====================== Image Encryption ====================== .. index:: Ceph Block Device; encryption Starting with the Pacific release, image-level encryption can be handled internally by RBD clients. This means you can set a secret key that will be used to encrypt a specific RBD image. This page describes the scope of the RBD encryption feature. .. note:: The ``krbd`` kernel module does not support encryption at this time. .. note:: External tools (e.g. dm-crypt, QEMU) can be used as well to encrypt an RBD image, and the feature set and limitation set for that use may be different than described here. Encryption Format ================= By default, RBD images are not encrypted. To encrypt an RBD image, it needs to be formatted to one of the supported encryption formats. The format operation persists encryption metadata to the image. The encryption metadata usually includes information such as the encryption format and version, cipher algorithm and mode specification, as well as information used to secure the encryption key. The encryption key itself is protected by a user-kept secret (usually a passphrase), which is never persisted. The basic encryption format operation will require specifying the encryption format and a secret. Some of the encryption metadata may be stored as part of the image data, typically an encryption header will be written to the beginning of the raw image data. This means that the effective image size of the encrypted image may be lower than the raw image size. See the `Supported Formats`_ section for more details. .. note:: Unless explicitly (re-)formatted, clones of an encrypted image are inherently encrypted using the same format and secret. .. note:: Clones of an encrypted image are always encrypted. Re-formatting to plaintext is not supported. .. note:: Any data written to the image prior to its format may become unreadable, though it may still occupy storage resources. .. note:: Images with the `journal feature`_ enabled cannot be formatted and encrypted by RBD clients. Encryption Load ================= Formatting an image is a necessary pre-requisite for enabling encryption. However, formatted images will still be treated as raw unencrypted images by all of the RBD APIs. In particular, an encrypted RBD image can be opened by the same APIs as any other image, and raw unencrypted data can be read / written. Such raw IOs may risk the integrity of the encryption format, for example by overriding encryption metadata located at the beginning of the image. In order to safely perform encrypted IO on the formatted image, an additional *encryption load* operation should be applied after opening the image. The encryption load operation requires supplying the encryption format and a secret for unlocking the encryption key for the image itself and each of its explicitly formatted ancestor images. Following a successful encryption load operation, all IOs for the opened image will be encrypted / decrypted. For a cloned image, this includes IOs for ancestor images as well. The encryption keys will be stored in-memory by the RBD client until the image is closed. .. note:: Once encryption has been loaded, no other encryption load / format operations can be applied to the context of the opened image. .. note:: Once encryption has been loaded, API calls for retrieving the image size and the parent overlap using the opened image context will return the effective image size and the effective parent overlap respectively. .. note:: Once encryption has been loaded, API calls for resizing the image will interpret the specified target size as effective image size. .. note:: If a clone of an encrypted image is explicitly formatted, the operation of flattening the cloned image ceases to be transparent since the parent data must be re-encrypted according to the cloned image format as it is copied from the parent snapshot. If encryption is not loaded before the flatten operation is issued, any parent data that was previously accessible in the cloned image may become unreadable. .. note:: If a clone of an encrypted image is explicitly formatted, the operation of shrinking the cloned image ceases to be transparent since in some cases (e.g. if the cloned image has snapshots or if the cloned image is being shrunk to a size that is not aligned with the object size) it involves copying some data from the parent snapshot, similar to flattening. If encryption is not loaded before the shrink operation is issued, any parent data that was previously accessible in the cloned image may become unreadable. .. note:: Encryption load can be automatically applied when mounting RBD images as block devices via `rbd-nbd`_. Supported Formats ================= LUKS ~~~~~~~ Both LUKS1 and LUKS2 are supported. The data layout is fully compliant with the LUKS specification. Thus, images formatted by RBD can be loaded using external LUKS-supporting tools such as dm-crypt or QEMU. Furthermore, existing LUKS data, created outside of RBD, can be imported (by copying the raw LUKS data into the image) and loaded by RBD encryption. .. note:: The LUKS formats are supported on Linux-based systems only. .. note:: Currently, only AES-128 and AES-256 encryption algorithms are supported. Additionally, xts-plain64 is currently the only supported encryption mode. To use the LUKS format, start by formatting the image: .. prompt:: bash $ rbd encryption format [--cipher-alg {aes-128|aes-256}] {image-spec} {luks1|luks2} {passphrase-file} The encryption