, where immutable containers would work well.
>>
>Agree completely. Create a new one for new values. Keep the old ones
>while they're still active.
>
>>
>> I¹m still not sold on the idea of registering services with Barbican,
>>even
>> though (or maybe especially because) Barbican would not be using this
>>data
>> for anything. I understand the problem that we¹re trying to solve by
>> associating different resources across projects, but I don¹t feel like
>> Barbican is the right place to do this.
>>
>Agreed also, this is simply not Barbican or Neutron's role. Be a REST
>API for secrets and networking, not all dancing all singing nannies that
>prevent any possibly dangerous behavior with said API's.
>
>> It seems we¹re leaning towards option #2, but I would argue that
>> orchestration of services is outside the scope of Barbican¹s role as a
>> secret-store. I think this is a problem that may need to be solved at a
>> higher level. Maybe an openstack-wide registry of dependend entities
>> across services?
>An optional openstack-wide registry of depended entities is called
>"Heat".
>
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>>
>http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev
>
>
>
>--
>Stephen Balukoff
>Blue Box Group, LLC
>(800)613-4305 x807<tel:%28800%29613-4305%20x807>
>
>_______________________________________________
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Stephen Balukoff
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(800)613-4305 x807
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