Hi, Andrew again,

I still have a question that if we move the encryption to HDFS level, we no 
longer can enable encryption per table I think? 
I assume encryption will impact performance to some extent, so we may would 
like to enable it per table. Is there any performance tests that shows how much 
overhead encryption can introduce? If very small, then I am very happy to do it 
in HDFS and encrypt all data.
I still not start to study HSM, but if for example, we can setup a separate 
storage, like a NFS, which can be mounted to each node of HBase cluster, and we 
put the key there, is it an acceptable plan?

Thanks,
Ming

-----邮件原件-----
发件人: Andrew Purtell [mailto:[email protected]] 
发送时间: 2016年6月3日 12:27
收件人: [email protected]
抄送: Zhang, Yi (Eason) <[email protected]>
主题: Re: 答复: hbase 'transparent encryption' feature is production ready or not?

> We are now confident to use this feature.

You should test carefully for your use case in any case.

> HSM is a good option, I am new to it. But will look at it.

I recommend using HDFS's transparent encryption feature instead of HBase 
transparent encryption if you're only just now thinking about HSMs and key 
protection in general. Storing the master key on the same nodes as the 
encrypted data will defeat protection. This should be offloaded to a protected 
domain. Hadoop ships with a software KMS that, while it has limitations, can be 
set up on a specially secured server and HDFS TDE can take advantage of it. 
(HBase TDE doesn't support the Hadoop KMS.)

Advice offered for what it's worth (smile)


On Thu, Jun 2, 2016 at 9:16 PM, Liu, Ming (Ming) <[email protected]> wrote:

> Thank you Andrew!
>
> What we hear must be rumor :-) We are now confident to use this feature.
>
> HSM is a good option, I am new to it. But will look at it.
>
> Thanks,
> Ming
> -----邮件原件-----
> 发件人: Andrew Purtell [mailto:[email protected]]
> 发送时间: 2016年6月3日 8:59
> 收件人: [email protected]
> 抄送: Zhang, Yi (Eason) <[email protected]>
> 主题: Re: hbase 'transparent encryption' feature is production ready or not?
>
> > We heard from various sources that it is not production ready before.
>
> ​Said by whom, specifically? ​
>
> ​> During our tests, we do find out it works not very stable, but 
> probably due to our lack of experience of this feature.
>
> If you have something repeatable, please consider filing a JIRA to 
> report the problem.
>
> > And, we now save the encryption key in the disk, so we were 
> > wondering,
> this is something not secure.
>
> Data keys are encrypted with a master key which must be protected. The 
> out of the box key provider stores the master key in a local keystore. 
> That's not sufficient protection. In a production environment you will 
> want to use a HSM. Most (all?) HSMs support the keystore API. If that 
> is not sufficient, our KeyProvider API is extensible for the solution 
> you choose to employ in production.
>
> ​Have you looked at HDFS transparent encryption?
>
> https://hadoop.apache.org/docs/r2.7.2/hadoop-project-dist/hadoop-hdfs/
> TransparentEncryption.html Because it works at the HDFS layer it's a 
> more general solution. Be careful what version of Hadoop you use if 
> opting for HDFS TDE, though. Pick the most recent release. Slightly 
> older versions (like 2.6.0) had fatal bugs if used in conjunction with 
> HBase.
>
>
>
> On Thu, Jun 2, 2016 at 5:52 PM, Liu, Ming (Ming) <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
> > Hi, all,
> >
> > We are trying to deploy the 'transparent encryption' feature of 
> > HBase , described in HBase reference guide:
> > https://hbase.apache.org/book.html#hbase.encryption.server  , in our 
> > product.
> > We heard from various sources that it is not production ready before.
> >
> > During our tests, we do find out it works not very stable, but 
> > probably due to our lack of experience of this feature. It works 
> > sometime, sometimes not work, and retry the same configuration, it 
> > work again. We were using HBase 1.0.
> >
> > Could anyone give us some information that this feature is already 
> > stable and can be used in a production environment?
> >
> > And, we now save the encryption key in the disk, so we were 
> > wondering, this is something not secure. Since the key is at same 
> > place with data, anyone can decode the data because if he/she can 
> > access the data, he/she can access the key as well. Is there any 
> > best practice about how to manage the key?
> >
> > Thanks,
> > Ming
> >
> >
>
>
> --
> Best regards,
>
>    - Andy
>
> Problems worthy of attack prove their worth by hitting back. - Piet 
> Hein (via Tom White)
>



--
Best regards,

   - Andy

Problems worthy of attack prove their worth by hitting back. - Piet Hein (via 
Tom White)

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