In release 0.9.0.0, the Kafka community added a number of features that, used either separately or together, increases security in a Kafka cluster. The following security measures are currently supported:
<li>Authentication of connections to brokers from clients (producers and consumers), other brokers and tools, using either SSL or SASL. Kafka supports the following SASL mechanisms:
<ul>
<li>SASL/GSSAPI (Kerberos) - starting at version 0.9.0.0</li>
<li>SASL/PLAIN - starting at version 0.10.0.0</li>
<li>SASL/SCRAM-SHA-256 and SASL/SCRAM-SHA-512 - starting at version 0.10.2.0</li>
<li>Authentication of connections from brokers to ZooKeeper</li>
<li>Encryption of data transferred between brokers and clients, between brokers, or between brokers and tools using SSL (Note that there is a performance degradation when SSL is enabled, the magnitude of which depends on the CPU type and the JVM implementation.)</li>
<li>Authorization of read / write operations by clients</li>
<li>Authorization is pluggable and integration with external authorization services is supported</li>
It's worth noting that security is optional - non-secured clusters are supported, as well as a mix of authenticated, unauthenticated, encrypted and non-encrypted clients.
The first step of deploying one or more brokers with the SSL support is to generate the key and the certificate for each machine in the cluster. You can use Java's keytool utility to accomplish this task.
You need to specify two parameters in the above command:
<ol>
<li>keystore: the keystore file that stores the certificate. The keystore file contains the private key of the certificate; therefore, it needs to be kept safely.</li>
<li>validity: the valid time of the certificate in days.</li>
Both fields are valid, RFC-2818 recommends the use of SAN however. SAN is also more flexible, allowing for multiple DNS entries to be declared. Another advantage is that the CN can be set to a more meaningful value for authorization purposes. To add a SAN field append the following argument <code> -ext SAN=DNS:{FQDN} </code> to the keytool command:
<li><h4><aid="security_ssl_ca"href="#security_ssl_ca">Creating your own CA</a></h4>
After the first step, each machine in the cluster has a public-private key pair, and a certificate to identify the machine. The certificate, however, is unsigned, which means that an attacker can create such a certificate to pretend to be any machine.<p>
Therefore, it is important to prevent forged certificates by signing them for each machine in the cluster. A certificate authority (CA) is responsible for signing certificates. CA works likes a government that issues passports—the government stamps (signs) each passport so that the passport becomes difficult to forge. Other governments verify the stamps to ensure the passport is authentic. Similarly, the CA signs the certificates, and the cryptography guarantees that a signed certificate is computationally difficult to forge. Thus, as long as the CA is a genuine and trusted authority, the clients have high assurance that they are connecting to the authentic machines.
<b>Note:</b> If you configure the Kafka brokers to require client authentication by setting ssl.client.auth to be "requested" or "required" on the <ahref="#config_broker">Kafka brokers config</a> then you must provide a truststore for the Kafka brokers as well and it should have all the CA certificates that clients' keys were signed by.
In contrast to the keystore in step 1 that stores each machine's own identity, the truststore of a client stores all the certificates that the client should trust. Importing a certificate into one's truststore also means trusting all certificates that are signed by that certificate. As the analogy above, trusting the government (CA) also means trusting all passports (certificates) that it has issued. This attribute is called the chain of trust, and it is particularly useful when deploying SSL on a large Kafka cluster. You can sign all certificates in the cluster with a single CA, and have all machines share the same truststore that trusts the CA. That way all machines can authenticate all other machines.</li>
<li><h4><aid="security_ssl_signing"href="#security_ssl_signing">Signing the certificate</a></h4>
The next step is to sign all certificates generated by step 1 with the CA generated in step 2. First, you need to export the certificate from the keystore:
Here is an example of a bash script with all above steps. Note that one of the commands assumes a password of `test1234`, so either use that password or edit the command before running it.
Note: ssl.truststore.password is technically optional but highly recommended. If a password is not set access to the truststore is still available, but integrity checking is disabled.
