Binary SASL Auth
Overview
Most deployments of memcached today exist within trusted networks where clients may freely connect to any server and the servers don’t discriminate against them.
There are cases, however, where memcached is deployed in untrusted networks or where administrators would like to exercise a bit more control over the clients that are connecting.
This does not provide encryption, but can provide authentication. Do not run this over the internet large, do use this to protect from neighbors and accidents from within large mostly trusted networks.
This page mostly exists to describe the protocol.
Authentication Concepts
Authentication is abstracted from the server using the Simple Authentication and Security Layer.
Among other things, this provides administrators with consistent credential management that is mostly independent from the services that are authenticating clients.
Protocol Definitions
Error Codes and Conditions
There are two status codes provided by the SASL protocol to enable authentication:
Unauthorized
If a message is returned with a status code of 0x20
, this is
considered an authentication or authorization failure.
This may be in response to an explicit authentication command indicating the credentials were not accepted or the authorization was otherwise not granted to access the server.
Continue Authentication
Some SASL mechanisms require multiple messages to be sent between the
client and server. If a server responds to an authentication message
with a status code of 0x21
, this will indicate your client needs to do
more work to complete the authentication negotiation.
Authentication Not Supported
If a server responds to an authentication request indicating the
command is unknown (status 0x81
), it likely doesn’t support
authentication. It is generally acceptable for the client to consider
authentication successful when communicating to a server that doesn’t
support authentication.
Authentication Requests
List Mechanisms
In order to negotiate authentication, a client may need to ask the server what authentication mechanisms it supports.
A command 0x20
with no extras, key, or value will request a mechanism
list from the server. The mechanisms are returned as a
space-separated value.
Authentication Request
To begin an authentication request, send a request with command 0x21
,
the requested mechanism as the key, and the initial authentication
data as the value if any is required for the chosen mechanism.
Authentication Continuation
If the authentication request responded with a continuation request
(status 0x21
), the body will contain the data needed for computing the
next value in the authentication negotiation.
The next step’s data will be transmitted similarly to the initial
step, but using command 0x22
. Note that this includes the mechanism
within the key as in the initial request.
Error Reference
Status Code | Meaning |
---|---|
0x20 | Authentication required / Not Successful |
0x21 | Further authentication steps required. |
Command Reference
Command | Op Code | Key | Value |
---|---|---|---|
List Mechanisms | 0x20 | None | None |
Start Authentication | 0x21 | Mechanism | Auth Data |
Authentication Step | 0x22 | Mechanism | Auth Data |
See Also
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simple_Authentication_and_Security_Layer
HOWTO
Introduction
If running memcached in a mostly trusted network; such as within a cloud or a corporate internal cloud, you might want to restrict access to the service.
SASL is not implemented as end-to-end encryption. While this can facilitate restricting access to the daemon, it does not hide communications and isn’t suitable for using over the internet.
SASL (as described in RFC2222) is a standard for adding authentication mechanisms to protocols in a way that is protocol independent.
Getting Started
In order to deploy memcached with SASL, you’ll need two things:
- A memcached server with SASL support (version 1.4.3 or greater built with
--enable-sasl
) - A client that supports SASL
- The server side has to support the authentication mechanism the client is using,
some clients only support
plain
while an OS may not provide a library/package that supportsplain
, at least not by default.
- The server side has to support the authentication mechanism the client is using,
some clients only support
Configuring SASL
For the most part, you just do the normal SASL admin stuff.
# Create a user for memcached.
saslpasswd2 -a memcached -c cacheuser
Running Memcached
In order to enable SASL support in the server you must use the -S
flag.
The -S
flag does a few things things:
- Enable all of the SASL commands.
- Require binary protocol only.
- Require authentication to have been successful before commands may be issued on a connection.
SASL how to FAQ
Q.) How can I check if the memcached server I have is built with SASL support?
- A.) You can see if the command line help lists the option:
-S, --enable-sasl turn on Sasl authentication
- A.) You can run the server in verbose mode, for example:
> memcached -S -vvvv
Reading configuration from: <...memcached.conf>
Initialized SASL.
- A.) On Linux you can check if it links against a SASL library, for example:
> ldd `which memcached` | grep -i sasl
libsasl2.so.3 => /lib64/libsasl2.so.3
Q.) The configure option --enable-sasl-pwdb
is not working
Q.) Plain auth is not working, why not?
- A.) Does running memcached with the
-vvvv
option provide any useful messages? - A.) Check you have the SASL lib that implements it installed, for example
/usr/lib64/sasl2/libplain.so
provided by the RPMcyrus-sasl-plain
. - A.) Check the password file is owned by and only readable by the user running memcached.
- A.) Check that the username the client is using matches that used in the password file,
note that sometimes the client hostname is postfixed to the username with an @, so
myname@client_hostname:mypass
Further Info
Read more about memcached’s SASL auth protocol. https://github.com/memcached/memcached/wiki/ReleaseNotes145#sasl_pwdb-for-more-simple-auth-deployments