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Data Grid Security Guide
Enable and configure Data Grid security
Abstract
Red Hat Data Grid 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Data Grid is a high-performance, distributed in-memory data store.
- Schemaless data structure
- Flexibility to store different objects as key-value pairs.
- Grid-based data storage
- Designed to distribute and replicate data across clusters.
- Elastic scaling
- Dynamically adjust the number of nodes to meet demand without service disruption.
- Data interoperability
- Store, retrieve, and query data in the grid from different endpoints.
Data Grid documentation 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Documentation for Data Grid is available on the Red Hat customer portal.
Data Grid downloads 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Access the Data Grid Software Downloads on the Red Hat customer portal.
You must have a Red Hat account to access and download Data Grid software.
Making open source more inclusive 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Red Hat is committed to replacing problematic language in our code, documentation, and web properties. We are beginning with these four terms: master, slave, blacklist, and whitelist. Because of the enormity of this endeavor, these changes will be implemented gradually over several upcoming releases. For more details, see our CTO Chris Wright’s message.
Role-based access control (RBAC) capabilities use different permissions levels to restrict user interactions with Data Grid.
For information on creating users and configuring authorization specific to remote or embedded caches, see:
1.1. Data Grid user roles and permissions 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Data Grid includes several roles that provide users with permissions to access caches and Data Grid resources.
| Role | Permissions | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
| ALL | Superuser with all permissions including control of the Cache Manager lifecycle. |
|
| ALL_READ, ALL_WRITE, LISTEN, EXEC, MONITOR, CREATE |
Can create and delete Data Grid resources in addition to |
|
| ALL_READ, ALL_WRITE, LISTEN, EXEC, MONITOR |
Has read and write access to Data Grid resources in addition to |
|
| ALL_READ, MONITOR |
Has read access to Data Grid resources in addition to |
|
| MONITOR |
Can view statistics via JMX and the |
1.1.1. Permissions 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
User roles are sets of permissions with different access levels.
| Permission | Function | Description |
| CONFIGURATION |
| Defines new cache configurations. |
| LISTEN |
| Registers listeners against a Cache Manager. |
| LIFECYCLE |
| Stops the Cache Manager. |
| CREATE |
| Create and remove container resources such as caches, counters, schemas, and scripts. |
| MONITOR |
|
Allows access to JMX statistics and the |
| ALL | - | Includes all Cache Manager permissions. |
| Permission | Function | Description |
| READ |
| Retrieves entries from a cache. |
| WRITE |
| Writes, replaces, removes, evicts data in a cache. |
| EXEC |
| Allows code execution against a cache. |
| LISTEN |
| Registers listeners against a cache. |
| BULK_READ |
| Executes bulk retrieve operations. |
| BULK_WRITE |
| Executes bulk write operations. |
| LIFECYCLE |
| Starts and stops a cache. |
| ADMIN |
| Allows access to underlying components and internal structures. |
| MONITOR |
|
Allows access to JMX statistics and the |
| ALL | - | Includes all cache permissions. |
| ALL_READ | - | Combines the READ and BULK_READ permissions. |
| ALL_WRITE | - | Combines the WRITE and BULK_WRITE permissions. |
1.1.2. Role and permission mappers 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Data Grid implements users as a collection of principals. Principals represent either an individual user identity, such as a username, or a group to which the users belong. Internally, these are implemented with the javax.security.auth.Subject class.
To enable authorization, the principals must be mapped to role names, which are then expanded into a set of permissions.
Data Grid includes the PrincipalRoleMapper API for associating security principals to roles, and the RolePermissionMapper API for associating roles with specific permissions.
Data Grid provides the following role and permission mapper implementations:
- Cluster role mapper
- Stores principal to role mappings in the cluster registry.
- Cluster permission mapper
- Stores role to permission mappings in the cluster registry. Allows you to dynamically modify user roles and permissions.
- Identity role mapper
- Uses the principal name as the role name. The type or format of the principal name depends on the source. For example, in an LDAP directory the principal name could be a Distinguished Name (DN).
- Common name role mapper
-
Uses the Common Name (CN) as the role name. You can use this role mapper with an LDAP directory or with client certificates that contain Distinguished Names (DN); for example
cn=managers,ou=people,dc=example,dc=commaps to themanagersrole.
Consider the following user retrieved from an LDAP server, as a collection of DNs:
CN=myapplication,OU=applications,DC=mycompany CN=dataprocessors,OU=groups,DC=mycompany CN=finance,OU=groups,DC=mycompany
CN=myapplication,OU=applications,DC=mycompany
CN=dataprocessors,OU=groups,DC=mycompany
CN=finance,OU=groups,DC=mycompany
Using the Common name role mapper, the user would be mapped to the following roles:
dataprocessors finance
dataprocessors
finance
Data Grid has the following role definitions:
dataprocessors: ALL_WRITE ALL_READ finance: LISTEN
dataprocessors: ALL_WRITE ALL_READ
finance: LISTEN
The user would have the following permissions:
ALL_WRITE ALL_READ LISTEN
ALL_WRITE ALL_READ LISTEN
1.1.3. Configuring role mappers 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Data Grid enables the cluster role mapper and cluster permission mapper by default. To use a different implementation for role mapping, you must configure the role mappers.
Procedure
- Open your Data Grid configuration for editing.
- Declare the role mapper as part of the security authorization in the Cache Manager configuration.
- Save the changes to your configuration.
With embedded caches you can programmatically configure role and permission mappers with the principalRoleMapper() and rolePermissionMapper() methods.
Role mapper configuration
XML
JSON
YAML
infinispan:
cacheContainer:
security:
authorization:
commonNameRoleMapper: ~
infinispan:
cacheContainer:
security:
authorization:
commonNameRoleMapper: ~
1.2. Configuring caches with security authorization 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Add security authorization to caches to enforce role-based access control (RBAC). This requires Data Grid users to have a role with a sufficient level of permission to perform cache operations.
Prerequisites
- Create Data Grid users and either grant them with roles or assign them to groups.
Procedure
- Open your Data Grid configuration for editing.