<li>ssl.client.auth=none ("required" => client authentication is required, "requested" => client authentication is requested and client without certs can still connect. The usage of "requested" is discouraged as it provides a false sense of security and misconfigured clients will still connect successfully.)</li>
<li>ssl.cipher.suites (Optional). A cipher suite is a named combination of authentication, encryption, MAC and key exchange algorithm used to negotiate the security settings for a network connection using TLS or SSL network protocol. (Default is an empty list)</li>
<li>ssl.enabled.protocols=TLSv1.2,TLSv1.1,TLSv1 (list out the SSL protocols that you are going to accept from clients. Do note that SSL is deprecated in favor of TLS and using SSL in production is not recommended)</li>
Due to import regulations in some countries, the Oracle implementation limits the strength of cryptographic algorithms available by default. If stronger algorithms are needed (for example, AES with 256-bit keys), the <ahref="http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads/index.html">JCE Unlimited Strength Jurisdiction Policy Files</a> must be obtained and installed in the JDK/JRE. See the
<ahref="https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/technotes/guides/security/SunProviders.html">JCA Providers Documentation</a> for more information.
</p>
<p>
The JRE/JDK will have a default pseudo-random number generator (PRNG) that is used for cryptography operations, so it is not required to configure the
implementation used with the <pre>ssl.secure.random.implementation</pre>. However, there are performance issues with some implementations (notably, the
default chosen on Linux systems, <pre>NativePRNG</pre>, utilizes a global lock). In cases where performance of SSL connections becomes an issue,
consider explicitly setting the implementation to be used. The <pre>SHA1PRNG</pre> implementation is non-blocking, and has shown very good performance
characteristics under heavy load (50 MB/sec of produced messages, plus replication traffic, per-broker).
</p>
Once you start the broker you should be able to see in the server.log
<pre>
with addresses: PLAINTEXT -> EndPoint(192.168.64.1,9092,PLAINTEXT),SSL -> EndPoint(192.168.64.1,9093,SSL)</pre>
SSL is supported only for the new Kafka Producer and Consumer, the older API is not supported. The configs for SSL will be the same for both producer and consumer.<br>
If client authentication is not required in the broker, then the following is a minimal configuration example:
Note: ssl.truststore.password is technically optional but highly recommended. If a password is not set access to the truststore is still available, but integrity checking is disabled.
Other configuration settings that may also be needed depending on our requirements and the broker configuration:
<ol>
<li>ssl.provider (Optional). The name of the security provider used for SSL connections. Default value is the default security provider of the JVM.</li>
<li>ssl.cipher.suites (Optional). A cipher suite is a named combination of authentication, encryption, MAC and key exchange algorithm used to negotiate the security settings for a network connection using TLS or SSL network protocol.</li>
<li>ssl.enabled.protocols=TLSv1.2,TLSv1.1,TLSv1. It should list at least one of the protocols configured on the broker side</li>
<li>ssl.truststore.type=JKS</li>
<li>ssl.keystore.type=JKS</li>
</ol>
<br>
Examples using console-producer and console-consumer:
If your organization is already using a Kerberos server (for example, by using Active Directory), there is no need to install a new server just for Kafka. Otherwise you will need to install one, your Linux vendor likely has packages for Kerberos and a short guide on how to install and configure it (<ahref="https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Kerberos">Ubuntu</a>, <ahref="https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-US/Red_Hat_Enterprise_Linux/6/html/Managing_Smart_Cards/installing-kerberos.html">Redhat</a>). Note that if you are using Oracle Java, you will need to download JCE policy files for your Java version and copy them to $JAVA_HOME/jre/lib/security.</li>
<li><b>Create Kerberos Principals</b><br>
If you are using the organization's Kerberos or Active Directory server, ask your Kerberos administrator for a principal for each Kafka broker in your cluster and for every operating system user that will access Kafka with Kerberos authentication (via clients and tools).</br>
If you have installed your own Kerberos, you will need to create these principals yourself using the following commands:
<li><b>Make sure all hosts can be reachable using hostnames</b> - it is a Kerberos requirement that all your hosts can be resolved with their FQDNs.</li>
<li>Add a suitably modified JAAS file similar to the one below to each Kafka broker's config directory, let's call it kafka_server_jaas.conf for this example (note that each broker should have its own keytab):
<tt>KafkaServer</tt> section in the JAAS file tells the broker which principal to use and the location of the keytab where this principal is stored. It
allows the broker to login using the keytab specified in this section. See <ahref="#security_sasl_brokernotes">notes</a> for more details on Zookeeper SASL configuration.
