mirror of https://github.com/status-im/consul.git
167 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
167 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
---
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layout: docs
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page_title: Consul NIA Security Model
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description: >-
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Security model including requirements, recommendations, and threats for Consul Network Infrastructure Automation (NIA).
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---
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## Overview
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Network Infrastructure Automation (NIA) enables dynamic updates to network infrastructure devices triggered by service changes using the [Consul Terraform Sync](https://github.com/hashicorp/consul-terraform-sync) (`consul-terraform-sync`) daemon. This daemon uses Consul's catalog to monitor networking information about services along with [Terraform](https://www.terraform.io/)'s provider ecosystem to apply relevant changes to network infrastructure.
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The [Secure Consul-Terraform-Sync for Production](https://learn.hashicorp.com/tutorials/consul/consul-terraform-sync-secure?utm_source=WEBSITE&utm_medium=WEB_IO&utm_offer=ARTICLE_PAGE&utm_content=DOCS)
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tutorial contains a checklist of best practices to secure your
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Consul-Terraform-Sync installation for a production environment.
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### Personas
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When considering Consul NIA's security model, it helps to think of the following personas.
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- **System Administrator** - This is someone who has access to the underlying infrastructure of the
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NIA daemon ([`consul-terraform-sync`](https://github.com/hashicorp/consul-terraform-sync)), and possibly the core Consul service. Often she has access to SSH directly
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into a server within a cluster through a bastion host. Ultimately they have read, write, and
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execute permissions for the `consul-terraform-sync` binary. These users potentially have sudo,
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administrative, or some other privileged access to the underlying compute resource. Users like
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these are essentially totally trusted by NIA as they have administrative rights to the system.
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- **Consul NIA Operator** - This is someone who has access
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to define the `consul-terraform-sync` configuration, and possibly a Consul ACL token, and other secrets used to interact with various network infrastructure APIs. They have full access to all parts of `consul-terraform-sync` including the ability to configure, start, and stop the daemon.
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- **Developer** - This is someone who is responsible for creating, and possibly deploying applications
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connected, or configured with Consul. In some cases they may have no access, or limited capabilities
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to view Consul information, such as through metrics, or logs.
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- **User** - The end-user using the applications and other services managed by the NIA daemon, and should
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have no knowledge or access to the daemon’s API endpoints, ACL tokens, certificates, or any other
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piece of the system.
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### Secure Configuration
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Consul NIA’s security model is applicable only if all parts of the system are running with a secure
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configuration; `consul-terraform-sync` is not secure-by-default. Without the following mechanisms enabled in the
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daemon’s configuration, it may be possible to abuse access to the daemon. Like all security
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considerations, one must determine what concerns are appropriate for their environment, and adapt these
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security concerns accordingly.
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#### Requirements
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- **Protect Configuration Files and Directories** - A dedicated NIA user and group with limited
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permissions should be created for production, along with directory, and file permissions appropriately
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scoped for your operating environment.
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Example commands to illustrate creating a dedicated `consul-nia` system user, along with the supporting
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directories, configuration file, and securing those permissions using
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[`chown`](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chown) and [`chmod`](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chmod):
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```shell-session
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$ useradd --system --shell /bin/false consul-nia
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$ mkdir -p /consul-nia/data
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$ mkdir -p /consul-nia/config
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$ echo "{ ... }" > /consul-nia/config/file.hcl
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$ chown --recursive consul-nia:consul-nia /consul-nia
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$ chmod -R 0750 consul-nia/
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```
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- **Protect Consul KV Path or Namespaces** - Note the daemon can monitor Consul services in other Namespaces.
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This can be limited based on the ACL token used for the daemon.
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- **Use Consul ACLs** - The Access Control List (ACL) system within Consul can be used to restrict access to
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only the required parts of Consul for the NIA daemon to operate.
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- **Read + Write** permission for Consul KV to the specified path, and namespace.
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- **Read** permission for Consul Catalog for all of the selected services to be monitored, and their namespaces.
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- **Read + Write** permission to update health checks, when using NIA health monitoring.
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#### Recommendations
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- **Use Dedicated Host** - The NIA daemon will potentially have access to critical secrets for your environment’s
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network infrastructure. Using a hardened, dedicated host, for supporting these sensitive operations is highly.
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- **Run without Root** - The NIA daemon does not require root or other administrative privileges to operate.
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- **Protect NIA Daemon API Endpoint** - Any network endpoints provided by, or exposed to the NIA Daemon should be
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protected using Consul Connect and appropriate firewall rules.
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- **Use a centralized logging solution** - Export log entries within [syslog](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syslog)
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generated from `consul-terraform-sync` to a centralized logging solution.