-
Add a
securitysection to the configuration. Specify roles that users must have to perform cache operations with the
authorizationelement.You can implicitly add all roles defined in the Cache Manager or explicitly define a subset of roles.
- Save the changes to your configuration.
Implicit role configuration
The following configuration implicitly adds every role defined in the Cache Manager:
XML
<distributed-cache>
<security>
<authorization/>
</security>
</distributed-cache>
<distributed-cache>
<security>
<authorization/>
</security>
</distributed-cache>
JSON
YAML
distributedCache:
security:
authorization:
enabled: true
distributedCache:
security:
authorization:
enabled: true
Explicit role configuration
The following configuration explicitly adds a subset of roles defined in the Cache Manager. In this case Data Grid denies cache operations for any users that do not have one of the configured roles.
XML
<distributed-cache>
<security>
<authorization roles="admin supervisor"/>
</security>
</distributed-cache>
<distributed-cache>
<security>
<authorization roles="admin supervisor"/>
</security>
</distributed-cache>
JSON
YAML
distributedCache:
security:
authorization:
enabled: true
roles: ["admin","supervisor"]
distributedCache:
security:
authorization:
enabled: true
roles: ["admin","supervisor"]
Chapter 2. Security realms 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Security realms integrate Data Grid Server deployments with the network protocols and infrastructure in your environment that control access and verify user identities.
2.1. Creating security realms 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Add security realms to Data Grid Server configuration to control access to deployments. You can add one or more security realm to your configuration.
When you add security realms to your configuration, Data Grid Server automatically enables the matching authentication mechanisms for the Hot Rod and REST endpoints.
Prerequisites
- Add socket bindings to your Data Grid Server configuration as required.
Create keystores, or have a PEM file, to configure the security realm with TLS/SSL encryption.
Data Grid Server can also generate keystores at startup.
-
Provision the resources or services that the security realm configuration relies on.
For example, if you add a token realm, you need to provision OAuth services.
This procedure demonstrates how to configure multiple property realms. Before you begin, you need to create properties files that add users and assign permissions with the Command Line Interface (CLI). Use the user create commands as follows:
Run user create --help for examples and more information.
Adding credentials to a properties realm with the CLI creates the user only on the server instance to which you are connected. You must manually synchronize credentials in a properties realm to each node in the cluster.
Procedure
- Open your Data Grid Server configuration for editing.
-
Use the
security-realmselement in thesecurityconfiguration to contain create multiple security realms. Add a security realm with the
security-realmelement and give it a unique name with thenameattribute.To follow the example, create one security realm named
application-realmand another namedmanagement-realm.-
Provide the TLS/SSL identify for Data Grid Server with the
server-identitieselement and configure a keystore as required. Specify the type of security realm by adding one the following elements or fields:
-
properties-realm -
ldap-realm -
token-realm -
truststore-realm
-
Specify properties for the type of security realm you are configuring as appropriate.
To follow the example, specify the
*.propertiesfiles you created with the CLI using thepathattribute on theuser-propertiesandgroup-propertieselements or fields.-
If you add multiple different types of security realm to your configuration, include the
distributed-realmelement or field so that Data Grid Server uses the realms in combination with each other. -
Configure Data Grid Server endpoints to use the security realm with the with the
security-realmattribute. - Save the changes to your configuration.
Multiple property realms
XML
JSON
YAML
2.2. Setting up Kerberos identities 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Add Kerberos identities to a security realm in your Data Grid Server configuration to use keytab files that contain service principal names and encrypted keys, derived from Kerberos passwords.
Prerequisites
- Have Kerberos service account principals.
keytab files can contain both user and service account principals. However, Data Grid Server uses service account principals only which means it can provide identity to clients and allow clients to authenticate with Kerberos servers.
In most cases, you create unique principals for the Hot Rod and REST endpoints. For example, if you have a "datagrid" server in the "INFINISPAN.ORG" domain you should create the following service principals:
-
hotrod/datagrid@INFINISPAN.ORGidentifies the Hot Rod service. -
HTTP/datagrid@INFINISPAN.ORGidentifies the REST service.
Procedure
Create keytab files for the Hot Rod and REST services.
- Linux
ktutil ktutil: addent -password -p datagrid@INFINISPAN.ORG -k 1 -e aes256-cts Password for datagrid@INFINISPAN.ORG: [enter your password] ktutil: wkt http.keytab ktutil: quit
ktutil ktutil: addent -password -p datagrid@INFINISPAN.ORG -k 1 -e aes256-cts Password for datagrid@INFINISPAN.ORG: [enter your password] ktutil: wkt http.keytab ktutil: quitCopy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Microsoft Windows
ktpass -princ HTTP/datagrid@INFINISPAN.ORG -pass * -mapuser INFINISPAN\USER_NAME ktab -k http.keytab -a HTTP/datagrid@INFINISPAN.ORG
ktpass -princ HTTP/datagrid@INFINISPAN.ORG -pass * -mapuser INFINISPAN\USER_NAME ktab -k http.keytab -a HTTP/datagrid@INFINISPAN.ORGCopy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow
-
Copy the keytab files to the
server/confdirectory of your Data Grid Server installation. - Open your Data Grid Server configuration for editing.
-
Add a
server-identitiesdefinition to the Data Grid server security realm. - Specify the location of keytab files that provide service principals to Hot Rod and REST connectors.
- Name the Kerberos service principals.
- Save the changes to your configuration.
Kerberos identity configuration
XML
JSON
YAML
2.3. Property realms 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Property realms use property files to define users and groups.
-
users.propertiescontains Data Grid user credentials. Passwords can be pre-digested with theDIGEST-MD5andDIGESTauthentication mechanisms. -
groups.propertiesassociates users with roles and permissions.