<li>Pass the JAAS and optionally the krb5 file locations as JVM parameters to each Kafka broker (see <ahref="https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/technotes/guides/security/jgss/tutorials/KerberosReq.html">here</a> for more details):
</li>We must also configure the service name in server.properties, which should match the principal name of the kafka brokers. In the above example, principal is "kafka/kafka1.hostname.com@EXAMPLE.com", so:
JAAS configuration for clients may alternatively be specified as a JVM parameter similar to brokers
as described <ahref="#security_client_staticjaas">here</a>. Clients use the login section named
<tt>KafkaClient</tt>. This option allows only one user for all client connections from a JVM.</li>
<li>Make sure the keytabs configured in the JAAS configuration are readable by the operating system user who is starting kafka client.</li>
<li>Optionally pass the krb5 file locations as JVM parameters to each client JVM (see <ahref="https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/technotes/guides/security/jgss/tutorials/KerberosReq.html">here</a> for more details):
<li><h4><aid="security_sasl_plain"href="#security_sasl_plain">Authentication using SASL/PLAIN</a></h4>
<p>SASL/PLAIN is a simple username/password authentication mechanism that is typically used with TLS for encryption to implement secure authentication.
Kafka supports a default implementation for SASL/PLAIN which can be extended for production use as described <ahref="#security_sasl_plain_production">here</a>.</p>
The username is used as the authenticated <code>Principal</code> for configuration of ACLs etc.
<li>Add a suitably modified JAAS file similar to the one below to each Kafka broker's config directory, let's call it kafka_server_jaas.conf for this example:
<li>Add a suitably modified JAAS file similar to the one below to each Kafka broker's config directory, let's call it kafka_server_jaas.conf for this example:
<li><h4><aid="security_sasl_oauthbearer"href="#security_sasl_oauthbearer">Authentication using SASL/OAUTHBEARER</a></h4>
<p>The <ahref="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6749">OAuth 2 Authorization Framework</a> "enables a third-party application to obtain limited access to an HTTP service,
either on behalf of a resource owner by orchestrating an approval interaction between the resource owner and the HTTP
service, or by allowing the third-party application to obtain access on its own behalf." The SASL OAUTHBEARER mechanism
enables the use of the framework in a SASL (i.e. a non-HTTP) context; it is defined in <ahref="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7628">RFC 7628</a>.
The default OAUTHBEARER implementation in Kafka creates and validates <ahref="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7515#appendix-A.5">Unsecured JSON Web Tokens</a>
and is only suitable for use in non-production Kafka installations. Refer to <ahref="#security_sasl_oauthbearer_security">Security Considerations</a>
<li>Add a suitably modified JAAS file similar to the one below to each Kafka broker's config directory, let's call it kafka_server_jaas.conf for this example:
<li><h5><aid="security_sasl_oauthbearer_unsecured_retrieval"href="#security_sasl_oauthbearer_unsecured_retrieval">Unsecured Token Creation Options for SASL/OAUTHBEARER</a></h5>
<ul>
<li>The default implementation of SASL/OAUTHBEARER in Kafka creates and validates <ahref="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7515#appendix-A.5">Unsecured JSON Web Tokens</a>.
While suitable only for non-production use, it does provide the flexibility to create arbitrary tokens in a DEV or TEST environment.</li>
<li>Here are the various supported JAAS module options on the client side (and on the broker side if OAUTHBEARER is the inter-broker protocol):
<table>
<tr>
<th>JAAS Module Option for Unsecured Token Creation</th>
<td>Set to a custom claim name if you wish the name of the <tt>String</tt>
claim holding the principal name to be something other than '<tt>sub</tt>'.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><tt>unsecuredLoginLifetimeSeconds</tt></td>
<td>Set to an integer value if the token expiration is to be set to something
other than the default value of 3600 seconds (which is 1 hour). The
'<tt>exp</tt>' claim will be set to reflect the expiration time.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><tt>unsecuredLoginScopeClaimName</tt></td>
<td>Set to a custom claim name if you wish the name of the <tt>String</tt> or
<tt>String List</tt> claim holding any token scope to be something other than
'<tt>scope</tt>'.</td>
</tr>
</table>
</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li><h5><aid="security_sasl_oauthbearer_unsecured_validation"href="#security_sasl_oauthbearer_unsecured_validation">Unsecured Token Validation Options for SASL/OAUTHBEARER</a></h5>
<ul>
<li>Here are the various supported JAAS module options on the broker side for <ahref="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7515#appendix-A.5">Unsecured JSON Web Token</a> validation:
<table>
<tr>
<th>JAAS Module Option for Unsecured Token Validation</th>
<li><h5><aid="security_sasl_oauthbearer_security"href="#security_sasl_oauthbearer_security">Security Considerations for SASL/OAUTHBEARER</a></h5>
<ul>
<li>The default implementation of SASL/OAUTHBEARER in Kafka creates and validates <ahref="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7515#appendix-A.5">Unsecured JSON Web Tokens</a>.
