Security
The Starter provides commands to create certificates and tokens for securing ArangoDB deployments for encrypting connections and authenticated access control
Creating certificates
The starter provides commands to create all certificates needed for an ArangoDB deployment.
TLS server certificates
To create a certificate used for TLS servers in the keyfile format,
you need the public key of the CA (--cacert
), the private key of
the CA (--cakey
) and one or more hostnames (or IP addresses).
Then run:
arangodb create tls keyfile \
--cacert=my-tls-ca.crt --cakey=my-tls-ca.key \
--host=<hostname> \
--keyfile=my-tls-cert.keyfile
Make sure to store the generated keyfile (my-tls-cert.keyfile
) in a safe place.
To create a certificate used for TLS servers in the crt & key format,
you need the public key of the CA (--cacert
), the private key of
the CA (--cakey
) and one or more hostnames (or IP addresses).
Then run:
arangodb create tls certificate \
--cacert=my-tls-ca.crt --cakey=my-tls-ca.key \
--host=<hostname> \
--cert=my-tls-cert.crt \
--key=my-tls-cert.key \
Make sure to protect and store the generated files (my-tls-cert.crt
& my-tls-cert.key
) in a safe place.
Client authentication certificates
To create a certificate used for client authentication in the keyfile format,
you need the public key of the CA (--cacert
), the private key of
the CA (--cakey
) and one or more hostnames (or IP addresses) or email addresses.
Then run:
arangodb create client-auth keyfile \
--cacert=my-client-auth-ca.crt --cakey=my-client-auth-ca.key \
[--host=<hostname> | --email=<emailaddress>] \
--keyfile=my-client-auth-cert.keyfile
Make sure to protect and store the generated keyfile (my-client-auth-cert.keyfile
) in a safe place.
CA certificates
To create a CA certificate used to sign TLS certificates, run:
arangodb create tls ca \
--cert=my-tls-ca.crt --key=my-tls-ca.key
Make sure to protect and store both generated files (my-tls-ca.crt
& my-tls-ca.key
) in a safe place.
Note: CA certificates have a much longer lifetime than normal certificates. Therefore even more care is needed to store them safely.
To create a CA certificate used to sign client authentication certificates, run:
arangodb create client-auth ca \
--cert=my-client-auth-ca.crt --key=my-client-auth-ca.key
Make sure to protect and store both generated files (my-client-auth-ca.crt
& my-client-auth-ca.key
)
in a safe place.
Note: CA certificates have a much longer lifetime than normal certificates. Therefore even more care is needed to store them safely.
Creating authentication tokens
JWT tokens are used to authenticate servers (within a cluster) with each other.
JWT tokens
To create a file containing an JWT token, run:
arangodb create jwt-secret \
--secret=my-secret.jwt [--length=32]
Make sure to protect and store the generated file (my-secret.jwt
) in a safe place.
Using authentication tokens
ArangoDB deployments that require authentication can be accessed through standard user+password pairs or using a JWT to get “super-user” access.
This super-user access is needed to communicate directly with the Agency or with any server in the deployment. Note that uses super-user access for normal database access is NOT advised.
To create a JWT from the JWT secret file specified using the --auth.jwt-secret
option,
use the following command:
arangodb auth token --auth.jwt-secret=<secret-file>
To create a complete HTTP Authorization header that can be passed directly to tools like curl
,
use the following command:
arangodb auth header --auth.jwt-secret=<secret-file>
Using curl
with this command looks like this:
curl -v -H "$(arangodb auth header --auth.jwt-secret=<secret-file>)" http://<database-ip>:8529/_api/version
Note the double quotes around $(...)
.