You can avoid authentication issues that relate to a property file by using the Data Grid CLI to enter the correct security realm name to the file. You can find the correct security realm name of your Data Grid Server by opening the infinispan.xml file and navigating to the <security-realm name> property. When you copy a property file from one Data Grid Server to another, make sure that the security realm name appropriates to the correct authentication mechanism for the target endpoint.
users.properties
myuser=a_password user2=another_password
myuser=a_password
user2=another_password
groups.properties
myuser=supervisor,reader,writer user2=supervisor
myuser=supervisor,reader,writer
user2=supervisor
Property realm configuration
XML
JSON
YAML
2.4. LDAP realms 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
LDAP realms connect to LDAP servers, such as OpenLDAP, Red Hat Directory Server, Apache Directory Server, or Microsoft Active Directory, to authenticate users and obtain membership information.
LDAP servers can have different entry layouts, depending on the type of server and deployment. It is beyond the scope of this document to provide examples for all possible configurations.
2.4.1. LDAP connection properties 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Specify the LDAP connection properties in the LDAP realm configuration.
The following properties are required:
| url |
Specifies the URL of the LDAP server. The URL should be in format |
| principal | Specifies a distinguished name (DN) of a valid user in the LDAp server. The DN uniquely identifies the user within the LDAP directory structure. |
| credential | Corresponds to the password associated with the principal mentioned above. |
The principal for LDAP connections must have necessary privileges to perform LDAP queries and access specific attributes.
Enabling connection-pooling significantly improves the performance of authentication to LDAP servers. The connection pooling mechanism is provided by the JDK. For more information see Connection Pooling Configuration and Java Tutorials: Pooling.
2.4.2. LDAP realm user authentication methods 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Configure the user authentication method in the LDAP realm.
The LDAP realm can authenticate users in two ways:
| Hashed password comparison |
by comparing the hashed password stored in a user’s password attribute (usually |
| Direct verification | by authenticating against the LDAP server using the supplied credentials
Direct verification is the only approach that works with Active Directory, because access to the |
You cannot use endpoint authentication mechanisms that performs hashing with the direct-verification attribute, since this method requires having the password in clear text. As a result you must use the BASIC authentication mechanism with the REST endpoint and PLAIN with the Hot Rod endpoint to integrate with Active Directory Server. A more secure alternative is to use Kerberos, which allows the SPNEGO, GSSAPI, and GS2-KRB5 authentication mechanisms.
The LDAP realm searches the directory to find the entry which corresponds to the authenticated user. The rdn-identifier attribute specifies an LDAP attribute that finds the user entry based on a provided identifier, which is typically a username; for example, the uid or sAMAccountName attribute. Add search-recursive="true" to the configuration to search the directory recursively. By default, the search for the user entry uses the (rdn_identifier={0}) filter. You can specify a different filter using the filter-name attribute.
2.4.3. Mapping user entries to their associated groups 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
In the LDAP realm configuration, specify the attribute-mapping element to retrieve and associate all groups that a user is a member of.
The membership information is stored typically in two ways:
-
Under group entries that usually have class
groupOfNamesorgroupOfUniqueNamesin thememberattribute. This is the default behavior in most LDAP installations, except for Active Directory. In this case, you can use an attribute filter. This filter searches for entries that match the supplied filter, which locates groups with amemberattribute equal to the user’s DN. The filter then extracts the group entry’s CN as specified byfrom, and adds it to the user’sRoles. In the user entry in the
memberOfattribute. This is typically the case for Active Directory. In this case you should use an attribute reference such as the following:<attribute-reference reference="memberOf" from="cn" to="Roles" />This reference gets all
memberOfattributes from the user’s entry, extracts the CN as specified byfrom, and adds them to the user’s groups (Rolesis the internal name used to map the groups).
2.4.4. LDAP realm configuration reference 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
XML
JSON
YAML
2.4.4.1. LDAP realm principal rewriting 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Principals obtained by SASL authentication mechanisms such as GSSAPI, GS2-KRB5 and Negotiate usually include the domain name, for example myuser@INFINISPAN.ORG. Before using these principals in LDAP queries, it is necessary to transform them to ensure their compatibility. This process is called rewriting.
Data Grid includes the following transformers:
| case-principal-transformer |
rewrites the principal to either all uppercase or all lowercase. For example |
| common-name-principal-transformer |
rewrites principals in the LDAP Distinguished Name format (as defined by RFC 4514). It extracts the first attribute of type |
| regex-principal-transformer | rewrites principals using a regular expression with capturing groups, allowing, for example, for extractions of any substring. |
Case principal transformer
XML
JSON
YAML
Common name principal transformer
XML
JSON
YAML
Regex principal transformer
XML
JSON
YAML
This example illustrates the process of loading and internally mapping LDAP users and groups to Data Grid subjects. The following is a LDIF (LDAP Data Interchange Format) file, which describes multiple LDAP entries:
LDIF
The root user is a member of the admin and monitor groups.
When a request to authenticate the user root with the password strongPassword is made on one of the endpoints, the following operations are performed:
- The username is optionally rewritten using the chosen principal transformer.
-
The realm searches within the
ou=People,dc=infinispan,dc=orgtree for an entry whoseuidattribute is equal torootand finds the entry with DNuid=root,ou=People,dc=infinispan,dc=org, which becomes the user principal. -
The realm searches within the
u=Roles,dc=infinispan,dc=orgtree for entries ofobjectClass=groupOfNamesthat includeuid=root,ou=People,dc=infinispan,dc=orgin thememberattribute. In this case it finds two entries:cn=admin,ou=Roles,dc=infinispan,dc=organdcn=monitor,ou=Roles,dc=infinispan,dc=org. From these entries, it extracts thecnattributes which become the group principals.
The resulting subject will therefore look like:
-
NamePrincipal:
uid=root,ou=People,dc=infinispan,dc=org -
RolePrincipal:
admin -
RolePrincipal:
monitor
At this point, the global authorization mappers are applied on the above subject to convert the principals into roles. The roles are then expanded into a set of permissions, which are validated against the requested cache and operation.
2.5. Token realms 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Token realms use external services to validate tokens and require providers that are compatible with RFC-7662 (OAuth2 Token Introspection), such as Red Hat SSO.
Token realm configuration
XML
JSON
YAML
2.6. Trust store realms 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Trust store realms use certificates, or certificates chains, that verify Data Grid Server and client identities when they negotiate connections.