This is suitable only for non-production use.</li>
<li>OAUTHBEARER should be used in production enviromnments only with TLS-encryption to prevent interception of tokens.</li>
<li>The default unsecured SASL/OAUTHBEARER implementation may be overridden (and must be overridden in production environments)
using custom login and SASL Server callback handlers as described above.</li>
<li>For more details on OAuth 2 security considerations in general, refer to <ahref="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6749#section-10">RFC 6749, Section 10</a>.</li>
<li><h4><aid="saslmechanism_rolling_upgrade"href="#saslmechanism_rolling_upgrade">Modifying SASL mechanism in a Running Cluster</a></h4>
<p>SASL mechanism can be modified in a running cluster using the following sequence:</p>
<ol>
<li>Enable new SASL mechanism by adding the mechanism to <tt>sasl.enabled.mechanisms</tt> in server.properties for each broker. Update JAAS config file to include both
mechanisms as described <ahref="#security_sasl_multimechanism">here</a>. Incrementally bounce the cluster nodes.</li>
<li>Restart clients using the new mechanism.</li>
<li>To change the mechanism of inter-broker communication (if this is required), set <tt>sasl.mechanism.inter.broker.protocol</tt> in server.properties to the new mechanism and
incrementally bounce the cluster again.</li>
<li>To remove old mechanism (if this is required), remove the old mechanism from <tt>sasl.enabled.mechanisms</tt> in server.properties and remove the entries for the
old mechanism from JAAS config file. Incrementally bounce the cluster again.</li>
<li><h4><aid="security_delegation_token"href="#security_delegation_token">Authentication using Delegation Tokens</a></h4>
<p>Delegation token based authentication is a lightweight authentication mechanism to complement existing SASL/SSL
methods. Delegation tokens are shared secrets between kafka brokers and clients. Delegation tokens will help processing
frameworks to distribute the workload to available workers in a secure environment without the added cost of distributing
Kerberos TGT/keytabs or keystores when 2-way SSL is used. See <ahref="https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/KAFKA/KIP-48+Delegation+token+support+for+Kafka">KIP-48</a>
for more details.</p>
<p>Typical steps for delegation token usage are:</p>
<ol>
<li>User authenticates with the Kafka cluster via SASL or SSL, and obtains a delegation token. This can be done
using AdminClient APIs or using <tt>kafka-delegation-token.sh</tt> script.</li>
<li>User securely passes the delegation token to Kafka clients for authenticating with the Kafka cluster.</li>
<li>Token owner/renewer can renew/expire the delegation tokens.</li>
Kafka ships with a pluggable Authorizer and an out-of-box authorizer implementation that uses zookeeper to store all the acls. The Authorizer is configured by setting <code>authorizer.class.name</code> in server.properties. To enable the out of the box implementation use:
Kafka acls are defined in the general format of "Principal P is [Allowed/Denied] Operation O From Host H on any Resource R matching ResourcePattern RP". You can read more about the acl structure in KIP-11 and resource patterns in KIP-290. In order to add, remove or list acls you can use the Kafka authorizer CLI. By default, if no ResourcePatterns match a specific Resource R, then R has no associated acls, and therefore no one other than super users is allowed to access R. If you want to change that behavior, you can include the following in server.properties.
By default, the SSL user name will be of the form "CN=writeuser,OU=Unknown,O=Unknown,L=Unknown,ST=Unknown,C=Unknown". One can change that by setting a customized PrincipalBuilder in server.properties like the following.
By default, the SASL user name will be the primary part of the Kerberos principal. One can change that by setting <code>sasl.kerberos.principal.to.local.rules</code> to a customized rule in server.properties.
The format of <code>sasl.kerberos.principal.to.local.rules</code> is a list where each rule works in the same way as the auth_to_local in <ahref="http://web.mit.edu/Kerberos/krb5-latest/doc/admin/conf_files/krb5_conf.html">Kerberos configuration file (krb5.conf)</a>. This also support additional lowercase rule, to force the translated result to be all lower case. This is done by adding a "/L" to the end of the rule. check below formats for syntax.
Each rules starts with RULE: and contains an expression as the following formats. See the kerberos documentation for more details.
