kolla-ansible/releasenotes/notes/fernet-key-rotation-8d40041d7d783dc7.yaml
Mark Goddard 6c1442c385 Fix keystone fernet key rotation scheduling
Right now every controller rotates fernet keys. This is nice because
should any controller die, we know the remaining ones will rotate the
keys. However, we are currently over-rotating the keys.

When we over rotate keys, we get logs like this:

 This is not a recognized Fernet token <token> TokenNotFound

Most clients can recover and get a new token, but some clients (like
Nova passing tokens to other services) can't do that because it doesn't
have the password to regenerate a new token.

With three controllers, in crontab in keystone-fernet we see the once a day
correctly staggered across the three controllers:

ssh ctrl1 sudo cat /etc/kolla/keystone-fernet/crontab
0 0 * * * /usr/bin/fernet-rotate.sh
ssh ctrl2 sudo cat /etc/kolla/keystone-fernet/crontab
0 8 * * * /usr/bin/fernet-rotate.sh
ssh ctrl3 sudo cat /etc/kolla/keystone-fernet/crontab
0 16 * * * /usr/bin/fernet-rotate.sh

Currently with three controllers we have this keystone config:

[token]
expiration = 86400 (although, keystone default is one hour)
allow_expired_window = 172800 (this is the keystone default)

[fernet_tokens]
max_active_keys = 4

Currently, kolla-ansible configures key rotation according to the following:

   rotation_interval = token_expiration / num_hosts

This means we rotate keys more quickly the more hosts we have, which doesn't
make much sense.

Keystone docs state:

   max_active_keys =
     ((token_expiration + allow_expired_window) / rotation_interval) + 2

For details see:
https://docs.openstack.org/keystone/stein/admin/fernet-token-faq.html

Rotation is based on pushing out a staging key, so should any server
start using that key, other servers will consider that valid. Then each
server in turn starts using the staging key, each in term demoting the
existing primary key to a secondary key. Eventually you prune the
secondary keys when there is no token in the wild that would need to be
decrypted using that key. So this all makes sense.

This change adds new variables for fernet_token_allow_expired_window and
fernet_key_rotation_interval, so that we can correctly calculate the
correct number of active keys. We now set the default rotation interval
so as to minimise the number of active keys to 3 - one primary, one
secondary, one buffer.

This change also fixes the fernet cron job generator, which was broken
in the following cases:

* requesting an interval of more than 1 day resulted in no jobs
* requesting an interval of more than 60 minutes, unless an exact
  multiple of 60 minutes, resulted in no jobs

It should now be possible to request any interval up to a week divided
by the number of hosts.

Change-Id: I10c82dc5f83653beb60ddb86d558c5602153341a
Closes-Bug: #1809469
2019-05-17 14:05:48 +01:00

17 lines
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YAML

---
upgrade:
- |
The Keystone fernet key rotation scheduling algorithm has been modified to
avoid issues with over-rotation of keys.
The variables ``fernet_token_expiry``,
``fernet_token_allow_expired_window`` and ``fernet_key_rotation_interval``
may be set to configure the token expiry and key rotation schedule.
By default, ``fernet_token_expiry`` is 86400,
``fernet_token_allow_expired_window`` is 172800, and
``fernet_key_rotation_interval`` is the sum of these two variables. This
allows for the minimum number of active keys - 3.
See `bug 1809469 <https://launchpad.net/bugs/1809469>`__ for details.