- Keystores
- Contain server certificates that provide a Data Grid Server identity to clients. If you configure a keystore with server certificates, Data Grid Server encrypts traffic using industry standard SSL/TLS protocols.
- Trust stores
- Contain client certificates, or certificate chains, that clients present to Data Grid Server. Client trust stores are optional and allow Data Grid Server to perform client certificate authentication.
Client certificate authentication
You must add the require-ssl-client-auth="true" attribute to the endpoint configuration if you want Data Grid Server to validate or authenticate client certificates.
Trust store realm configuration
XML
JSON
YAML
2.7. Distributed security realms 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Distributed realms combine multiple different types of security realms. When users attempt to access the Hot Rod or REST endpoints, Data Grid Server uses each security realm in turn until it finds one that can perform the authentication.
Distributed realm configuration
XML
JSON
YAML
Chapter 3. Endpoint authentication mechanisms 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Data Grid Server can use custom SASL and HTTP authentication mechanisms for Hot Rod and REST endpoints.
3.1. Data Grid Server authentication 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Authentication restricts user access to endpoints as well as the Data Grid Console and Command Line Interface (CLI).
Data Grid Server includes a "default" security realm that enforces user authentication. Default authentication uses a property realm with user credentials stored in the server/conf/users.properties file. Data Grid Server also enables security authorization by default so you must assign users with permissions stored in the server/conf/groups.properties file.
Use the user create command with the Command Line Interface (CLI) to add users and assign permissions. Run user create --help for examples and more information.
You can explicitly configure Hot Rod and REST endpoints to use specific authentication mechanisms. Configuring authentication mechanisms is required only if you need to explicitly override the default mechanisms for a security realm.
Each endpoint section in your configuration must include hotrod-connector and rest-connector elements or fields. For example, if you explicitly declare a hotrod-connector you must also declare a rest-connector even if it does not configure an authentication mechanism.
Prerequisites
- Add security realms to your Data Grid Server configuration as required.
Procedure
- Open your Data Grid Server configuration for editing.
-
Add an
endpointelement or field and specify the security realm that it uses with thesecurity-realmattribute. Add a
hotrod-connectorelement or field to configure the Hot Rod endpoint.-
Add an
authenticationelement or field. -
Specify SASL authentication mechanisms for the Hot Rod endpoint to use with the
sasl mechanismsattribute. -
If applicable, specify SASL quality of protection settings with the
qopattribute. -
Specify the Data Grid Server identity with the
server-nameattribute if necessary.
-
Add an
Add a
rest-connectorelement or field to configure the REST endpoint.-
Add an
authenticationelement or field. -
Specify HTTP authentication mechanisms for the REST endpoint to use with the
mechanismsattribute.
-
Add an
- Save the changes to your configuration.
Authentication mechanism configuration
The following configuration specifies SASL mechanisms for the Hot Rod endpoint to use for authentication:
XML
JSON
YAML
3.2.1. Disabling authentication 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
In local development environments or on isolated networks you can configure Data Grid to allow unauthenticated client requests. When you disable user authentication you should also disable authorization in your Data Grid security configuration.
Procedure
- Open your Data Grid Server configuration for editing.
-
Remove the
security-realmattribute from theendpointselement or field. -
Remove any
authorizationelements from thesecurityconfiguration for thecache-containerand each cache configuration. - Save the changes to your configuration.
XML
<server xmlns="urn:infinispan:server:14.0"> <endpoints socket-binding="default"/> </server>
<server xmlns="urn:infinispan:server:14.0">
<endpoints socket-binding="default"/>
</server>
JSON
YAML
server:
endpoints:
endpoint:
socketBinding: "default"
server:
endpoints:
endpoint:
socketBinding: "default"
3.3. Data Grid Server authentication mechanisms 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Data Grid Server automatically configures endpoints with authentication mechanisms that match your security realm configuration. For example, if you add a Kerberos security realm then Data Grid Server enables the GSSAPI and GS2-KRB5 authentication mechanisms for the Hot Rod endpoint.
Currently, you cannot use the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) protocol with the DIGEST or SCRAM authentication mechanisms, because these mechanisms require access to specific hashed passwords.
Hot Rod endpoints
Data Grid Server enables the following SASL authentication mechanisms for Hot Rod endpoints when your configuration includes the corresponding security realm:
| Security realm | SASL authentication mechanism |
|---|---|
| Property realms and LDAP realms |
SCRAM-*, DIGEST-*, |
| Token realms | OAUTHBEARER |
| Trust realms | EXTERNAL |
| Kerberos identities | GSSAPI, GS2-KRB5 |
| SSL/TLS identities | PLAIN |
REST endpoints
Data Grid Server enables the following HTTP authentication mechanisms for REST endpoints when your configuration includes the corresponding security realm:
| Security realm | HTTP authentication mechanism |
|---|---|
| Property realms and LDAP realms | DIGEST |
| Token realms | BEARER_TOKEN |
| Trust realms | CLIENT_CERT |
| Kerberos identities | SPNEGO |
| SSL/TLS identities | BASIC |
3.3.1. SASL authentication mechanisms 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Data Grid Server supports the following SASL authentications mechanisms with Hot Rod endpoints:
| Authentication mechanism | Description | Security realm type | Related details |
|---|---|---|---|
|
|
Uses credentials in plain-text format. You should use | Property realms and LDAP realms |
Similar to the |
|
|
Uses hashing algorithms and nonce values. Hot Rod connectors support | Property realms and LDAP realms |
Similar to the |
|
|
Uses salt values in addition to hashing algorithms and nonce values. Hot Rod connectors support | Property realms and LDAP realms |
Similar to the |
|
|
Uses Kerberos tickets and requires a Kerberos Domain Controller. You must add a corresponding | Kerberos realms |
Similar to the |
|
|
Uses Kerberos tickets and requires a Kerberos Domain Controller. You must add a corresponding | Kerberos realms |
Similar to the |
|
| Uses client certificates. | Trust store realms |
Similar to the |
|
|
Uses OAuth tokens and requires a | Token realms |
Similar to the |
3.3.2. SASL quality of protection (QoP) 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
If SASL mechanisms support integrity and privacy protection (QoP) settings, you can add them to your Hot Rod endpoint configuration with the qop attribute.
| QoP setting | Description |
|---|---|
|
| Authentication only. |
|
| Authentication with integrity protection. |
|
| Authentication with integrity and privacy protection. |
3.3.3. SASL policies 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
SASL policies provide fine-grain control over Hot Rod authentication mechanisms.
