Securing Falcon

Overview

Apache Falcon enforces authentication and authorization which are detailed below. Falcon also provides transport level security ensuring data confidentiality and integrity.

Authentication (User Identity)

Apache Falcon enforces authentication on protected resources. Once authentication has been established it sets a signed HTTP Cookie that contains an authentication token with the user name, user principal, authentication type and expiration time.

It does so by using Hadoop Auth. Hadoop Auth is a Java library consisting of a client and a server components to enable Kerberos SPNEGO authentication for HTTP. Hadoop Auth also supports additional authentication mechanisms on the client and the server side via 2 simple interfaces.

Authentication Methods

It supports 2 authentication methods, simple and kerberos out of the box.

Pseudo/Simple Authentication

Falcon authenticates the user by simply trusting the value of the query string parameter 'user.name'. This is the default mode Falcon is configured with.

Kerberos Authentication

Falcon uses HTTP Kerberos SPNEGO to authenticate the user.

Authorization

Falcon also enforces authorization on Entities using ACLs (Access Control Lists). ACLs are useful for implementing permission requirements and provide a way to set different permissions for specific users or named groups.

By default, support for authorization is disabled and can be enabled in startup.properties.

ACLs in Entity

All Entities now have ACL which needs to be present if authorization is enabled. Only owners who own or created the entity will be allowed to update or delete their entities.

An entity has ACLs (Access Control Lists) that are useful for implementing permission requirements and provide a way to set different permissions for specific users or named groups.

    <ACL owner="test-user" group="test-group" permission="*"/>

ACL indicates the Access control list for this cluster. owner is the Owner of this entity. group is the one which has access to read. permission indicates the rwx is not enforced at this time.

Super-User

The super-user is the user with the same identity as falcon process itself. Loosely, if you started the falcon, then you are the super-user. The super-user can do anything in that permissions checks never fail for the super-user. There is no persistent notion of who was the super-user; when the falcon is started the process identity determines who is the super-user for now. The Falcon super-user does not have to be the super-user of the falcon host, nor is it necessary that all clusters have the same super-user. Also, an experimenter running Falcon on a personal workstation, conveniently becomes that installation's super-user without any configuration.

Falcon also allows users to configure a super user group and allows users belonging to this group to be a super user.

ACL owner and group must be valid even if the authenticated user is a super-user.

Group Memberships

Once a user has been authenticated and a username has been determined, the list of groups is determined by a group mapping service, configured by the hadoop.security.group.mapping property in Hadoop. The default implementation, org.apache.hadoop.security.ShellBasedUnixGroupsMapping, will shell out to the Unix bash -c groups command to resolve a list of groups for a user.

Note that Falcon stores the user and group of an Entity as strings; there is no conversion from user and group identity numbers as is conventional in Unix.

The only limitation is that a user cannot add a group in ACL that he does not belong to.

Authorization Provider

Falcon provides a plugin-able provider interface for Authorization. It also ships with a default implementation that enforces the following authorization policy.

Entity and Instance Management Operations Policy

  • All Entity and Instance operations are authorized for users who created them, Owners and users with group memberships
  • Reference to entities with in a feed or process is allowed with out enforcing permissions

Any Feed or Process can refer to a Cluster entity not owned by the Feed or Process owner. Any Process can refer to a Feed entity not owned by the Process owner

The authorization is enforced in the following way:

  • if admin resource,
    • If authenticated user name matches the admin users configuration
    • Else if groups of the authenticated user matches the admin groups configuration
    • Else authorization exception is thrown
  • Else if entities or instance resource
    • If the authenticated user matches the owner in ACL for the entity
    • Else if the groups of the authenticated user matches the group in ACL for the entity
    • Else authorization exception is thrown
  • Else if lineage resource
    • All have read-only permissions, reason being folks should be able to examine the dependency and allow reuse

To authenticate user for REST api calls, user should append "user.name=<username>" to the query.

