The Teiid's configuration file(s)
contain transports defined for access into Teiid, and transport contains the properties to configure SSL for socket.
There are two types of transports, each with it's own SSL configuration:
-
"teiid" - Default configuration to only encrypt login traffic, none of the other properties are used.
-
"pg" type - Defaults to no SSL.
Example Configuration
<ssl mode="login" authentication-mode="1-way" ssl-protocol="SSLv3" keymanagement-algorithm="algo"
enabled-cipher-suites="SSL_RSA_WITH_RC4_128_MD5,SSL_RSA_WITH_RC4_128_SHA">
<keystore name="cert.keystore" password="passwd" type="JKS" key-alias="alias"/>
<truststore name="cert.truststore" password="passwd"/>
</ssl>
Properties
-
keystore/name - The file name of the keystore, which contains the private key of the Server. The file name can be relative resource path available to the Teiid deployer classloader or an absolute file system path. A typical installation would place the keystore file in the conf directory of the profile where Teiid is deployed with a file name relative to the conf path.
-
truststore/name - if "authenticationMode" is chosen as "2-way", then this property must be provided. This is the truststore that contains the public key for the client. Depending upon how you created the keystore and truststores, this may be same file as defined under "keystoreFilename" property.
You can also use CLI to modify the transport configuration.
If you do not like to leave clear text passwords in the configuration file, then you can use JBoss AS vault mechanism for storing the keystore and truststore passwords. Use the directions defined here https://community.jboss.org/docs/DOC-17248
SSL Authentication Modes
SSL supports multiple authentication modes. In most secure intranet environments, anonymous is suitable to just bulk encrypt traffic without the need to setup SSL certificates.
-
2-way- the server will present a certificate, which is obtained from the keystore related properties. The client should have a truststore configured to accept the server certificate. The client is also expected to present a certificate, which is obtained from its keystore. The client certificate should be accepted by the trust store configured by the truststore related properties.
Encryption Strength
Both anonymous SSL and login only encryption are configured to use 128 bit AES encryption by default. By default, 1-way and 2-way SSL allow for cipher suite negotiation based upon the default cipher suites supported by the respective Java platforms of the client and server. User can restrict the cipher suites used for encryption by specifying the enabledCipherSuites property above in ssl configuration.