Data Grid cache authorization restricts access to caches based on roles and permissions. Configure cache authorization and then set <no-anonymous value=false /> to allow anonymous login and delegate access logic to cache authorization.
| Policy | Description | Default value |
|---|---|---|
|
| Use only SASL mechanisms that support forward secrecy between sessions. This means that breaking into one session does not automatically provide information for breaking into future sessions. | false |
|
| Use only SASL mechanisms that require client credentials. | false |
|
| Do not use SASL mechanisms that are susceptible to simple plain passive attacks. | false |
|
| Do not use SASL mechanisms that are susceptible to active, non-dictionary, attacks. | false |
|
| Do not use SASL mechanisms that are susceptible to passive dictionary attacks. | false |
|
| Do not use SASL mechanisms that accept anonymous logins. | true |
SASL policy configuration
In the following configuration the Hot Rod endpoint uses the GSSAPI mechanism for authentication because it is the only mechanism that complies with all SASL policies:
XML
JSON
YAML
3.3.4. HTTP authentication mechanisms 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Data Grid Server supports the following HTTP authentication mechanisms with REST endpoints:
| Authentication mechanism | Description | Security realm type | Related details |
|---|---|---|---|
|
|
Uses credentials in plain-text format. You should use | Property realms and LDAP realms |
Corresponds to the |
|
|
Uses hashing algorithms and nonce values. REST connectors support | Property realms and LDAP realms |
Corresponds to the |
|
|
Uses Kerberos tickets and requires a Kerberos Domain Controller. You must add a corresponding | Kerberos realms |
Corresponds to the |
|
|
Uses OAuth tokens and requires a | Token realms |
Corresponds to the |
|
| Uses client certificates. | Trust store realms |
Similar to the |
Chapter 4. Configuring TLS/SSL encryption 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
You can secure Data Grid Server connections using SSL/TLS encryption by configuring a keystore that contains public and private keys for Data Grid. You can also configure client certificate authentication if you require mutual TLS.
4.1. Configuring Data Grid Server keystores 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Add keystores to Data Grid Server and configure it to present SSL/TLS certificates that verify its identity to clients. If a security realm contains TLS/SSL identities, it encrypts any connections to Data Grid Server endpoints that use that security realm.
Prerequisites
- Create a keystore that contains certificates, or certificate chains, for Data Grid Server.
Data Grid Server supports the following keystore formats: JKS, JCEKS, PKCS12/PFX and PEM. BKS, BCFKS, and UBER are also supported if the Bouncy Castle library is present. When using client hostname validation, according to the rules defined by the RFC 2818 specification, server certificates should include the subjectAltName extension of type dNSName and/or iPAddress.
In production environments, server certificates should be signed by a trusted Certificate Authority, either Root or Intermediate CA.
You can use PEM files as keystores if they contain both of the following:
- A private key in PKCS#1 or PKCS#8 format.
- One or more certificates.
You should also configure PEM file keystores with an empty password (password="").
Procedure
- Open your Data Grid Server configuration for editing.
-
Add the keystore that contains SSL/TLS identities for Data Grid Server to the
$RHDG_HOME/server/confdirectory. -
Add a
server-identitiesdefinition to the Data Grid Server security realm. -
Specify the keystore file name with the
pathattribute. -
Provide the keystore password and certificate alias with the
keystore-passwordandaliasattributes. - Save the changes to your configuration.
Next steps
Configure clients with a trust store so they can verify SSL/TLS identities for Data Grid Server.
Keystore configuration
XML
JSON
YAML
4.1.1. Generating Data Grid Server keystores 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Configure Data Grid Server to automatically generate keystores at startup.
Automatically generated keystores:
- Should not be used in production environments.
- Are generated whenever necessary; for example, while obtaining the first connection from a client.
- Contain certificates that you can use directly in Hot Rod clients.
Procedure
- Open your Data Grid Server configuration for editing.
-
Include the
generate-self-signed-certificate-hostattribute for thekeystoreelement in the server configuration. - Specify a hostname for the server certificate as the value.
- Save the changes to your configuration.
Generated keystore configuration
XML
JSON
YAML
4.1.2. Configuring TLS versions and cipher suites 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
When using SSL/TLS encryption to secure your deployment, you can configure Data Grid Server to use specific versions of the TLS protocol as well as specific cipher suites within the protocol.
Procedure
- Open your Data Grid Server configuration for editing.
-
Add the
engineelement to the SSL configuration for Data Grid Server. Configure Data Grid to use one or more TLS versions with the
enabled-protocolsattribute.Data Grid Server supports TLS version 1.2 and 1.3 by default. If appropriate you can set
TLSv1.3only to restrict the security protocol for client connections. Data Grid does not recommend enablingTLSv1.1because it is an older protocol with limited support and provides weak security. You should never enable any version of TLS older than 1.1.WarningIf you modify the SSL
engineconfiguration for Data Grid Server you must explicitly configure TLS versions with theenabled-protocolsattribute. Omitting theenabled-protocolsattribute allows any TLS version.<engine enabled-protocols="TLSv1.3 TLSv1.2" />
<engine enabled-protocols="TLSv1.3 TLSv1.2" />Copy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow Configure Data Grid to use one or more cipher suites with the
enabled-ciphersuitesattribute (for TLSv1.2 and below) and theenabled-ciphersuites-tls13attribute (for TLSv1.3).You must ensure that you set a cipher suite that supports any protocol features you plan to use; for example
HTTP/2 ALPN.- Save the changes to your configuration.
SSL engine configuration
XML
JSON
YAML
FIPS (Federal Information Processing Standards) are standards and guidelines for US federal computer systems. Although FIPS are developed for use by the US federal government, many in the private sector voluntarily use these standards.
