Managing Encryption for CockroachDB Self-Hosted

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Warning:
As of May 16, 2023, CockroachDB v21.2 is no longer supported. For more details, refer to the Release Support Policy.

This page outlines several procedures necessary for managing encryption in CockroachDB Self-Hosted clusters.

Generating store key files

Cockroach determines which encryption algorithm to use based on the size of the key file. The key file must contain random data making up the key ID (32 bytes) and the actual key (16, 24, or 32 bytes depending on the encryption algorithm).

Algorithm Key size Key file size
AES-128 128 bits (16 bytes) 48 bytes
AES-192 192 bits (24 bytes) 56 bytes
AES-256 256 bits (32 bytes) 64 bytes

Generating a key file can be done using the cockroach CLI:

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$ cockroach gen encryption-key -s 128 /path/to/my/aes-128.key

Or the equivalent openssl CLI command:

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$ openssl rand -out /path/to/my/aes-128.key 48

Starting a node with encryption

Encryption at Rest is configured at node start time using the --enterprise-encryption command line flag. The flag specifies the encryption options for one of the stores on the node. If multiple stores exist, the flag must be specified for each store.

The flag takes the form: --enterprise-encryption=path=<store path>,key=<key file>,old-key=<old key file>,rotation-period=<period>.

The allowed components in the flag are:

Component Requirement Description
path Required Path of the store to apply encryption to.
key Required Path to the key file to encrypt data with, or plain for plaintext.
old-key Required Path to the key file the data is encrypted with, or plain for plaintext.
rotation-period Optional How often data keys should be automatically rotated. Default: one week.

The key and old-key components must always be specified. They allow for transitions between encryption algorithms, and between plaintext and encrypted.

Starting a node for the first time using AES-128 encryption can be done using:

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$ cockroach start --store=cockroach-data --enterprise-encryption=path=cockroach-data,key=/path/to/my/aes-128.key,old-key=plain
Warning:

Once specified for a given store, the --enterprise-encryption flag must always be present.

Checking encryption status

Encryption status can be seen on the node's stores report, reachable through: http(s)://nodeaddress:8080/#/reports/stores/local (or replace local with the node ID). For example, if you are running a local cluster, you can see the node's stores report at https://localhost:8080/#/reports/stores/local.

The report shows encryption status for all stores on the selected node, including:

  • Encryption algorithm.
  • Active store key information.
  • Active data key information.
  • The fraction of files/bytes encrypted using the active data key.

CockroachDB relies on storage layer compactions to write new files using the latest encryption key. It may take several days for all files to be replaced. Some files are only rewritten at startup, and some keep older copies around, requiring multiple restarts. You can force storage compaction with the cockroach debug compact command (the node must first be stopped).

Information about keys is written to the logs, including:

  • Active/old key information at startup.
  • New key information after data key rotation.

Alternatively, you can use the cockroach debug encryption-active-key command to view information about a store's encryption algorithm and store key.

Changing encryption algorithm or keys

Encryption type and keys can be changed at any time by restarting the node. To change keys or encryption type, the key component of the --enterprise-encryption flag is set to the new key, while the key previously used must be specified in the old-key component.

For example, we can switch from AES-128 to AES-256 using:

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$ cockroach start --store=cockroach-data --enterprise-encryption=path=cockroach-data,key=/path/to/my/aes-256.key,old-key=/path/to/my/aes-128.key

Upon starting, the node will read the existing data keys using the old encryption key (aes-128.key), then rewrite the data keys using the new key (aes-256.key). A new data key will be generated to match the desired AES-256 algorithm.

To check that the new key is active, use the stores report page in the DB Console to check the encryption status.

To disable encryption, specify key=plain. The data keys will be stored in plaintext and new data will not be encrypted.

To rotate keys, specify key=/path/to/my/new-aes-128.key and old-key=/path/to/my/old-aes-128.key. The data keyswill be decrypted using the old key and then encrypted using the new key. A new data key will also be generated.


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