operations on Entity Resource

Resource Description Authorization
api/entities/validate/:entity-type Validate the entity Owner/Group
api/entities/submit/:entity-type Submit the entity Owner/Group
api/entities/update/:entity-type/:entity-name Update the entity Owner/Group
api/entities/submitAndSchedule/:entity-type Submit & Schedule the entity Owner/Group
api/entities/schedule/:entity-type/:entity-name Schedule the entity Owner/Group
api/entities/suspend/:entity-type/:entity-name Suspend the entity Owner/Group
api/entities/resume/:entity-type/:entity-name Resume the entity Owner/Group
api/entities/delete/:entity-type/:entity-name Delete the entity Owner/Group
api/entities/status/:entity-type/:entity-name Get the status of the entity Owner/Group
api/entities/definition/:entity-type/:entity-name Get the definition of the entity Owner/Group
api/entities/list/:entity-type?fields=:fields Get the list of entities Owner/Group
api/entities/dependencies/:entity-type/:entity-name Get the dependencies of the entity Owner/Group
REST Call on Feed and Process Instances

Resource Description Authorization
api/instance/running/:entity-type/:entity-name List of running instances. Owner/Group
api/instance/status/:entity-type/:entity-name Status of a given instance Owner/Group
api/instance/kill/:entity-type/:entity-name Kill a given instance Owner/Group
api/instance/suspend/:entity-type/:entity-name Suspend a running instance Owner/Group
api/instance/resume/:entity-type/:entity-name Resume a given instance Owner/Group
api/instance/rerun/:entity-type/:entity-name Rerun a given instance Owner/Group
api/instance/logs/:entity-type/:entity-name Get logs of a given instance Owner/Group
Admin Resources Policy

Only users belonging to admin users or groups have access to this resource. Admin membership is determined by a static configuration parameter.

Resource Description Authorization
api/admin/version Get version of the server No restriction
api/admin/stack Get stack of the server Admin User/Group
api/admin/config/:config-type Get configuration information of the server Admin User/Group
Lineage Resource Policy

Lineage is read-only and hence all users can look at lineage for their respective entities. Note: This gap will be fixed in a later release.

Authentication Configuration

Following is the Server Side Configuration Setup for Authentication.

Common Configuration Parameters

# Authentication type must be specified: simple|kerberos
*.falcon.authentication.type=kerberos

Kerberos Configuration

##### Service Configuration

# Indicates the Kerberos principal to be used in Falcon Service.
*.falcon.service.authentication.kerberos.principal=falcon/_HOST@EXAMPLE.COM

# Location of the keytab file with the credentials for the Service principal.
*.falcon.service.authentication.kerberos.keytab=/etc/security/keytabs/falcon.service.keytab

# name node principal to talk to config store
*.dfs.namenode.kerberos.principal=nn/_HOST@EXAMPLE.COM

##### SPNEGO Configuration

# Authentication type must be specified: simple|kerberos|<class>
# org.apache.falcon.security.RemoteUserInHeaderBasedAuthenticationHandler can be used for backwards compatibility
*.falcon.http.authentication.type=kerberos

# Indicates how long (in seconds) an authentication token is valid before it has to be renewed.
*.falcon.http.authentication.token.validity=36000

# The signature secret for signing the authentication tokens.
*.falcon.http.authentication.signature.secret=falcon

# The domain to use for the HTTP cookie that stores the authentication token.
*.falcon.http.authentication.cookie.domain=

# Indicates if anonymous requests are allowed when using 'simple' authentication.
*.falcon.http.authentication.simple.anonymous.allowed=true

# Indicates the Kerberos principal to be used for HTTP endpoint.
# The principal MUST start with 'HTTP/' as per Kerberos HTTP SPNEGO specification.
*.falcon.http.authentication.kerberos.principal=HTTP/_HOST@EXAMPLE.COM

# Location of the keytab file with the credentials for the HTTP principal.
*.falcon.http.authentication.kerberos.keytab=/etc/security/keytabs/spnego.service.keytab

# The kerberos names rules is to resolve kerberos principal names, refer to Hadoop's KerberosName for more details.
*.falcon.http.authentication.kerberos.name.rules=DEFAULT

# Comma separated list of black listed users
*.falcon.http.authentication.blacklisted.users=

# Increase Jetty request buffer size to accommodate the generated Kerberos token
*.falcon.jetty.request.buffer.size=16192

Pseudo/Simple Configuration

##### SPNEGO Configuration

# Authentication type must be specified: simple|kerberos|<class>
# org.apache.falcon.security.RemoteUserInHeaderBasedAuthenticationHandler can be used for backwards compatibility
*.falcon.http.authentication.type=simple

# Indicates how long (in seconds) an authentication token is valid before it has to be renewed.
*.falcon.http.authentication.token.validity=36000

# The signature secret for signing the authentication tokens.
*.falcon.http.authentication.signature.secret=falcon

# The domain to use for the HTTP cookie that stores the authentication token.
*.falcon.http.authentication.cookie.domain=

# Indicates if anonymous requests are allowed when using 'simple' authentication.
*.falcon.http.authentication.simple.anonymous.allowed=true

# Comma separated list of black listed users
*.falcon.http.authentication.blacklisted.users=

Authorization Configuration

Enabling Authorization

By default, support for authorization is disabled and specifying ACLs in entities are optional. To enable support for authorization, set falcon.security.authorization.enabled to true in the startup configuration.

# Authorization Enabled flag: false|true
*.falcon.security.authorization.enabled=true

Authorization Provider

Falcon provides a basic implementation for Authorization bundled, org.apache.falcon.security .DefaultFalconAuthorizationProvider. This can be overridden by custom implementations in the startup configuration.

# Authorization Provider Fully Qualified Class Name
*.falcon.security.authorization.provider=org.apache.falcon.security.DefaultAuthorizationProvider

Super User Group

Super user group is determined by the configuration:

# The name of the group of super-users
*.falcon.security.authorization.superusergroup=falcon

Admin Membership

Administrative users are determined by the configuration:

# Admin Users, comma separated users
*.falcon.security.authorization.admin.users=falcon,ambari-qa,seetharam

Administrative groups are determined by the configuration:

# Admin Group Membership, comma separated users
*.falcon.security.authorization.admin.groups=falcon,testgroup,staff

SSL

Falcon provides transport level security ensuring data confidentiality and integrity. This is enabled by default for communicating over HTTP between the client and the server.

SSL Configuration

*.falcon.enableTLS=true
*.keystore.file=/path/to/keystore/file
*.keystore.password=password

Distributed Falcon Setup

Falcon should be configured to communicate with Prism over TLS in secure mode. Its not enabled by default.

Changes to ownership and permissions of directories managed by Falcon

Directory Location Owner Permissions
Configuration Store ${config.store.uri} falcon 700
Cluster Staging Location ${cluster.staging-location} falcon 777
Cluster Working Location ${cluster.working-location} falcon 755
Shared libs {cluster.working}/{lib,libext} falcon 755
Oozie coord/bundle XMLs ${cluster.staging-location}/workflows/{entity}/{entity-name} $user cluster umask
App logs ${cluster.staging-location}/workflows/{entity}/{entity-name}/logs $user cluster umask
Note: Please note that the cluster staging and working locations MUST be created prior to submitting a cluster entity to Falcon. Also, note that the the parent dirs must have execute permissions.

Backwards compatibility

Scheduled Entities

Entities already scheduled with an earlier version of Falcon are not compatible with this version

Falcon Clients

Older Falcon clients are backwards compatible wrt Authentication and user information sent as part of the HTTP header, Remote-User is still honoured when the authentication type is configured as below:

*.falcon.http.authentication.type=org.apache.falcon.security.RemoteUserInHeaderBasedAuthenticationHandler

Blacklisted super users for authentication

The blacklist users used to have the following super users: hdfs, mapreduce, oozie, and falcon. The list is externalized from code into Startup.properties file and is empty now and needs to be configured specifically in the file.

Falcon Dashboard

To initialize the current user for dashboard, user should append query param "user.name=<username>" to the REST api call.

If dashboard user wishes to change the current user, they should do the following.

  • delete the hadoop.auth cookie from browser cache.
  • append query param "user.name=<new_user>" to the next REST API call.

In Kerberos method, the browser must support HTTP Kerberos SPNEGO.

Known Limitations

  • ActiveMQ topics are not secure but will be in the near future
  • Entities already scheduled with an earlier version of Falcon are not compatible with this version as new
workflow parameters are being passed back into Falcon such as the user are required The alternative is to use webhdfs scheme instead and its been tested with DistCp.

Examples

Accessing the server using Falcon CLI (Java client)

There is no change in the way the CLI is used. The CLI has been changed to work with the configured authentication method.

Accessing the server using curl

Try accessing protected resources using curl. The protected resources are:

$ kinit
Please enter the password for venkatesh@LOCALHOST:

$ curl http://localhost:15000/api/admin/version

$ curl http://localhost:15000/api/admin/version?user.name=venkatesh

$ curl --negotiate -u foo -b ~/cookiejar.txt -c ~/cookiejar.txt curl http://localhost:15000/api/admin/version