FIPS 140-2 defines security requirements for cryptographic modules. You can configure your Data Grid Server to use encryption ciphers that adhere to the FIPS 140-2 specification by using alternative JDK security providers.
Additional resources
4.2.1. Configuring the PKCS11 cryptographic provider 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
You can configure the PKCS11 cryptographic provider by specifying the PKCS11 keystore with the SunPKCS11-NSS-FIPS provider.
Prerequisites
-
Configure your system for FIPS mode. You can check if your system has FIPS Mode enabled by issuing the
fips-mode-setup --checkcommand in your Data Grid command-line Interface (CLI) -
Initialize the system-wide NSS database by using the
certutiltool. -
Install the JDK with the
java.securityfile configured to enable theSunPKCS11provider. This provider points to the NSS database and the SSL provider. - Install a certificate in the NSS database.
The OpenSSL provider requires a private key, but you cannot retrieve a private key from the PKCS#11 store. FIPS blocks the export of unencrypted keys from a FIPS-compliant cryptographic module, so you cannot use the OpenSSL provider for TLS when in FIPS mode. You can disable the OpenSSL provider at startup with the -Dorg.infinispan.openssl=false argument.
Procedure
- Open your Data Grid Server configuration for editing.
-
Add a
server-identitiesdefinition to the Data Grid Server security realm. -
Specify the PKCS11 keystore with the
SunPKCS11-NSS-FIPSprovider. - Save the changes to your configuration.
Keystore configuration
XML
JSON
YAML
You can configure the Bouncy Castle FIPS (Federal Information Processing Standards) cryptographic provider in your Data Grid server’s configuration.
Prerequisites
-
Configure your system for FIPS mode. You can check if your system has FIPS Mode enabled by issuing the
fips-mode-setup --checkcommand in your Data Grid command-line Interface (CLI). - Create a keystore in BCFKS format that contains a certificate.
Procedure
-
Download the Bouncy Castle FIPS JAR file, and add the file to the
server/libdirectory of your Data Grid Server installation. To install Bouncy Castle, issue the
installcommand:[disconnected]> install org.bouncycastle:bc-fips:1.0.2.3
[disconnected]> install org.bouncycastle:bc-fips:1.0.2.3Copy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Open your Data Grid Server configuration for editing.
-
Add a
server-identitiesdefinition to the Data Grid Server security realm. -
Specify the BCFKS keystore with the
BCFIPSprovider. - Save the changes to your configuration.
Keystore configuration
XML
JSON
YAML
4.3. Configuring client certificate authentication 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Configure Data Grid Server to use mutual TLS to secure client connections.
You can configure Data Grid to verify client identities from certificates in a trust store in two ways:
- Require a trust store that contains only the signing certificate, which is typically a Certificate Authority (CA). Any client that presents a certificate signed by the CA can connect to Data Grid.
- Require a trust store that contains all client certificates in addition to the signing certificate. Only clients that present a signed certificate that is present in the trust store can connect to Data Grid.
Alternatively to providing trust stores you can use shared system certificates.
Prerequisites
- Create a client trust store that contains either the CA certificate or all public certificates.
- Create a keystore for Data Grid Server and configure an SSL/TLS identity.
PEM files can be used as trust stores provided they contain one or more certificates. These trust stores should be configured with an empty password: password="".
Procedure
- Open your Data Grid Server configuration for editing.
-
Add the
require-ssl-client-auth="true"parameter to yourendpointsconfiguration. -
Add the client trust store to the
$RHDG_HOME/server/confdirectory. -
Specify the
pathandpasswordattributes for thetruststoreelement in the Data Grid Server security realm configuration. -
Add the
<truststore-realm/>element to the security realm if you want Data Grid Server to authenticate each client certificate. - Save the changes to your configuration.
Next steps
- Set up authorization with client certificates in the Data Grid Server configuration if you control access with security roles and permissions.
- Configure clients to negotiate SSL/TLS connections with Data Grid Server.
Client certificate authentication configuration
XML
JSON
YAML
4.4. Configuring authorization with client certificates 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Enabling client certificate authentication means you do not need to specify Data Grid user credentials in client configuration, which means you must associate roles with the Common Name (CN) field in the client certificate(s).
Prerequisites
- Provide clients with a Java keystore that contains either their public certificates or part of the certificate chain, typically a public CA certificate.
- Configure Data Grid Server to perform client certificate authentication.
Procedure
- Open your Data Grid Server configuration for editing.
-
Enable the
common-name-role-mapperin the security authorization configuration. -
Assign the Common Name (
CN) from the client certificate a role with the appropriate permissions. - Save the changes to your configuration.
Client certificate authorization configuration
XML
JSON
YAML
External services require credentials to authenticate with Data Grid Server. To protect sensitive text strings such as passwords, add them to a credential keystore rather than directly in Data Grid Server configuration files.
You can then configure Data Grid Server to decrypt passwords for establishing connections with services such as databases or LDAP directories.
Plain-text passwords in $RHDG_HOME/server/conf are unencrypted. Any user account with read access to the host filesystem can view plain-text passwords.
While credential keystores are password-protected store encrypted passwords, any user account with write access to the host filesystem can tamper with the keystore itself.
To completely secure Data Grid Server credentials, you should grant read-write access only to user accounts that can configure and run Data Grid Server.
5.1. Setting up credential keystores 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Create keystores that encrypt credential for Data Grid Server access.
A credential keystore contains at least one alias that is associated with an encrypted password. After you create a keystore, you specify the alias in a connection configuration such as a database connection pool. Data Grid Server then decrypts the password for that alias from the keystore when the service attempts authentication.
You can create as many credential keystores with as many aliases as required.
As a security best practice, keystores should be readable only by the user who runs the process for Data Grid Server.