<pre>
RULE:[n:string](regexp)s/pattern/replacement/
RULE:[n:string](regexp)s/pattern/replacement/g
RULE:[n:string](regexp)s/pattern/replacement//L
RULE:[n:string](regexp)s/pattern/replacement/g/L
</pre>
An example of adding a rule to properly translate user@MYDOMAIN.COM to user while also keeping the default rule in place is:
<h4><aid="security_authz_cli"href="#security_authz_cli">Command Line Interface</a></h4>
Kafka Authorization management CLI can be found under bin directory with all the other CLIs. The CLI script is called <b>kafka-acls.sh</b>. Following lists all the options that the script supports:
<td>Indicates to the script that user is trying to add an acl.</td>
<td></td>
<td>Action</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>--remove</td>
<td>Indicates to the script that user is trying to remove an acl.</td>
<td></td>
<td>Action</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>--list</td>
<td>Indicates to the script that user is trying to list acls.</td>
<td></td>
<td>Action</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>--authorizer</td>
<td>Fully qualified class name of the authorizer.</td>
<td>kafka.security.auth.SimpleAclAuthorizer</td>
<td>Configuration</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>--authorizer-properties</td>
<td>key=val pairs that will be passed to authorizer for initialization. For the default authorizer the example values are: zookeeper.connect=localhost:2181</td>
<td>Indicates to the script the type of resource pattern, (for --add), or resource pattern filter, (for --list and --remove), the user wishes to use.<br>
When adding acls, this should be a specific pattern type, e.g. 'literal' or 'prefixed'.<br>
When listing or removing acls, a specific pattern type filter can be used to list or remove acls from a specific type of resource pattern,
or the filter values of 'any' or 'match' can be used, where 'any' will match any pattern type, but will match the resource name exactly,
and 'match' will perform pattern matching to list or remove all acls that affect the supplied resource(s).<br>
WARNING: 'match', when used in combination with the '--remove' switch, should be used with care.
<td>Principal is in PrincipalType:name format that will be added to ACL with Allow permission. <br>You can specify multiple --allow-principal in a single command.</td>
<td></td>
<td>Principal</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>--deny-principal</td>
<td>Principal is in PrincipalType:name format that will be added to ACL with Deny permission. <br>You can specify multiple --deny-principal in a single command.</td>
<td></td>
<td>Principal</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>--allow-host</td>
<td>IP address from which principals listed in --allow-principal will have access.</td>
<td> if --allow-principal is specified defaults to * which translates to "all hosts"</td>
<td>Host</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>--deny-host</td>
<td>IP address from which principals listed in --deny-principal will be denied access.</td>
<td>if --deny-principal is specified defaults to * which translates to "all hosts"</td>
Suppose you want to add an acl "Principals User:Bob and User:Alice are allowed to perform Operation Read and Write on Topic Test-Topic from IP 198.51.100.0 and IP 198.51.100.1". You can do that by executing the CLI with following options:
By default, all principals that don't have an explicit acl that allows access for an operation to a resource are denied. In rare cases where an allow acl is defined that allows access to all but some principal we will have to use the --deny-principal and --deny-host option. For example, if we want to allow all users to Read from Test-topic but only deny User:BadBob from IP 198.51.100.3 we can do so using following commands:
Above examples add acls to a topic by specifying --topic [topic-name] as the resource pattern option. Similarly user can add acls to cluster by specifying --cluster and to a consumer group by specifying --group [group-name].
You can add acls on any resource of a certain type, e.g. suppose you wanted to add an acl "Principal User:Peter is allowed to produce to any Topic from IP 198.51.200.0"
You can do that by using the wildcard resource '*', e.g. by executing the CLI with following options:
You can add acls on prefixed resource patterns, e.g. suppose you want to add an acl "Principal User:Jane is allowed to produce to any Topic whose name starts with 'Test-' from any host".
Note, --resource-pattern-type defaults to 'literal', which only affects resources with the exact same name or, in the case of the wildcard resource name '*', a resource with any name.</li>
Removing acls is pretty much the same. The only difference is instead of --add option users will have to specify --remove option. To remove the acls added by the first example above we can execute the CLI with following options:
We can list acls for any resource by specifying the --list option with the resource. To list all acls on the literal resource pattern Test-topic, we can execute the CLI with following options:
However, it is not necessarily possible to explicitly query for acls on prefixed resource patterns that match Test-topic as the name of such patterns may not be known.
We can list <i>all</i> acls affecting Test-topic by using '--resource-pattern-type match', e.g.
