Set up TLS-secured connections inside and outside your cluster
Pinot versions from 0.7.0+ support client-cluster and intra-cluster TLS. TLS-support comes in both 1-way and 2-way flavors. This guide walks through the relevant configuration options.
Looking to ingest from Kafka via secured connections? Check out Kafka Streaming Ingestion with TLS/SSL.
In order to support incremental upgrades of unsecured pinot clusters towards TLS, we introduce multi-ingress support via listeners. Each listener accepts connections for a specific protocol on a specific port. For example, pinot-broker may be configured to accept both, http on port 8099 and https on port 8443 at the same time.
Existing configuration properties such as controller.port
are still parsed and automatically translated to a http listener configuration to enable full backwards-compatibility. TLS-secured ingress must be configured through the new listener specifications.
If you're bootstrapping a cluster from scratch, you can directly configure TLS-secured connections and you can forgo legacy http ingress. If you're upgrading an existing (production) cluster, you'll be able to perform the upgrade without downtime if your deployment is configured for high-availability.
On a high level, a zero-downtime upgrade includes the following 3 phases:
adding a secondary TLS-secured ingress to pinot controllers, brokers, and servers
switching client and internode egress to prefer TLS-secured connections
disabling unsecured ingress
This requires a rolling restart of (replicated) service containers after each re-configuration phase. The sample listener specifications below will guide you through this process.
Apache Pinot leverages the JVM's native TLS infrastructure with all its benefits and limitations. Certificates should be generated to include the host IP, hostname, and fully-qualified domain names (if accessed or identified this way).
We support both, the JVM's default key/truststore, as well as configuration options to load certificates from secondary locations. Note, that some connector plugins require the default truststore to contain any trusted certs since they do not parse pinot's configuration properties for external truststores.
Most JVM's default certificate store can be configured with command-line arguments:
-Djavax.net.ssl.keyStore
-Djavax.net.ssl.keyStorePassword
-Djavax.net.ssl.trustStore
-Djavax.net.ssl.trustStorePassword
This section contains a number of examples for common situations. The complete configuration reference can be found is each component's configuration reference.
If you're bootstrapping a new cluster, scroll down towards the end. We order this section for purposes of migrating an existing unsecured cluster to TLS-only.
This is a minimal example of network configuration options prior to 0.7.0. This specification is still supported for backwards-compatibility and translated internally to a listener specification.
This HTTP listener specification is the equivalent of manually translating the legacy configuration above to a listener specification.
This is a common scenario for development clusters and an intermediate phase during a zero-downtime migration of an unsecured cluster towards TLS. This configuration optionally accepts secure ingress on alternate ports, but still defaults to unsecured egress for all operations.
After all pinot components have been configured and restarted to offer secure ingress, we can modify egress to default to secure connections internode. Clients, such as pinot-admin.sh, support an optional flag -controllerProtocol https
to enable secure access. Ingestion jobs similarly support an optional tlsSpec
key to configure key/trststores. Note, that any console clients must have access to appropriate certificates via the JVM's default key/truststore.
This is the default for a newly bootstrapped secure pinot cluster. It is also the final stage for any migration of an existing cluster. With this configuration applied, pinot's components will reject any unsecured connection attempt.
Apache Pinot also supports 2-way TLS for environments with high security requirements. This can be enabled per component with the optional client.auth.enabled
flag. Bear in mind that any client (or server) interacting with a component expecting client auth must have access to both, a keystore and a truststore. This setting does NOT have apply to unsecured http or netty connections.
key
value
controller.port
9000
pinot.broker.client.queryPort
8099
pinot.server.netty.port
8098
pinot.server.adminapi.port
8097
key
value
controller.access.protocols
http
controller.access.protocols.http.port
9000
pinot.broker.client.access.protocols
http
pinot.broker.client.access.protocols.http.port
8099
pinot.server.netty.enabled
true
pinot.server.netty.port
8098
pinot.server.adminapi.access.protocols
http
pinot.server.adminapi.access.protocols.http.port
8097
key
value
controller.tls.keystore.path
/path/to/keystore (unset for JVM default)
controller.tls.keystore.password
mykeystorepassword
(unset for JVM default)
controller.tls.truststore.path
/path/to/truststore (unset for JVM default)
controller.tls.truststore.password
mytruststorepassword
(unset for JVM default)
controller.access.protocols
http,https
controller.access.protocols.http.port
9000
controller.access.protocols.https.port
9443
pinot.broker.tls.keystore.path
/path/to/keystore (unset for JVM default)
pinot.broker.tls.keystore.password
mykeystorepassword
(unset for JVM default)
pinot.broker.tls.truststore.path
/path/to/truststore (unset for JVM default)
pinot.broker.tls.truststore.password
mytruststorepassword
(unset for JVM default)
pinot.broker.client.access.protocols
http,https
pinot.broker.client.access.protocols.http.port
8099
pinot.broker.client.access.protocols.https.port
8443
pinot.server.tls.keystore.path
/path/to/keystore (unset for JVM default)
pinot.server.tls.keystore.password
mykeystorepassword
(unset for JVM default)
pinot.server.tls.truststore.path
/path/to/truststore (unset for JVM default)
pinot.server.tls.truststore.password
mytruststorepassword
(unset JVM default)
pinot.server.netty.enabled
true
pinot.server.netty.port
8098
pinot.server.nettytls.enabled
true
pinot.server.nettytls.port
8089
pinot.server.adminapi.access.protocols
http,https
pinot.server.adminapi.access.protocols.http.port
8097
pinot.server.adminapi.access.protocols.https.port
7443
pinot.minion.tls.keystore.path
/path/to/keystore (unset for JVM default)
pinot.minion.tls.keystore.password
mykeystorepassword
(unset for JVM default)
pinot.minion.tls.truststore.path
/path/to/truststore (unset for JVM default)
pinot.minion.tls.truststore.password
mytruststorepassword
(unset JVM default)
key
value
controller.tls ...
(see above)
controller.access ...
(see above)
controller.broker.protocol
https
controller.broker.port.override
8443
controller.vip.protocol
https
controller.vip.port
9443
pinot.broker.tls ...
(see above)
pinot.broker.client.access ...
(see above)
pinot.broker.nettytls.enabled
true
pinot.server ...
(see above)
pinot.minion ...
(see above)
key
value
controller.tls ...
(see above)
controller.access.protocols
https
controller.access.protocols.https.port
9443
controller.broker.protocol
https
controller.vip.protocol
https
controller.vip.port
9443
pinot.broker.tls ...
(see above)
pinot.broker.client.access.protocols
https
pinot.broker.client.access.protocols.https.port
8443
pinot.broker.nettytls.enabled
true
pinot.server.tls ...
(see above)
pinot.server.adminapi.access.protocols
https
pinot.server.adminapi.access.protocols.https.port
7443
pinot.server.netty.enabled
false
pinot.server.nettytls.enabled
true
pinot.server.nettytls.port
8089
pinot.minon.tls ...
(see above)
key
value
controller ...
(see above)
controller.tls.client.auth.enabled
(applies to client and internode connections)
true
pinot.broker ...
(see above)
pinot.broker.tls.client.auth.enabled
(applies to client and internode connections)
true
pinot.server ...
(see above)
pinot.server.tls.client.auth.enabled
(applies to nettytls and adminapi)
true
pinot.minion ...
(see above)
pinot.minion.tls.client.auth.enabled
true