Procedure
-
Open a terminal in
$RHDG_HOME. Create a keystore and add credentials to it with the
credentialscommand.TipBy default, keystores are of type PKCS12. Run
help credentialsfor details on changing keystore defaults.The following example shows how to create a keystore that contains an alias of "dbpassword" for the password "changeme". When you create a keystore you also specify a password to access the keystore with the
-pargument.- Linux
bin/cli.sh credentials add dbpassword -c changeme -p "secret1234!"
bin/cli.sh credentials add dbpassword -c changeme -p "secret1234!"Copy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Microsoft Windows
bin\cli.bat credentials add dbpassword -c changeme -p "secret1234!"
bin\cli.bat credentials add dbpassword -c changeme -p "secret1234!"Copy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow
Check that the alias is added to the keystore.
bin/cli.sh credentials ls -p "secret1234!" dbpassword
bin/cli.sh credentials ls -p "secret1234!" dbpasswordCopy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Open your Data Grid Server configuration for editing.
Configure Data Grid to use the credential keystore.
-
Add a
credential-storessection to thesecurityconfiguration. - Specify the name and location of the credential keystore.
Specify the password to access the credential keystore with the
clear-text-credentialconfiguration.NoteInstead of adding a clear-text password for the credential keystore to your Data Grid Server configuration you can use an external command or masked password for additional security.
You can also use a password in one credential store as the master password for another credential store.
-
Add a
Reference the credential keystore in configuration that Data Grid Server uses to connect with an external system such as a datasource or LDAP server.
-
Add a
credential-referencesection. -
Specify the name of the credential keystore with the
storeattribute. Specify the password alias with the
aliasattribute.TipAttributes in the
credential-referenceconfiguration are optional.-
storeis required only if you have multiple keystores. -
aliasis required only if the keystore contains multiple password aliases.
-
-
Add a
- Save the changes to your configuration.
5.2. Securing passwords for credential keystores 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Data Grid Server requires a password to access credential keystores. You can add that password to Data Grid Server configuration in clear text or, as an added layer of security, you can use an external command for the password or you can mask the password.
Prerequisites
- Set up a credential keystore for Data Grid Server.
Procedure
Do one of the following:
Use the
credentials maskcommand to obscure the password, for example:bin/cli.sh credentials mask -i 100 -s pepper99 "secret1234!"
bin/cli.sh credentials mask -i 100 -s pepper99 "secret1234!"Copy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow Masked passwords use Password Based Encryption (PBE) and must be in the following format in your Data Grid Server configuration: <MASKED_VALUE;SALT;ITERATION>.
Use an external command that provides the password as standard output.
An external command can be any executable, such as a shell script or binary, that uses
java.lang.Runtime#exec(java.lang.String).
If the command requires parameters, provide them as a space-separated list of strings.
5.3. Credential keystore configuration 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
You can add credential keystores to Data Grid Server configuration and use clear-text passwords, masked passwords, or external commands that supply passwords.
Credential keystore with a clear text password
XML
JSON
YAML
Credential keystore with a masked password
XML
JSON
YAML
External command passwords
XML
JSON
YAML
5.4. Credential keystore references 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
After you add credential keystores to Data Grid Server you can reference them in connection configurations.
Datasource connections
XML
JSON
YAML
LDAP connections
XML
JSON
YAML
Chapter 6. Encrypting cluster transport 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Secure cluster transport so that nodes communicate with encrypted messages. You can also configure Data Grid clusters to perform certificate authentication so that only nodes with valid identities can join.
6.1. Securing cluster transport with TLS identities 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Add SSL/TLS identities to a Data Grid Server security realm and use them to secure cluster transport. Nodes in the Data Grid Server cluster then exchange SSL/TLS certificates to encrypt JGroups messages, including RELAY messages if you configure cross-site replication.
Prerequisites
- Install a Data Grid Server cluster.
Procedure
Create a TLS keystore that contains a single certificate to identify Data Grid Server.
You can also use a PEM file if it contains a private key in PKCS#1 or PKCS#8 format, a certificate, and has an empty password:
password="".NoteIf the certificate in the keystore is not signed by a public certificate authority (CA) then you must also create a trust store that contains either the signing certificate or the public key.
-
Add the keystore to the
$RHDG_HOME/server/confdirectory. Add the keystore to a new security realm in your Data Grid Server configuration.
ImportantYou should create dedicated keystores and security realms so that Data Grid Server endpoints do not use the same security realm as cluster transport.
Copy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow Configure cluster transport to use the security realm by specifying the name of the security realm with the
server:security-realmattribute.<infinispan> <cache-container> <transport server:security-realm="cluster-transport"/> </cache-container> </infinispan><infinispan> <cache-container> <transport server:security-realm="cluster-transport"/> </cache-container> </infinispan>Copy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow
Verification
When you start Data Grid Server, the following log message indicates that the cluster is using the security realm for cluster transport:
[org.infinispan.SERVER] ISPN080060: SSL Transport using realm <security_realm_name>
[org.infinispan.SERVER] ISPN080060: SSL Transport using realm <security_realm_name>
6.2. JGroups encryption protocols 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
To secure cluster traffic, you can configure Data Grid nodes to encrypt JGroups message payloads with secret keys.
Data Grid nodes can obtain secret keys from either:
- The coordinator node (asymmetric encryption).
- A shared keystore (symmetric encryption).
Retrieving secret keys from coordinator nodes
You configure asymmetric encryption by adding the ASYM_ENCRYPT protocol to a JGroups stack in your Data Grid configuration. This allows Data Grid clusters to generate and distribute secret keys.
When using asymmetric encryption, you should also provide keystores so that nodes can perform certificate authentication and securely exchange secret keys. This protects your cluster from man-in-the-middle (MitM) attacks.
Asymmetric encryption secures cluster traffic as follows:
- The first node in the Data Grid cluster, the coordinator node, generates a secret key.
- A joining node performs certificate authentication with the coordinator to mutually verify identity.
- The joining node requests the secret key from the coordinator node. That request includes the public key for the joining node.
- The coordinator node encrypts the secret key with the public key and returns it to the joining node.
- The joining node decrypts and installs the secret key.
- The node joins the cluster, encrypting and decrypting messages with the secret key.
Retrieving secret keys from shared keystores
You configure symmetric encryption by adding the SYM_ENCRYPT protocol to a JGroups stack in your Data Grid configuration. This allows Data Grid clusters to obtain secret keys from keystores that you provide.
