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Pengaturan keamanan

Bab ini berisi informasi untuk mengonfigurasi pengaturan keamanan spesifik untuk cloud yang dimungkinkan oleh OpenStack Anda.

Untuk memahami desain keamanan, silakan lihat Keamanan.

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Mengamankan layanan dengan sertifikat SSL

OpenStack Security Guide merekomendasikan untuk menyediakan komunikasi yang aman antara berbagai layanan dalam penyebaran OpenStack. Proyek OpenStack-Ansible saat ini menawarkan kemampuan untuk mengonfigurasi sertifikat SSL untuk komunikasi aman antara layanan:

All public endpoints reside behind haproxy, resulting in the only certificate management for externally visible https services are those for haproxy. Certain internal services such as RabbitMQ also require proper SSL configuration.

Saat menggunakan dengan OpenStack-Ansible, Anda bisa menggunakan sertifikat yang ditandatangani sendiri yang dihasilkan selama proses penyebaran atau memberikan sertifikat SSL, kunci, dan sertifikat CA dari otoritas sertifikat tepercaya Anda sendiri. Lingkungan yang sangat aman menggunakan sertifikat terpercaya, user-provided (disediakan pengguna) untuk sebanyak mungkin layanan.

Catatan

Lakukan semua konfigurasi sertifikat SSL dalam file /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml. Jangan mengedit playbook atau role itu sendiri.

Openstack-Ansible uses an ansible role ansible_role_pki as a general tool to manage and install self-signed and user provided certificates.

Sertifikat yang ditandatangani sendiri (self-signed certificate)

Self-signed certificates enable you to start quickly and encrypt data in transit. However, they do not provide a high level of trust for public endpoints in highly secure environments. By default, self-signed certificates are used in OpenStack-Ansible. When self-signed certificates are used, certificate verification is automatically disabled.

Self-signed certificates can play an important role in securing internal services within the Openstack-Ansible deployment, as they can only be issued by the private CA associated with the deployment. Using mutual TLS between backend services such as RabbitMQ and MariaDB with self-signed certificates and a robust CA setup can ensure that only correctly authenticated clients can connect to these internal services.

Generating and regenerating self-signed certificate authorities

A self-signed certificate authority is generated on the deploy host during the first run of the playbook.

To regenerate the certificate authority you must set the openstack_pki_regen_ca variable to either the name of the root CA or intermediate CA you wish or regenerate, or to true to regenerate all self-signed certificate authorities.

# openstack-ansible -e "openstack_pki_regen_ca=ExampleCorpIntermediate" certificate-authority.yml

Take particular care not to regenerate Root or Intermediate certificate authorities in a way that may invalidate existing server certificates in the deployment. It may be preferable to create new Intermediate CA certificates rather than regenerate existing ones in order to maintain existing chains of trust.

Membuat dan membuat ulang sertifikat yang ditandatangani sendiri (self-signed certificate)

Sertifikat yang ditandatangani sendiri dibuat untuk setiap layanan selama menjalankan pertama dari playbook.

To generate a new self-signed certificate for a service, you must set the <servicename>_pki_regen_cert variable to true in one of the following ways:

  • Untuk memaksa sertifikat yang ditandatangani sendiri untuk dibuat ulang, Anda bisa meneruskan variabel ke openstack-ansible pada baris perintah:

    # openstack-ansible -e "haproxy_pki_regen_cert=true" haproxy-install.yml
    
  • To force a self-signed certificate to regenerate with every playbook run, set the appropriate regeneration option to true. For example, if you have already run the haproxy playbook, but you want to regenerate the self-signed certificate, set the haproxy_pki_regen_cert variable to true in the /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml file:

    haproxy_pki_regen_cert: true
    

Generating and regenerating self-signed user certificates

Self-signed user certificates are generated but not installed for services outside of Openstack ansible. These user certificates are signed by the same self-signed certificate authority as is used by openstack services but are intended to be used by user applications.

To create user certificates, define a variable with the prefix user_pki_certificates_ in the /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml file.

