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			85 lines
		
	
	
		
			3.1 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			ReStructuredText
		
	
	
	
	
	
| .. _security:
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| 
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| Security
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| ========
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| The two main security components you will use with the
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| Python driver are Authentication and SSL.
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| 
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| Authentication
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| --------------
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| Versions 2.0 and higher of the driver support a SASL-based
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| authentication mechanism when :attr:`~.Cluster.protocol_version`
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| is set to 2 or higher.  To use this authentication, set
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| :attr:`~.Cluster.auth_provider` to an instance of a subclass
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| of :class:`~cassandra.auth.AuthProvider`.  When working
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| with Cassandra's ``PasswordAuthenticator``, you can use
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| the :class:`~cassandra.auth.PlainTextAuthProvider` class.
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| 
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| For example, suppose Cassandra is setup with its default
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| 'cassandra' user with a password of 'cassandra':
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| 
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| .. code-block:: python
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| 
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|     from cassandra.cluster import Cluster
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|     from cassandra.auth import PlainTextAuthProvider
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| 
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|     auth_provider = PlainTextAuthProvider(username='cassandra', password='cassandra')
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|     cluster = Cluster(auth_provider=auth_provider, protocol_version=2)
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| 
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| 
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| When working with version 2 or higher of the driver, the protocol
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| version is set to 2 by default, but we've included it in the example
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| to be explicit.
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| 
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| Custom Authenticators
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| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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| If you're using something other than Cassandra's ``PasswordAuthenticator``,
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| :class:`~.SaslAuthProvider` is provided for generic SASL authentication mechanisms,
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| utilizing the ``pure-sasl`` package.
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| If these do not suit your needs, you may need to create your own subclasses of
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| :class:`~.AuthProvider` and :class:`~.Authenticator`.  You can use the Sasl classes
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| as example implementations.
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| 
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| Protocol v1 Authentication
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| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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| When working with Cassandra 1.2 (or a higher version with
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| :attr:`~.Cluster.protocol_version` set to ``1``), you will not pass in
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| an :class:`~.AuthProvider` instance.  Instead, you should pass in a
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| function that takes one argument, the IP address of a host, and returns
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| a dict of credentials with a ``username`` and ``password`` key:
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| 
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| .. code-block:: python
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| 
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|     from cassandra.cluster import Cluster
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| 
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|     def get_credentials(host_address):
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|         return {'username': 'joe', 'password': '1234'}
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| 
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|     cluster = Cluster(auth_provider=get_credentials, protocol_version=1)
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| 
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| SSL
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| ---
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| To enable SSL you will need to set :attr:`.Cluster.ssl_options` to a
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| dict of options.  These will be passed as kwargs to ``ssl.wrap_socket()``
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| when new sockets are created.  This should be used when client encryption
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| is enabled in Cassandra.
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| 
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| By default, a ``ca_certs`` value should be supplied (the value should be
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| a string pointing to the location of the CA certs file), and you probably
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| want to specify ``ssl_version`` as ``ssl.PROTOCOL_TLSv1`` to match
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| Cassandra's default protocol.
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| 
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| For example:
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| 
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| .. code-block:: python
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| 
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|     from cassandra.cluster import Cluster
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|     from ssl import PROTOCOL_TLSv1
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| 
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|     ssl_opts = {'ca_certs': '/path/to/my/ca.certs',
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|                 'ssl_version': PROTOCOL_TLSv1}
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|     cluster = Cluster(ssl_options=ssl_opts)
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| 
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| For further reading, Andrew Mussey has published a thorough guide on
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| `Using SSL with the DataStax Python driver <http://blog.amussey.com/post/64036730812/cassandra-2-0-client-server-ssl-with-datastax-python>`_.
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