- Nodes install the secret key from a keystore on the Data Grid classpath at startup.
- Node join clusters, encrypting and decrypting messages with the secret key.
Comparison of asymmetric and symmetric encryption
ASYM_ENCRYPT with certificate authentication provides an additional layer of encryption in comparison with SYM_ENCRYPT. You provide keystores that encrypt the requests to coordinator nodes for the secret key. Data Grid automatically generates that secret key and handles cluster traffic, while letting you specify when to generate secret keys. For example, you can configure clusters to generate new secret keys when nodes leave. This ensures that nodes cannot bypass certificate authentication and join with old keys.
SYM_ENCRYPT, on the other hand, is faster than ASYM_ENCRYPT because nodes do not need to exchange keys with the cluster coordinator. A potential drawback to SYM_ENCRYPT is that there is no configuration to automatically generate new secret keys when cluster membership changes. Users are responsible for generating and distributing the secret keys that nodes use to encrypt cluster traffic.
Configure Data Grid clusters to generate and distribute secret keys that encrypt JGroups messages.
Procedure
- Create a keystore with certificate chains that enables Data Grid to verify node identity.
Place the keystore on the classpath for each node in the cluster.
For Data Grid Server, you put the keystore in the $RHDG_HOME directory.
Add the
SSL_KEY_EXCHANGEandASYM_ENCRYPTprotocols to a JGroups stack in your Data Grid configuration, as in the following example:Copy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow
Verification
When you start your Data Grid cluster, the following log message indicates that the cluster is using the secure JGroups stack:
[org.infinispan.CLUSTER] ISPN000078: Starting JGroups channel cluster with stack <encrypted_stack_name>
[org.infinispan.CLUSTER] ISPN000078: Starting JGroups channel cluster with stack <encrypted_stack_name>
Data Grid nodes can join the cluster only if they use ASYM_ENCRYPT and can obtain the secret key from the coordinator node. Otherwise the following message is written to Data Grid logs:
[org.jgroups.protocols.ASYM_ENCRYPT] <hostname>: received message without encrypt header from <hostname>; dropping it
[org.jgroups.protocols.ASYM_ENCRYPT] <hostname>: received message without encrypt header from <hostname>; dropping it
Configure Data Grid clusters to encrypt JGroups messages with secret keys from keystores that you provide.
Procedure
- Create a keystore that contains a secret key.
Place the keystore on the classpath for each node in the cluster.
For Data Grid Server, you put the keystore in the $RHDG_HOME directory.
-
Add the
SYM_ENCRYPTprotocol to a JGroups stack in your Data Grid configuration.
Verification
When you start your Data Grid cluster, the following log message indicates that the cluster is using the secure JGroups stack:
[org.infinispan.CLUSTER] ISPN000078: Starting JGroups channel cluster with stack <encrypted_stack_name>
[org.infinispan.CLUSTER] ISPN000078: Starting JGroups channel cluster with stack <encrypted_stack_name>
Data Grid nodes can join the cluster only if they use SYM_ENCRYPT and can obtain the secret key from the shared keystore. Otherwise the following message is written to Data Grid logs:
[org.jgroups.protocols.SYM_ENCRYPT] <hostname>: received message without encrypt header from <hostname>; dropping it
[org.jgroups.protocols.SYM_ENCRYPT] <hostname>: received message without encrypt header from <hostname>; dropping it
Chapter 7. Data Grid ports and protocols 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
As Data Grid distributes data across your network and can establish connections for external client requests, you should be aware of the ports and protocols that Data Grid uses to handle network traffic.
If run Data Grid as a remote server then you might need to allow remote clients through your firewall. Likewise, you should adjust ports that Data Grid nodes use for cluster communication to prevent conflicts or network issues.
7.1. Data Grid Server ports and protocols 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Data Grid Server provides network endpoints that allow client access with different protocols.
| Port | Protocol | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
| TCP | Hot Rod and REST |
|
| TCP | Memcached (disabled by default) |
Single port
Data Grid Server exposes multiple protocols through a single TCP port, 11222. Handling multiple protocols with a single port simplifies configuration and reduces management complexity when deploying Data Grid clusters. Using a single port also enhances security by minimizing the attack surface on the network.
Data Grid Server handles HTTP/1.1, HTTP/2, and Hot Rod protocol requests from clients via the single port in different ways.
HTTP/1.1 upgrade headers
Client requests can include the HTTP/1.1 upgrade header field to initiate HTTP/1.1 connections with Data Grid Server. Client applications can then send the Upgrade: protocol header field, where protocol is a server endpoint.
Application-Layer Protocol Negotiation (ALPN)/Transport Layer Security (TLS)
Client requests include Server Name Indication (SNI) mappings for Data Grid Server endpoints to negotiate protocols over a TLS connection.
Applications must use a TLS library that supports the ALPN extension. Data Grid uses WildFly OpenSSL bindings for Java.
Automatic Hot Rod detection
Client requests that include Hot Rod headers automatically route to Hot Rod endpoints.
Adjust firewall rules to allow traffic between Data Grid Server and client applications.
Procedure
On Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) workstations, for example, you can allow traffic to port 11222 with firewalld as follows:
firewall-cmd --add-port=11222/tcp --permanent firewall-cmd --list-ports | grep 11222
# firewall-cmd --add-port=11222/tcp --permanent
success
# firewall-cmd --list-ports | grep 11222
11222/tcp
To configure firewall rules that apply across a network, you can use the nftables utility.
7.2. TCP and UDP ports for cluster traffic 复制链接链接已复制到粘贴板!
Data Grid uses the following ports for cluster transport messages:
| Default Port | Protocol | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
| TCP/UDP | JGroups cluster bind port |
|
| UDP | JGroups multicast |
Cross-site replication
Data Grid uses the following ports for the JGroups RELAY2 protocol:
7900- For Data Grid clusters running on OpenShift.
7800- If using UDP for traffic between nodes and TCP for traffic between clusters.
7801- If using TCP for traffic between nodes and TCP for traffic between clusters.