Example

user_pki_certificates_example:
   - name: "example"
     provider: ownca
     cn: "example.com"
     san: "DNS:example.com,IP:x.x.x.x"
     signed_by: "{{ openstack_pki_service_intermediate_cert_name }}"
     key_usage:
       - digitalSignature
       - keyAgreement
     extended_key_usage:
       - serverAuth

To generate a new self-signed certificate for a service, you must set the user_pki_regen_cert variable to true in one of the following ways:

  • Untuk memaksa sertifikat yang ditandatangani sendiri untuk dibuat ulang, Anda bisa meneruskan variabel ke openstack-ansible pada baris perintah:

    # openstack-ansible -e "user_pki_regen_cert=true" certificate-generate.yml
    
  • To force a self-signed certificate to regenerate with every playbook run, set the user_pki_regen_cert variable to true in the /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml file:

    user_pki_regen_cert: true
    

User-provided certificate (sertifikat yang disediakan pengguna)

Untuk kepercayaan tambahan di lingkungan yang sangat aman, Anda dapat memberikan sertifikat SSL, kunci, dan sertifikat CA Anda sendiri. Memperoleh sertifikat dari otoritas sertifikat tepercaya berada di luar ruang lingkup dokumen ini, tetapi bagian Certificate Management dari Linux Documentation Project menjelaskan cara membuat otoritas sertifikat Anda sendiri dan menandatangani sertifikat.

Gunakan proses berikut untuk menggunakan sertifikat SSL yang disediakan pengguna di OpenStack-Ansible:

  1. Salin file sertifikat SSL, kunci, dan CA Anda ke host penyebaran.

  2. Tentukan path ke sertifikat SSL, kunci, dan sertifikat CA Anda di file /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml.

  3. Jalankan playbook untuk layanan itu.

Contoh HAProxy

Variabel yang akan ditetapkan yang menyediakan jalur pada deployment node ke sertifikat untuk konfigurasi HAProxy adalah:

haproxy_user_ssl_cert: /etc/openstack_deploy/ssl/example.com.crt
haproxy_user_ssl_key: /etc/openstack_deploy/ssl/example.com.key
haproxy_user_ssl_ca_cert: /etc/openstack_deploy/ssl/ExampleCA.crt

Contoh RabbitMQ

Untuk menggunakan sertifikat yang disediakan pengguna untuk RabbitMQ, salin sertifikat ke host penyebaran, edit file /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml dan tetapkan tiga variabel berikut:

rabbitmq_user_ssl_cert:    /etc/openstack_deploy/ssl/example.com.crt
rabbitmq_user_ssl_key:     /etc/openstack_deploy/ssl/example.com.key
rabbitmq_user_ssl_ca_cert: /etc/openstack_deploy/ssl/ExampleCA.crt

Kemudian, jalankan playbook untuk menerapkan sertifikat:

# openstack-ansible rabbitmq-install.yml

Playbook menyebarkan sertifikat SSL, kunci, dan sertifikat CA yang disediakan pengguna ke setiap container RabbitMQ.

Prosesnya identik untuk layanan lain. Ganti rabbitmq dalam variabel konfigurasi sebelumnya dengan horizon, haproxy, atau keystone, dan kemudian jalankan playbook untuk layanan itu untuk menggunakan sertifikat yang disediakan pengguna ke layanan tersebut.

Certbot certificates

The HAProxy ansible role supports using certbot to automatically deploy trusted SSL certificates for the public endpoint. Each HAProxy server will individually request a SSL certificate using certbot.

Certbot defaults to using LetsEncrypt as the Certificate Authority, other Certificate Authorities can be used by setting the haproxy_ssl_letsencrypt_certbot_server variable in the /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml file:

haproxy_ssl_letsencrypt_certbot_server: "https://acme-staging-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory"

The http-01 type challenge is used by certbot to deploy certificates so it is required that the public endpoint is accessible directly by the Certificate Authority.

Deployment of certificates using certbot has been validated for openstack-ansible using Ubuntu Bionic. Other distributions should work but are not tested.

To deploy certificates with certbot, add the following to /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml to enable the certbot function in the haproxy ansible role, and to create a new backend service called certbot to service http-01 challenge requests.

haproxy_ssl: true
haproxy_ssl_letsencrypt_enable: True
haproxy_ssl_letsencrypt_install_method: "distro"
haproxy_ssl_letsencrypt_email: "email.address@example.com"

If you don't have horizon deployed, you will need to define dummy service that will listen on 80 and 443 ports and will be used for acme-challenge, whose backend is certbot on the haproxy host:

haproxy_extra_services:
  # the external facing service which serves the apache test site, with a acl for LE requests
  - service:
      haproxy_service_name: certbot
      haproxy_redirect_http_port: 80                         #redirect port 80 to port ssl
      haproxy_redirect_scheme: "https if !{ ssl_fc } !{ path_beg /.well-known/acme-challenge/ }"   #redirect all non-ssl traffic to ssl except acme-challenge
      haproxy_port: 443
      haproxy_frontend_acls: "{{ haproxy_ssl_letsencrypt_acl }}"       #use a frontend ACL specify the backend to use for acme-challenge
      haproxy_ssl: True
      haproxy_backend_nodes:                                 #apache is running on locally on 127.0.0.1:80 serving a dummy site
        - name: local-test-service
          ip_addr: 127.0.0.1
      haproxy_balance_type: http
      haproxy_backend_port: 80
      haproxy_backend_options:
        - "httpchk HEAD /"                                   # request to use for health check for the example service

TLS for Haproxy Internal VIP

As well as load balancing public endpoints, haproxy is also used to load balance internal connections.

