Internal/Membership Authentication
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You can require that members of replica sets and sharded clusters authenticate to each other. For the internal authentication of the members, MongoDB can use either keyfiles or x.509 certificates.
The selected method is used for all internal communication. For example, when a
client authenticates to a mongos
using one of the supported
authentication mechanisms,
the mongos
then uses the configured internal authentication method to
connect to the required mongod
processes.
Note
Enabling internal authentication also enables client authorization.
Keyfiles
Keyfiles use SCRAM challenge and response authentication mechanism where the keyfiles contain the shared password for the members.
Key Requirements
A key's length must be between 6 and 1024 characters and may only
contain characters in the base64 set. MongoDB strips whitespace
characters (e.g. x0d
, x09
, and x20
) for cross-platform
convenience. As a result, the following operations produce identical
keys:
echo -e "mysecretkey" > key1 echo -e "my secret key" > key1 echo -e "my secret key\n" > key2 echo -e "my secret key" > key3 echo -e "my\r\nsecret\r\nkey\r\n" > key4
Keyfile Format
Starting in MongoDB 4.2, keyfiles for internal membership authentication use YAML format to allow for multiple keys in a keyfile. The YAML format accepts either:
A single key string (same as in earlier versions)
A sequence of key strings
The YAML format is compatible with the existing single-key keyfiles that use the text file format.
For example,
If the keyfile contains a single key, you can specify the key string with or without quotes:
my old secret key1
You can specify multiple key strings [1] as a sequence of key strings (optionally enclosed in quotes):
- my old secret key1 - my new secret key2
The ability to specify multiple keys in a file allows for the rolling upgrade of the keys without downtime. See Rotate Keys for Replica Sets and Rotate Keys for Sharded Clusters.
All mongod
and mongos
instances of a
deployment must share at least one common key.
On UNIX systems, the keyfile must not have group or world permissions. On Windows systems, keyfile permissions are not checked.
You must store the keyfile on each server hosting the member of the replica set or sharded clusters.
[1] | For MongoDB's encrypted storage engine, the keyfile used for local key management can only contain a single key . |
MongoDB Configuration for Keyfile
To specify the keyfile, use the security.keyFile
setting or
--keyFile
command line option.
For an example of keyfile internal authentication, see Update Replica Set to Keyfile Authentication.
x.509
Members of a replica set or sharded cluster can use x.509 certificates for internal authentication instead of using keyfiles. MongoDB supports x.509 certificate authentication for use with a secure TLS/SSL connection.
Note
MongoDB disables support for TLS 1.0 encryption on systems where TLS 1.1+ is available. For more details, see Disable TLS 1.0.
Member Certificate Requirements
Use member certificates to verify membership to a sharded
cluster or a replica set. Member certificates are stored in
net.tls.clusterFile
and net.tls.certificateKeyFile
.
Member certificate requirements:
A single Certificate Authority (CA) must issue all x.509 certificates for the members of a sharded cluster or a replica set.
The x.509 certificate must not be expired.
Note
Changed in version 4.4:
mongod
/mongos
logs a warning on connection if the presented x.509 certificate expires within30
days of themongod/mongos
host system time. See x.509 Certificates Nearing Expiry Trigger Warnings for more information.The Distinguished Name (
DN
), found in the member certificate'ssubject
, must specify a non-empty value for at least one of the following attributes:the Organization (
O
)the Organizational Unit (
OU
)the Domain Component (
DC
)
Each cluster member certificate must have identical
O
s,OU
s, andDC
s in theirnet.tls.clusterFile
andnet.tls.certificateKeyFile
certificates. This also applies to thetlsX509ClusterAuthDNOverride
value, if set. Attribute order doesn't matter.Here's an example. The two
DN
s below have matching specifications forO
andOU
, andDC
is not specified.CN=host1,OU=Dept1,O=MongoDB,ST=NY,C=US C=US, ST=CA, O=MongoDB, OU=Dept1, CN=host2 The following example is incorrect, because the
DN
s don't match. OneDN
has twoOU
specifications and the other has only oneOU
specification.CN=host1,OU=Dept1,OU=Sales,O=MongoDB CN=host2,OU=Dept1,O=MongoDB Either the Common Name (
CN
) or one of the Subject Alternative Name (SAN
) entries must match the server hostname for other cluster members. Starting in MongoDB 4.2, when comparingSAN
s, MongoDB can compare either DNS names or IP addresses. In previous versions, MongoDB only compares DNS names.For example, the certificates for a cluster could have the following
subject
s:subject= CN=<myhostname1>,OU=Dept1,O=MongoDB,ST=NY,C=US subject= CN=<myhostname2>,OU=Dept1,O=MongoDB,ST=NY,C=US subject= CN=<myhostname3>,OU=Dept1,O=MongoDB,ST=NY,C=US If the certificate includes the Extended Key Usage (
extendedKeyUsage
) setting, the value must includeclientAuth
("TLS Web Client Authentication").extendedKeyUsage = clientAuth
MongoDB Configuration
You can use TLS for internal authentication between each member of
your replica set (each mongod
instance) or sharded
cluster (each mongod
and mongos
instance).
To use TLS for internal authentication, use the following settings:
security.clusterAuthMode
or--clusterAuthMode
set tox509
net.tls.clusterFile
or--tlsClusterFile
(available starting in MongoDB 4.2)
mongod
and mongos
instances use their certificate key files to
prove their identity to clients, but certificate key files can also be used for
membership authentication. If you do not specify a cluster file,
members use their certificate key files for membership authentication.
Specify the certificate key file with net.tls.certificateKeyFile
or
--tlsCertificateKeyFile
(available starting in MongoDB 4.2).
To use the certificate key file for both client authentication and membership authentication, the certificate must either:
Omit
extendedKeyUsage
orSpecify
extendedKeyUsage = serverAuth, clientAuth
Next Steps
For an example of x.509 internal authentication, see Use x.509 Certificate for Membership Authentication.
To upgrade from keyfile internal authentication to x.509 internal authentication, see Upgrade from Keyfile Authentication to x.509 Authentication.