format operation generates a LUKS header and writes it to the beginning of the image. The header is appended with a single keyslot holding a randomly-generated encryption key, and is protected by the passphrase read from `passphrase-file`. .. note:: In older versions, if the content of `passphrase-file` ended with a newline character, it was stripped off. By default, AES-256 in xts-plain64 mode (which is the current recommended mode, and the usual default for other tools) will be used. The format operation allows selecting AES-128 as well. Adding / removing passphrases is currently not supported by RBD, but can be applied to the raw RBD data using compatible tools such as cryptsetup. The LUKS header size can vary (up to 136MiB in LUKS2), but is usually up to 16MiB, depending on the version of `libcryptsetup` installed. For optimal performance, the encryption format will set the data offset to be aligned with the image stripe period size. For example, expect a minimum overhead of 8MiB if using an image configured with an 8MiB object size and a minimum overhead of 12MiB if using an image configured with a 4MiB object size and `stripe count`_ of 3. In LUKS1, sectors, which are the minimal encryption units, are fixed at 512 bytes. LUKS2 supports larger sectors, and for better performance we set the default sector size to the maximum of 4KiB. Writes which are either smaller than a sector, or are not aligned to a sector start, will trigger a guarded read-modify-write chain on the client, with a considerable latency penalty. A batch of such unaligned writes can lead to IO races which will further deteriorate performance. Thus it is advisable to avoid using RBD encryption in cases where incoming writes cannot be guaranteed to be sector-aligned. To map a LUKS-formatted image run: .. prompt:: bash # rbd device map -t nbd -o encryption-passphrase-file={passphrase-file} {image-spec} Note that for security reasons, both the encryption format and encryption load operations are CPU-intensive, and may take a few seconds to complete. For the encryption operations of actual image IO, assuming AES-NI is enabled, a relative small microseconds latency should be added, as well as a small increase in CPU utilization. Examples ======== Create a LUKS2-formatted image with the effective size of 50GiB: .. prompt:: bash $ rbd create --size 50G mypool/myimage rbd encryption format mypool/myimage luks2 passphrase.bin rbd resize --size 50G --encryption-passphrase-file passphrase.bin mypool/myimage ``rbd resize`` command at the end grows the image to compensate for the overhead associated with the LUKS2 header. Given a LUKS2-formatted image, create a LUKS2-formatted clone with the same effective size: .. prompt:: bash $ rbd snap create mypool/myimage@snap rbd snap protect mypool/myimage@snap rbd clone mypool/myimage@snap mypool/myclone rbd encryption format mypool/myclone luks2 clone-passphrase.bin Given a LUKS2-formatted image with the effective size of 50GiB, create a LUKS1-formatted clone with the same effective size: .. prompt:: bash $ rbd snap create mypool/myimage@snap rbd snap protect mypool/myimage@snap rbd clone mypool/myimage@snap mypool/myclone rbd encryption format mypool/myclone luks1 clone-passphrase.bin rbd resize --size 50G --allow-shrink --encryption-passphrase-file clone-passphrase.bin --encryption-passphrase-file passphrase.bin mypool/myclone Since LUKS1 header is usually smaller than LUKS2 header, ``rbd resize`` command at the end shrinks the cloned image to get rid of unneeded space allowance. Given a LUKS1-formatted image with the effective size of 50GiB, create a LUKS2-formatted clone with the same effective size: .. prompt:: bash $ rbd resize --size 51G mypool/myimage rbd snap create mypool/myimage@snap rbd snap protect mypool/myimage@snap rbd clone mypool/myimage@snap mypool/myclone rbd encryption format mypool/myclone luks2 clone-passphrase.bin rbd resize --size 50G --allow-shrink --encryption-passphrase-file passphrase.bin mypool/myimage rbd resize --size 50G --allow-shrink --encryption-passphrase-file clone-passphrase.bin --encryption-passphrase-file passphrase.bin mypool/myclone Since LUKS2 header is usually bigger than LUKS1 header, ``rbd resize`` command at the beginning temporarily grows the parent image to reserve some extra space in the parent snapshot and consequently the cloned image. This is necessary to make all parent data accessible in the cloned image. ``rbd resize`` commands at the end shrink the parent image back to its original size (this does not impact the parent snapshot) and also the cloned image to get rid of unused reserved space. The same applies to creating a formatted clone of an unformatted (plaintext) image since an unformatted image does not have a header at all. To map a formatted clone, provide encryption formats and passphrases for the clone itself and all of its explicitly formatted parent images. The order in which ``encryption-format`` and ``encryption-passphrase-file`` options should be provided is based on the image hierarchy: start with that of the cloned image, then its parent and so on. Here is an example of a command that maps a formatted clone: .. prompt:: bash # rbd device map -t nbd -o encryption-passphrase-file=clone-passphrase.bin,encryption-passphrase-file=passphrase.bin mypool/myclone .. _journal feature: ../rbd-mirroring/#enable-image-journaling-feature .. _Supported Formats: #supported-formats .. _rbd-nbd: ../../man/8/rbd-nbd .. _stripe count: ../../man/8/rbd/#striping