By default, OpenStack-Ansible does not secure connections to the internal VIP. To enable this you must set the following variables in the /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml file:

openstack_service_adminuri_proto: https
openstack_service_internaluri_proto: https

haproxy_ssl_all_vips: true

Run all playbooks to configure haproxy and openstack services.

When enabled haproxy will use the same TLS certificate on all interfaces (internal and external). It is not currently possible in OpenStack-Ansible to use different self-signed or user-provided TLS certificates on different haproxy interfaces.

The only way to use a different TLS certificates on the internal and external VIP is to use certbot.

Enabling TLS on the internal VIP for existing deployments will cause some downtime, this is because haproxy only listens on a single well known port for each OpenStack service and OpenStack services are configured to use http or https. This means once haproxy is updated to only accept HTTPS connections, the OpenStack services will stop working until they are updated to use HTTPS.

For this reason it is recommended that TLS for haproxy internal VIP on existing deployments is deployed at the same time as enabling TLS for Haproxy backends, as this may also cause downtime. For new deployments this should be enabled from the start.

TLS for Haproxy Backends

Securing the internal communications from haproxy to backend services is currently work in progress.

TLS for Live Migrations

Live migration of VM's using SSH is deprecated and the OpenStack Nova Docs recommends using the more secure native TLS method supported by QEMU. The default live migration method used by OpenStack-Ansible has been updated to use TLS migrations.

QEMU-native TLS requires all compute hosts to accept TCP connections on port 16514 and port range 49152 to 49261.

It is not possible to have a mixed estate of some compute nodes using SSH and some using TLS for live migrations, as this would prevent live migrations between the compute nodes.

There are no issues enabling TLS live migration during an OpenStack upgrade, as long as you do not need to live migrate instances during the upgrade. If you you need to live migrate instances during an upgrade, enable TLS live migrations before or after the upgrade.

To force the use of SSH instead of TLS for live migrations you must set the nova_libvirtd_listen_tls variable to 0 in the /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml file:

nova_libvirtd_listen_tls: 0

TLS for VNC

When using VNC for console access there are 3 connections to secure, client to haproxy, haproxy to noVNC Proxy and noVNC Proxy to Compute nodes. The OpenStack Nova Docs for remote console access cover console security in much more detail.

In OpenStack-Ansible TLS to haproxy is configured in haproxy, TLS from haproxy to noVNC is not currently enabled and TLS from nVNC to Compute nodes is enabled by default.

Changes will not apply to any existing running guests on the compute node, so this configuration should be done before launching any instances. For existing deployments it is recommended that you migrate instances off the compute node before enabling.

To help with the transition from unencrypted VNC to VeNCrypt, initially noVNC proxy auth scheme allows for both encrypted and unencrypted sessions using the variable nova_vencrypt_auth_scheme. This will be restricted to VeNCrypt only in future versions of OpenStack-Ansible.

nova_vencrypt_auth_scheme: "vencrypt,none"

To not encrypt data from noVNC proxy to Compute nodes you must set the nova_qemu_vnc_tls variable to 0 in the /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml file:

nova_qemu_vnc_tls: 0

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Security Headers

Security headers are HTTP headers that can be used to increase the security of a web application by restricting what modern browsers are able to run.

In OpenStack-Ansible, security headers are implemented in haproxy as all the public endpoints reside behind it.

The following headers are enabled by default on all the haproxy interfaces that implement TLS, but only for the Horizon service. The security headers can be implemented on other haproxy services, but only services used by browsers will make use of the headers.

HTTP Strict Transport Security

The OpenStack TLS Security Guide recommends that all production deployments use HTTP strict transport security (HSTS).

By design, this header is difficult to disable once set. It is recommended that during testing you set a short time of 1 day and after testing increase the time to 1 year.

To change the default max age to 1 day, override the variable haproxy_security_headers_max_age in the /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml file:

haproxy_security_headers_max_age: 86400

If you would like your domain included in the HSTS preload list, which is built into browsers, before submitting your request to be added to the HSTS preload list you must add the preload token to your response header. The preload token indicates to the maintainers of HSTS preload list that you are happy to have your site included.

