Analysis of customer stalls revealed that the function `detail::hash_with_salt` (invoked by `passwords::check`) often blocks the reactor. Internally, this function uses the external `crypt_r` function to compute password hashes, which is CPU-intensive.
This PR addresses the issue in two ways:
1) `sha-512` is now the only password hashing scheme for new passwords (it was already the common-case).
2) `passwords::check` is moved to a dedicated alien thread.
Regarding point 1: before this change, the following hashing schemes were supported by `identify_best_supported_scheme()`: bcrypt_y, bcrypt_a, SHA-512, SHA-256, and MD5. The reason for this was that the `crypt_r` function used for password hashing comes from an external library (currently `libxcrypt`), and the supported hashing algorithms vary depending on the library in use. However:
- The bcrypt schemes never worked properly because their prefixes lack the required round count (e.g. `$2y$` instead of `$2y$05$`). Moreover, bcrypt is slower than SHA-512, so it not good idea to fix or use it.
- SHA-256 and SHA-512 both belong to the SHA-2 family. Libraries that support one almost always support the other, so it’s very unlikely to find SHA-256 without SHA-512.
- MD5 is no longer considered secure for password hashing.
Regarding point 2: the `passwords::check` call now runs on a shared alien thread created at database startup. An `std::mutex` synchronizes that thread with the shards. In theory this could introduce a frequent lock contention, but in practice each shard handles only a few hundred new connections per second—even during storms. There is already `_conns_cpu_concurrency_semaphore` in `generic_server` limits the number of concurrent connection handlers.
Fixes https://github.com/scylladb/scylladb/issues/24524
Backport not needed, as it is a new feature.
Closesscylladb/scylladb#24924
* github.com:scylladb/scylladb:
main: utils: add thread names to alien workers
auth: move passwords::check call to alien thread
test: wait for 3 clients with given username in test_service_level_api
auth: refactor password checking in password_authenticator
auth: make SHA-512 the only password hashing scheme for new passwords
auth: whitespace change in identify_best_supported_scheme()
auth: require scheme as parameter for `generate_salt`
auth: check password hashing scheme support on authenticator start
(cherry picked from commit c762425ea7)
Instead of lengthy blurbs, switch to single-line, machine-readable
standardized (https://spdx.dev) license identifiers. The Linux kernel
switched long ago, so there is strong precedent.
Three cases are handled: AGPL-only, Apache-only, and dual licensed.
For the latter case, I chose (AGPL-3.0-or-later and Apache-2.0),
reasoning that our changes are extensive enough to apply our license.
The changes we applied mechanically with a script, except to
licenses/README.md.
Closes#9937
There is no constexpr operator+ for std::string_view, so we have to
concatenate the strings ourselves.
Signed-off-by: Rafael Ávila de Espíndola <espindola@scylladb.com>
This converts the following variables:
DEFAULT_SUPERUSER_NAME AUTH_KS USERS_CF AUTH_PACKAGE_NAME
Since they are now constexpr they will not be part of any
initialization order problems.
Signed-off-by: Rafael Ávila de Espíndola <espindola@scylladb.com>
This change appears quite large, but is logically fairly simple.
Previously, the `auth` module was structured around global state in a
number of ways:
- There existed global instances for the authenticator and the
authorizer, which were accessed pervasively throughout the system
through `auth::authenticator::get()` and `auth::authorizer::get()`,
respectively. These instances needed to be initialized before they
could be used with `auth::authenticator::setup(sstring type_name)`
and `auth::authorizer::setup(sstring type_name)`.
- The implementation of the `auth::auth` functions and the authenticator
and authorizer depended on resources accessed globally through
`cql3::get_local_query_processor()` and
`service::get_local_migration_manager()`.
- CQL statements would check for access and manage users through static
functions in `auth::auth`. These functions would access the global
authenticator and authorizer instances and depended on the necessary
systems being started before they were used.
This change eliminates global state from all of these.
The specific changes are:
- Move out `allow_all_authenticator` and `allow_all_authorizer` into
their own files so that they're constructed like any other
authenticator or authorizer.
- Delete `auth.hh` and `auth.cc`. Constants and helper functions useful
for implementing functionality in the `auth` module have moved to
`common.hh`.
- Remove silent global dependency in
`auth::authenticated_user::is_super()` on the auth* service in favour
of a new function `auth::is_super_user()` with an explicit auth*
service argument.
- Remove global authenticator and authorizer instances, as well as the
`setup()` functions.
- Expose dependency on the auth* service in
`auth::authorizer::authorize()` and `auth::authorizer::list()`, which
is necessary to check for superuser status.
- Add an explicit `service::migration_manager` argument to the
authenticators and authorizers so they can announce metadata tables.
- The permissions cache now requires an auth* service reference instead
of just an authorizer since authorizing also requires this.
- The permissions cache configuration can now easily be created from the
DB configuration.
- Move the static functions in `auth::auth` to the new `auth::service`.
Where possible, previously static resources like the `delayed_tasks`
are now members.
- Validating `cql3::user_options` requires an authenticator, which was
previously accessed globally.
- Instances of the auth* service are accessed through `external`
instances of `client_state` instead of globally. This includes several
CQL statements including `alter_user_statement`,
`create_user_statement`, `drop_user_statement`, `grant_statement`,
`list_permissions_statement`, `permissions_altering_statement`, and
`revoke_statement`. For `internal` `client_state`, this is `nullptr`.
- Since the `cql_server` is responsible for instantiating connections
and each connection gets a new `client_state`, the `cql_server` is
instantiated with a reference to the auth* service.
- Similarly, the Thrift server is now also instantiated with a reference
to the auth* service.
- Since the storage service is responsible for instantiating and
starting the sharded servers, it is instantiated with the sharded
auth* service which it threads through. All relevant factory functions
have been updated.
- The storage service is still responsible for starting the auth*
service it has been provided, and shutting it down.
- The `cql_test_env` is now instantiated with an instance of the auth*
service, and can be accessed through a member function.
- All unit tests have been updated and pass.
Fixes#2929.