Security Hardening Guide
This document provides guidance and instructions to achieve a secure deployment of Charmed Apache Kafka, including setting up and managing a secure environment. The document is divided into the following sections:
- Environment, outlining the recommendation for deploying a secure environment
- Applications, outlining the product features that enable a secure deployment of an Apache Kafka cluster
- Additional resources, providing any further information about security and compliance
Environment
The environment where applications operate can be divided in two components:
- Cloud
- Juju
Cloud
Charmed Apache Kafka can be deployed on top of several clouds and virtualization layers:
Cloud | Security guide |
---|---|
OpenStack | OpenStack Security Guide |
AWS | Best Practices for Security, Identity and Compliance, AWS security credentials |
Azure | Azure security best practices and patterns, Managed identities for Azure resource |
Juju
Juju is the component responsible for orchestrating the entire lifecycle, from deployment to Day 2 operations, of all applications. Therefore, it is imperative that it is set up securely. Please refer to the Juju documentation for more information on:
Cloud credentials
When configuring the cloud credentials to be used with Juju, ensure that the users have correct permissions to operate at the required level. Juju superusers responsible for bootstrapping and managing controllers require elevated permissions to manage several kinds of resources, such as virtual machines, networks, storages, etc. Please refer to the references below for more information on the policies required to be used depending on the cloud.
Cloud | Cloud user policies |
---|---|
OpenStack | N/A |
AWS | Juju AWS Permission, AWS Instance Profiles, Juju on AWS |
Azure | Juju Azure Permission, How to use Juju with Microsoft Azure |
Juju users
It is very important that the different juju users are set up with minimal permission depending on the scope of their operations. Please refer to the User access levels documentation for more information on the access level and corresponding abilities that the different users can be granted.
Juju user credentials must be stored securely and rotated regularly to limit the chances of unauthorized access due to credentials leakage.
Applications
In the following, we provide guidance on how to harden your deployment using:
- Base images
- Charmed operator security upgrades
- Encryption
- Authentication
- Monitoring and auditing
Base images
Charmed Apache Kafka and Charmed Apache ZooKeeper currently run on top of Ubuntu 22.04. Deploy a Landscape Client Charm in order to connect the underlying VM to a Landscape User Account to manage security upgrades and integrate Ubuntu Pro subscriptions.
Charmed operator security upgrades
Charmed Apache Kafka and Charmed Apache ZooKeeper operators install a pinned revision of the Charmed Apache Kafka snap and Charmed ZooKeeper snap, respectively, to provide reproducible and secure environments. New versions of Charmed Apache Kafka and Charmed Apache ZooKeeper may be released to provide patching of vulnerabilities (CVEs). It is important to refresh the charm regularly to make sure the workload is as secure as possible. For more information on how to refresh the charm, see the how-to upgrade guide.
Encryption
Charmed Apache Kafka must be deployed with encryption enabled. To do that, you need to relate Apache Kafka and Apache ZooKeeper charms to one of the TLS certificate operator charms. Please refer to the Charming Security page for more information on how to select the right certificate provider for your use case.
For more information on encryption setup, see the How to enable encryption guide.
Authentication
Charmed Apache Kafka supports the following authentication layers:
- SCRAM-based SASL Authentication
- certificate-base Authentication (mTLS)
- OAuth Authentication using Hydra or Google
Each combination of authentication scheme and encryption is associated to the dedicated listener and it maps to a well-defined port. Please refer to the listener reference documentation for more information.
Monitoring and Auditing
Charmed Apache Kafka provides native integration with the Canonical Observability Stack (COS). To reduce the blast radius of infrastructure disruptions, the general recommendation is to deploy COS and the observed application into separate environments, isolated one another. Refer to the COS production deployments best practices for more information.
Refer to How-To user guide for more information on:
- how to integrate the Charmed Apache Kafka deployment with COS
- how to customise the alerting rules and dashboards
External user access to Apache Kafka is logged to the kafka-authorizer.log
that is pushed to Loki endpoint and exposed via Grafana, both components being part of the COS stack.
Access denials are logged at the INFO
level, whereas allowed accesses are logged at the DEBUG
level. Depending on the auditing needs,
customize the logging level either for all logs via the log_level
config option or
only tune the logging level of the authorizerAppender
in the log4j.properties
file. Refer to the Reference documentation, for more information about
the file system paths.
Additional Resources
For further information and details on the security and cryptographic specifications used by Charmed Apache Kafka, please refer to the Security Explanation page.