Commit Graph

5 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Andreas Auernhammer
26f1fcab7d
add SSE-KMS support and use SSE-KMS for auto encryption (#11767)
This commit adds basic SSE-KMS support.
Now, a client can specify the SSE-KMS headers
(algorithm, optional key-id, optional context)
such that the object gets encrypted using the
SSE-KMS method. Further, auto-encryption now
defaults to SSE-KMS.

This commit does not try to do any refactoring
and instead tries to implement SSE-KMS as a minimal
change to the code base. However, refactoring the entire
crypto-related code is planned - but needs a separate
effort.

Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <aead@mail.de>
Co-authored-by: Klaus Post <klauspost@gmail.com>
2021-05-05 11:24:14 -07:00
Harshavardhana
069432566f update license change for MinIO
Signed-off-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
2021-04-23 11:58:53 -07:00
Andreas Auernhammer
885c170a64
introduce new package pkg/kms (#12019)
This commit introduces a new package `pkg/kms`.
It contains basic types and functions to interact
with various KMS implementations.

This commit also moves KMS-related code from `cmd/crypto`
to `pkg/kms`. Now, it is possible to implement a KMS-based
config data encryption in the `pkg/config` package.
2021-04-15 08:47:33 -07:00
Andreas Auernhammer
871b450dbd
crypto: add support for decrypting SSE-KMS metadata (#11415)
This commit refactors the SSE implementation and add
S3-compatible SSE-KMS context handling.

SSE-KMS differs from SSE-S3 in two main aspects:
 1. The client can request a particular key and
    specify a KMS context as part of the request.
 2. The ETag of an SSE-KMS encrypted object is not
    the MD5 sum of the object content.

This commit only focuses on the 1st aspect.

A client can send an optional SSE context when using
SSE-KMS. This context is remembered by the S3 server
such that the client does not have to specify the
context again (during multipart PUT / GET / HEAD ...).
The crypto. context also includes the bucket/object
name to prevent renaming objects at the backend.

Now, AWS S3 behaves as following:
 - If the user does not provide a SSE-KMS context
   it does not store one - resp. does not include
   the SSE-KMS context header in the response (e.g. HEAD).
 - If the user specifies a SSE-KMS context without
   the bucket/object name then AWS stores the exact
   context the client provided but adds the bucket/object
   name internally. The response contains the KMS context
   without the bucket/object name.
 - If the user specifies a SSE-KMS context with
   the bucket/object name then AWS again stores the exact
   context provided by the client. The response contains
   the KMS context with the bucket/object name.

This commit implements this behavior w.r.t. SSE-KMS.
However, as of now, no such object can be created since
the server rejects SSE-KMS encryption requests.

This commit is one stepping stone for SSE-KMS support.

Co-authored-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
2021-02-03 15:19:08 -08:00
Andreas Auernhammer
8cdf2106b0
refactor cmd/crypto code for SSE handling and parsing (#11045)
This commit refactors the code in `cmd/crypto`
and separates SSE-S3, SSE-C and SSE-KMS.

This commit should not cause any behavior change
except for:
  - `IsRequested(http.Header)`

which now returns the requested type {SSE-C, SSE-S3,
SSE-KMS} and does not consider SSE-C copy headers.

However, SSE-C copy headers alone are anyway not valid.
2020-12-22 09:19:32 -08:00