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Use x.509 Certificate for Membership Authentication
MongoDB supports x.509 certificate authentication for use with a secure TLS/SSL connection. Sharded cluster members and replica set members can use x.509 certificates to verify their membership to the cluster or the replica set instead of using keyfiles. The membership authentication is an internal process.
Note
Starting in version 4.0, MongoDB disables support for TLS 1.0 encryption on systems where TLS 1.1+ is available. For more details, see Disable TLS 1.0.
Enabling internal authentication also enables Role-Based Access Control. Clients must authenticate as a user in order to connect and perform operations in the deployment.
See the Manage Users and Roles tutorial for instructions on adding users to the deployment.
See the Use x.509 Certificates to Authenticate Clients tutorial for instructions on using x.509 certificates for user authentication.
Important
A full description of TLS/SSL, PKI (Public Key Infrastructure) certificates, in particular x.509 certificates, and Certificate Authority is beyond the scope of this document. This tutorial assumes prior knowledge of TLS/SSL as well as access to valid x.509 certificates.
Member x.509 Certificate
Note
You must have valid x.509 certificates.
Starting in MongoDB 4.2, if you specify
--tlsAllowInvalidateCertificates
or
net.tls.allowInvalidCertificates: true
when using x.509
authentication, an invalid certificate is only sufficient to
establish a TLS connection but it is insufficient for
authentication.
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
Configure Replica Set/Sharded Cluster
Outside of rolling upgrade procedures, every component of a replica set or sharded cluster should use the same
--clusterAuthMode
setting to ensure it can securely connect to all
other components in the deployment.
For replica set deployments, this includes all mongod
members of the replica set.
For sharded cluster deployments, this includes all mongod
or mongos
instances.
Note
Starting in MongoDB 3.6, mongod
and mongos
bind to localhost by default. If the members of your deployment are
run on different hosts or if you wish remote clients to connect to
your deployment, you must specify --bind_ip
or
net.bindIp
. For more information, see
Localhost Binding Compatibility Changes.
Use Command-line Options (tls
)
Note
The procedures in this section use the tls
settings/option. For
procedures using the deprecated ssl
aliases, see
Use Command-line Options (ssl
).
The tls
settings/options provide identical functionality
as the ssl
options since MongoDB has always supported TLS 1.0
and later.
For more information, see Configure mongod
and mongos
for TLS/SSL.
Use Command-line Options (ssl
)
Note
The procedures in this section use the deprecated ssl
settings/option.
For procedures using their tls
aliases (available in MongoDB 4.2+),
see Use Command-line Options (tls
).
The tls
settings/options provide identical functionality
as the ssl
options since MongoDB has always supported TLS 1.0
and later.
For more information, see Configure mongod
and mongos
for TLS/SSL.
Additional Information
To upgrade from keyfile internal authentication to x.509 internal authentication, see Upgrade from Keyfile Authentication to x.509 Authentication.
To perform a rolling update of the certificates to new certificates
with different DN
, see
Rolling Update of x.509 Cluster Certificates that Contain New DN.