<li><b>Adding or removing a principal as producer or consumer</b><br>
The most common use case for acl management are adding/removing a principal as producer or consumer so we added convenience options to handle these cases. In order to add User:Bob as a producer of Test-topic we can execute the following command:
<h3><aid="security_rolling_upgrade"href="#security_rolling_upgrade">7.5 Incorporating Security Features in a Running Cluster</a></h3>
You can secure a running cluster via one or more of the supported protocols discussed previously. This is done in phases:
<p></p>
<ul>
<li>Incrementally bounce the cluster nodes to open additional secured port(s).</li>
<li>Restart clients using the secured rather than PLAINTEXT port (assuming you are securing the client-broker connection).</li>
<li>Incrementally bounce the cluster again to enable broker-to-broker security (if this is required)</li>
<li>A final incremental bounce to close the PLAINTEXT port.</li>
</ul>
<p></p>
The specific steps for configuring SSL and SASL are described in sections <ahref="#security_ssl">7.2</a> and <ahref="#security_sasl">7.3</a>.
Follow these steps to enable security for your desired protocol(s).
<p></p>
The security implementation lets you configure different protocols for both broker-client and broker-broker communication.
These must be enabled in separate bounces. A PLAINTEXT port must be left open throughout so brokers and/or clients can continue to communicate.
<p></p>
When performing an incremental bounce stop the brokers cleanly via a SIGTERM. It's also good practice to wait for restarted replicas to return to the ISR list before moving onto the next node.
<p></p>
As an example, say we wish to encrypt both broker-client and broker-broker communication with SSL. In the first incremental bounce, a SSL port is opened on each node:
Alternatively we might choose to open multiple ports so that different protocols can be used for broker-broker and broker-client communication. Say we wished to use SSL encryption throughout (i.e. for broker-broker and broker-client communication) but we'd like to add SASL authentication to the broker-client connection also. We would achieve this by opening two additional ports during the first bounce:
<h4><aid="zk_authz_new"href="#zk_authz_new">7.6.1 New clusters</a></h4>
To enable ZooKeeper authentication on brokers, there are two necessary steps:
<ol>
<li> Create a JAAS login file and set the appropriate system property to point to it as described above</li>
<li> Set the configuration property <tt>zookeeper.set.acl</tt> in each broker to true</li>
</ol>
The metadata stored in ZooKeeper for the Kafka cluster is world-readable, but can only be modified by the brokers. The rationale behind this decision is that the data stored in ZooKeeper is not sensitive, but inappropriate manipulation of that data can cause cluster disruption. We also recommend limiting the access to ZooKeeper via network segmentation (only brokers and some admin tools need access to ZooKeeper if the new Java consumer and producer clients are used).
If you are running a version of Kafka that does not support security or simply with security disabled, and you want to make the cluster secure, then you need to execute the following steps to enable ZooKeeper authentication with minimal disruption to your operations:
<ol>
<li>Perform a rolling restart setting the JAAS login file, which enables brokers to authenticate. At the end of the rolling restart, brokers are able to manipulate znodes with strict ACLs, but they will not create znodes with those ACLs</li>
<li>Perform a second rolling restart of brokers, this time setting the configuration parameter <tt>zookeeper.set.acl</tt> to true, which enables the use of secure ACLs when creating znodes</li>
<li>Execute the ZkSecurityMigrator tool. To execute the tool, there is this script: <tt>./bin/zookeeper-security-migration.sh</tt> with <tt>zookeeper.acl</tt> set to secure. This tool traverses the corresponding sub-trees changing the ACLs of the znodes</li>
</ol>
<p>It is also possible to turn off authentication in a secure cluster. To do it, follow these steps:</p>
<ol>
<li>Perform a rolling restart of brokers setting the JAAS login file, which enables brokers to authenticate, but setting <tt>zookeeper.set.acl</tt> to false. At the end of the rolling restart, brokers stop creating znodes with secure ACLs, but are still able to authenticate and manipulate all znodes</li>
<li>Execute the ZkSecurityMigrator tool. To execute the tool, run this script <tt>./bin/zookeeper-security-migration.sh</tt> with <tt>zookeeper.acl</tt> set to unsecure. This tool traverses the corresponding sub-trees changing the ACLs of the znodes</li>
<li>Perform a second rolling restart of brokers, this time omitting the system property that sets the JAAS login file</li>
</ol>
Here is an example of how to run the migration tool:
<h4><aid="zk_authz_ensemble"href="#zk_authz_ensemble">7.6.3 Migrating the ZooKeeper ensemble</a></h4>
It is also necessary to enable authentication on the ZooKeeper ensemble. To do it, we need to perform a rolling restart of the server and set a few properties. Please refer to the ZooKeeper documentation for more detail: