125 lines
5.7 KiB
Plaintext
125 lines
5.7 KiB
Plaintext
[role="xpack"]
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[[fips-140-compliance]]
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=== FIPS 140-2
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The Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS) Publication 140-2, (FIPS PUB
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140-2), titled "Security Requirements for Cryptographic Modules" is a U.S.
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government computer security standard used to approve cryptographic modules.
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{es} offers a FIPS 140-2 compliant mode and as such can run in a FIPS 140-2
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enabled JVM. In order to set {es} in fips mode, you must set the
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`xpack.security.fips_mode.enabled` to `true` in `elasticsearch.yml`
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For {es}, adherence to FIPS 140-2 is ensured by
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- Using FIPS approved / NIST recommended cryptographic algorithms.
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- Delegating the implementation of these cryptographic algorithms to a NIST
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validated cryptographic module (available via the Java Security Provider
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in use in the JVM).
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- Allowing the configuration of {es} in a FIPS 140-2 compliant manner, as
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documented below.
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[float]
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=== Upgrade considerations
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If you plan to upgrade your existing cluster to a version that can be run in
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a FIPS 140-2 enabled JVM, the suggested approach is to first perform a rolling
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upgrade to the new version in your existing JVM and perform all necessary
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configuration changes in preparation for running in fips mode. You can then
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perform a rolling restart of the nodes, this time starting each node in the FIPS
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140-2 JVM. This enables {es} to take care of a couple of things automatically for you:
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- <<secure-settings,Secure settings>> will be upgraded to the latest format version as
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previous format versions cannot be loaded in a FIPS 140-2 JVM.
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- Self-generated trial licenses will be upgraded to the latest format that
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is compliant with FIPS 140-2.
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If you have a {subscriptions}[subscription] that supports FIPS 140-2 mode, you
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can elect to perform a rolling upgrade while at the same time running each
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upgraded node in a FIPS 140-2 JVM. In this case, you would need to also
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regenerate your `elasticsearch.keystore` and migrate all secure settings to it,
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in addition to the necessary configuration changes outlined below, before
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starting each node.
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[float]
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=== Configuring {es} for FIPS 140-2
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Apart from setting `xpack.security.fips_mode.enabled`, a number of security
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related settings need to be configured accordingly in order to be compliant
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and able to run {es} successfully in a FIPS 140-2 enabled JVM.
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[float]
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==== TLS
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SSLv2 and SSLv3 are not allowed by FIPS 140-2, so `SSLv2Hello` and `SSLv3` cannot
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be used for <<ssl-tls-settings,`ssl.supported_protocols`>>.
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NOTE: The use of TLS ciphers is mainly governed by the relevant crypto module
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(the FIPS Approved Security Provider that your JVM uses). All the ciphers that
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are configured by default in {es} are FIPS 140-2 compliant and as such can be
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used in a FIPS 140-2 JVM. See <<ssl-tls-settings,`ssl.cipher_suites`>>.
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[float]
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==== TLS Keystores and keys
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Keystores can be used in a number of <<ssl-tls-settings>> in order to
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conveniently store key and trust material. Neither `JKS`, nor `PKCS#12` keystores
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can be used in a FIPS 140-2 enabled JVM however, so you must refrain from using
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these keystores. Your FIPS 140-2 provider may provide a compliant keystore that
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can be used or you can use PEM encoded files. To use PEM encoded key material,
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you can use the relevant `\*.key` and `*.certificate` configuration
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options, and for trust material you can use `*.certificate_authorities`.
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FIPS 140-2 compliance dictates that the length of the public keys used for TLS
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must correspond to the strength of the symmetric key algorithm in use in TLS.
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Depending on the value of `ssl.cipher_suites` that you select to use, the TLS
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keys must have corresponding length according to the following table:
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[[comparable-key-strength]]
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.Comparable key strengths
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|=======================
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| Symmetric Key Algorithm | RSA key Length | ECC key length
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| `3DES` | 2048 | 224-255
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| `AES-128` | 3072 | 256-383
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| `AES-256` | 15630 | 512+
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|=======================
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[float]
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==== Password Hashing
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{es} offers a number of algorithms for securely hashing credentials in memory and
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on disk. However, only the `PBKDF2` family of algorithms is compliant with FIPS
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140-2 for password hashing. You must set the `cache.hash_algo` realm settings
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and the `xpack.security.authc.password_hashing.algorithm` setting to one of the
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available `PBKDF2` values.
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See <<hashing-settings>>.
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Password hashing configuration changes are not retroactive so the stored hashed
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credentials of existing users of the file and native realms will not be updated
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on disk.
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Authentication will still work, but in order to ensure FIPS 140-2 compliance,
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you would need to recreate users or change their password using the
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<<users-command, elasticsearch-user>> CLI tool for the file realm and the
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<<security-api-put-user,create users>> and <<security-api-change-password,change
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password>> APIs for the native realm.
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The user cache will be emptied upon node restart, so any existing hashes using
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non-compliant algorithms will be discarded and the new ones will be created
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using the compliant `PBKDF2` algorithm you have selected.
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[float]
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=== Limitations
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Due to the limitations that FIPS 140-2 compliance enforces, a small number of
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features are not available while running in fips mode. The list is as follows:
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* Azure Classic Discovery Plugin
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* Ingest Attachment Plugin
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* The {ref}/certutil.html[`elasticsearch-certutil`] tool. However,
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`elasticsearch-certutil` can very well be used in a non FIPS 140-2
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enabled JVM (pointing `JAVA_HOME` environment variable to a different java
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installation) in order to generate the keys and certificates that
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can be later used in the FIPS 140-2 enabled JVM.
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* The SQL CLI client cannot run in a FIPS 140-2 enabled JVM while using
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TLS for transport security or PKI for client authentication.
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