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- **Audit used Terraform providers** - [Terraform providers](https://www.terraform.io/docs/providers/index.html) that
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are configured with the NIA daemon should be audited to ensure you’re only using providers from sources that
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you trust.
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### Threat Model
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The following are the parts of the NIA threat model:
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- **Consul agent communication** - In order to monitor the Consul Catalog for changes, the NIA daemon interacts with
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Consul’s HTTP API on a local or remote server agent. This communication requires TLS transport encryption, preferably
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using mTLS for mutual authentication.
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- **NIA Terraform communication** - Network connectivity to downstream infrastructure APIs managed by the NIA daemon’s
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Terraform runs will need to be properly configured for secure access.
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- **Tampering of data in transit** - Any tampering should be detectable and cause the daemon to avoid processing the
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request.
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- **Access to data without authentication or authorization** - Requests to the Consul agent should be authenticated and
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authorized using (m)TLS and ACLs respectively. ACLs should be configured with the minimal permissions required for
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your environment.
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- **Denial-of-Service** - DoS attacks against the NIA Daemon should not compromise the security of Consul, or Terraform,
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but may impact any networking components relying on updates from the daemon to properly handle traffic within the
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network. Access to the daemon should be prevented using firewall rules.
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The following are not a part of the threat model, as the NIA Daemon expects a secure configuration, while always
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providing the default options for testing in local environments which cannot be automatically configured to be both
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secure, and easily usable. However, these are valid concerns for Administrators and Operators to evaluate when hardening
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a production deployment:
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- **Access (read or write) to the Consul NIA Configuration Files or Directory** - Necessary configuration for the daemon
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process can be loaded from a single file or a directory of files. These configurations may contain secrets and can
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enable/disable insecure features, or Terraform providers.
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- **Access (read or write) to the Consul NIA Consul KV Path** - Access to the daemon’s Consul KV path may leak sensitive
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information such as usernames, passwords, certificates, and tokens used by Terraform to provision infrastructure.
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- **Memory Access to a Running Consul-Terraform-Sync Process** - Direct access to the memory of running the daemon process
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allows an attacker to extract sensitive information.
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- **Memory Access to a Running Terraform Process** - Direct access to the memory of running the Terraform process
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managed by the daemon process allows an attacker to extract sensitive information.
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- **Access to the Terraform Binary** - Direct access to the Terraform binary used by the NIA daemon can allow an
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attacker to extract sensitive information.
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- **Access to the Consul-Terraform-Sync Binary** - Direct access to the system binary used to start the NIA daemon can allow
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an attacker to extract sensitive information.
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#### Internal Threats
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- **NIA Operator** - Someone with access to the NIA Host, and it’s related binaries or configuration files may be a
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threat to your deployment, especially considering multi-team deployments. They may accidentally or intentionally use a
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malicious Terraform provider, or extract various secrets to cause harm to the network. Access to the NIA host should
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be guarded.
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- **Consul Operator** - Someone with access to the backend Consul cluster, similar to the NIA Operator, which can
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perform actions that may trigger Terraform runs. They may also have access to the namespace and KV path of the NIA
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daemon, which could give unintended access to Terraform’s state file, which contains sensitive information. ACL
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permissions for Consul should be carefully audited to ensure that no policies may be leaking the state file containing
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sensitive information to other Consul operators unintentionally within the cluster.
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- **System-bound Attackers** - Multi-tenant environments, especially container orchestrators, can introduce a number of
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security concerns. These may include shared secrets, host volume access, and other sources of potential pivoting, or
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privilege escalation from attackers with operating system-level access, or side-car container access, through various
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means. Extra steps to configuring OS, cluster, service, user, directory, and file permissions are essential steps for
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implementing defense-in-depth within a production environment.
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#### External Threats
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- **Terraform Providers and Modules** - Potentially malicious providers or modules, or any malicious dependencies part
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of the Terraform ecosystem could cause harm to the network, and may have access to secrets in order to make necessary
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network changes. Terraform provider configuration should be audited, pinned to a version, and audited for potential
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typo-squatting issues from the Terraform Registry.
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- **Network-bound Attackers** - Whenever a service is exposed to the open internet, which may be the case, you really
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need to consider external network attackers which may seek-out hidden, unauthenticated, or otherwise vulnerable
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endpoints. This can lead to larger security concerns when able to pivot to internal resources from an external one.
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- **Leaking Secrets** - TLS certificates and tokens used by the Consul NIA daemon can enable external attackers to
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access Consul, or Terraform resources. These secrets shouldn’t be hardcoded into configs uploaded to public
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places like GitHub.
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