- "http-response set-header Strict-Transport-Security \"max-age={{ haproxy_security_headers_max_age }}; includeSubDomains; preload;\""

X-Content-Type-Options

The X-Content-Type-Options header prevents MIME type sniffing.

This functionality can be changed by overriding the list of headers in haproxy_security_headers variable in the /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml file.

Referrer Policy

The Referrer-Policy header controls how much referrer information is sent with requests. It defaults to same-origin, which does not send the origin path for cross-origin requests.

This functionality can be changed by overriding the list of headers in haproxy_security_headers variable in the /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml file.

Permission Policy

The Permissions-Policy header allows you to selectively enable, disable or modify the use of browser features and APIs, previously known as Feature Policy.

By default this header is set to block access to all features apart from the following from the same origin; fullscreen, clipboard read, clipboard write and spatial navigation.

This functionality can be changed by overriding the list of headers in haproxy_security_headers variable in the /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml file.

Content Security Policy (CSP)

The Content-Security-Policy header allows you to control what resources a browser is allowed to load for a given page, which helps to mitigate the risks from Cross-Site Scripting (XSS) and data injection attacks.

By default, the Content Security Policy (CSP) enables a minimum set of resources to allow Horizon to work, which includes access the Nova console. If you require access to other resources these can be set by overriding the haproxy_security_headers_csp variable in the /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml file.

Report Only

Implementing CSP could lead to broken content if a browser is blocked from accessing certain resources, therefore it is recommended that when testing CSP you use the Content-Security-Policy-Report-Only header, instead of Content-Security-Policy, this reports CSP violations to the browser console, but does not enforce the policy.

To set the CSP policy to report only by overriding the haproxy_security_headers_csp_report_only variable to True in the /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml file:

haproxy_security_headers_csp_report_only: True

Reporting Violations

It is recommended that you monitor attempted CSP violations in production, this is achieved by setting the report-uri and report-to tokens.

Federated Login

When using federated login you will need to override the default Content Security Policy to allow access to your authorisation server by overriding the haproxy_horizon_csp variable in the /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml file:

haproxy_horizon_csp: "http-response set-header Content-Security-Policy \"default-src 'self'; frame-ancestors 'self'; form-action 'self' {{ external_lb_vip_address }}:5000 <YOUR-AUTHORISATION-SERVER-ORIGIN>; upgrade-insecure-requests; style-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline'; script-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline' 'unsafe-eval'; child-src 'self' {{ external_lb_vip_address }}:{{ nova_console_port }}; frame-src 'self' {{ external_lb_vip_address }}:{{ nova_console_port }};\""

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Security.txt

security.txt is a proposed IETF standard to allow independent security researchers to easily report vulnerabilities. The standard defines that a text file called security.txt should be found at "/.well-known/security.txt". For legacy compatibility reasons the file might also be placed at "/security.txt".

In OpenStack-Ansible, security.txt is implemented in haproxy as all public endpoints reside behind it and the text file is hosted by keystone. It defaults to directing any request paths that end with /security.txt to the text file using an ACL rule in haproxy.

Enabling security.txt

Use the following process to add a security.txt file to your deployment using OpenStack-Ansible:

  1. Write the contents of the security.txt file in accordance with the standard.

  2. Define the contents of security.txt in the variable keystone_security_txt_content in the /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml file:

keystone_security_txt_content: |
    # This is my example security.txt file
    # Please see https://securitytxt.org/ for details of the specification of this file
  1. Update keystone

# openstack-ansible os-keystone-install.yml
  1. Update haproxy

# openstack-ansible haproxy-install.yml

Advanced security.txt ACL

In some cases you may need to change the haproxy ACL used to redirect requests to the security.txt file, such as adding extra domains.

The haproxy ACL is updated by overriding the variable haproxy_security_txt_acl in the /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml file.

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Menerapkan ansible-hardening

Role ansible-hardening berlaku untuk host fisik dalam penyebaran OpenStack-Ansible yang beroperasi sebagai semua jenis node, infrastruktur, atau komputasi. Secara default, role diaktifkan. Anda dapat menonaktifkannya dengan mengubah nilai variabel apply_security_hardening dalam file user_variables.yml menjadi false:

apply_security_hardening: false

Anda dapat menerapkan konfigurasi pengerasan keamanan untuk lingkungan yang ada atau mengaudit lingkungan dengan menggunakan playbook yang disediakan dengan OpenStack-Ansible:

# Apply security hardening configurations
  openstack-ansible security-hardening.yml

# Perform a quick audit by using Ansible's check mode
  openstack-ansible --check security-hardening.yml

Untuk informasi lebih lanjut tentang konfigurasi keamanan, lihat dokumentasi security hardening role .