1# Authentication 2 3gRPC supports a number of different mechanisms for asserting identity between an client and server. This document provides code samples demonstrating how to provide SSL/TLS encryption support and identity assertions in Java, as well as passing OAuth2 tokens to services that support it. 4 5# Transport Security (TLS) 6 7HTTP/2 over TLS mandates the use of [ALPN](https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-tls-applayerprotoneg-05) to negotiate the use of the h2 protocol. ALPN is a fairly new standard and (where possible) gRPC also supports protocol negotiation via [NPN](https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-agl-tls-nextprotoneg-04) for systems that do not yet support ALPN. 8 9On Android, use the [Play Services Provider](#tls-on-android). For non-Android systems, use [OpenSSL](#tls-with-openssl). 10 11## TLS on Android 12 13On Android we recommend the use of the [Play Services Dynamic Security 14Provider](https://www.appfoundry.be/blog/2014/11/18/Google-Play-Services-Dynamic-Security-Provider/) 15to ensure your application has an up-to-date OpenSSL library with the necessary 16ciper-suites and a reliable ALPN implementation. This requires [updating the 17security provider at 18runtime](https://developer.android.com/training/articles/security-gms-provider.html). 19 20Although ALPN mostly works on newer Android releases (especially since 5.0), 21there are bugs and discovered security vulnerabilities that are only fixed by 22upgrading the security provider. Thus, we recommend using the Play Service 23Dynamic Security Provider for all Android versions. 24 25*Note: The Dynamic Security Provider must be installed **before** creating a gRPC OkHttp channel. gRPC's OkHttpProtocolNegotiator statically initializes the security protocol(s) available to gRPC, which means that changes to the security provider after the first channel is created will not be picked up by gRPC.* 26 27### Bundling Conscrypt 28 29If depending on Play Services is not an option for your app, then you may bundle 30[Conscrypt](https://conscrypt.org) with your application. Binaries are available 31on [Maven 32Central](https://search.maven.org/#search%7Cga%7C1%7Cg%3Aorg.conscrypt%20a%3Aconscrypt-android). 33 34Like the Play Services Dynamic Security Provider, you must still "install" 35Conscrypt before use. 36 37```java 38import org.conscrypt.Conscrypt; 39import java.security.Security; 40... 41 42Security.insertProviderAt(Conscrypt.newProvider(), 1); 43``` 44 45## TLS with OpenSSL 46 47This is currently the recommended approach for using gRPC over TLS (on non-Android systems). 48 49The main benefits of using OpenSSL are: 50 511. **Speed**: In local testing, we've seen performance improvements of 3x over the JDK. GCM, which is used by the only cipher suite required by the HTTP/2 spec, is 10-500x faster. 522. **Ciphers**: OpenSSL has its own ciphers and is not dependent on the limitations of the JDK. This allows supporting GCM on Java 7. 533. **ALPN to NPN Fallback**: if the remote endpoint doesn't support ALPN. 544. **Version Independence**: does not require using a different library version depending on the JDK update. 55 56Support for OpenSSL is only provided for the Netty transport via [netty-tcnative](https://github.com/netty/netty-tcnative), which is a fork of 57[Apache Tomcat's tcnative](http://tomcat.apache.org/native-doc/), a JNI wrapper around OpenSSL. 58 59### OpenSSL: Dynamic vs Static (which to use?) 60 61As of version `1.1.33.Fork14`, netty-tcnative provides two options for usage: statically or dynamically linked. For simplification of initial setup, 62we recommend that users first look at `netty-tcnative-boringssl-static`, which is statically linked against BoringSSL and Apache APR. Using this artifact requires no extra installation and guarantees that ALPN and the ciphers required for 63HTTP/2 are available. In addition, starting with `1.1.33.Fork16` binaries for 64all supported platforms can be included at compile time and the correct binary 65for the platform can be selected at runtime. 66 67Production systems, however, may require an easy upgrade path for OpenSSL security patches. In this case, relying on the statically linked artifact also implies waiting for the Netty team 68to release the new artifact to Maven Central, which can take some time. A better solution in this case is to use the dynamically linked `netty-tcnative` artifact, which allows the site administrator 69to easily upgrade OpenSSL in the standard way (e.g. apt-get) without relying on any new builds from Netty. 70 71### OpenSSL: Statically Linked (netty-tcnative-boringssl-static) 72 73This is the simplest way to configure the Netty transport for OpenSSL. You just need to add the appropriate `netty-tcnative-boringssl-static` artifact to your application's classpath. 74 75Artifacts are available on [Maven Central](http://repo1.maven.org/maven2/io/netty/netty-tcnative-boringssl-static/) for the following platforms: 76 77Maven Classifier | Description 78---------------- | ----------- 79windows-x86_64 | Windows distribution 80osx-x86_64 | Mac distribution 81linux-x86_64 | Linux distribution 82 83##### Getting netty-tcnative-boringssl-static from Maven 84 85In Maven, you can use the [os-maven-plugin](https://github.com/trustin/os-maven-plugin) to help simplify the dependency. 86 87```xml 88<project> 89 <dependencies> 90 <dependency> 91 <groupId>io.netty</groupId> 92 <artifactId>netty-tcnative-boringssl-static</artifactId> 93 <version>2.0.7.Final</version> 94 </dependency> 95 </dependencies> 96</project> 97``` 98 99##### Getting netty-tcnative-boringssl-static from Gradle 100 101Gradle you can use the [osdetector-gradle-plugin](https://github.com/google/osdetector-gradle-plugin), which is a wrapper around the os-maven-plugin. 102 103```gradle 104buildscript { 105 repositories { 106 mavenCentral() 107 } 108} 109 110dependencies { 111 compile 'io.netty:netty-tcnative-boringssl-static:2.0.7.Final' 112} 113``` 114 115### OpenSSL: Dynamically Linked (netty-tcnative) 116 117If for any reason you need to dynamically link against OpenSSL (e.g. you need control over the version of OpenSSL), you can instead use the `netty-tcnative` artifact. 118 119Requirements: 120 1211. [OpenSSL](https://www.openssl.org/) version >= 1.0.2 for ALPN support, or version >= 1.0.1 for NPN. 1222. [Apache APR library (libapr-1)](https://apr.apache.org/) version >= 1.5.2. 1233. [netty-tcnative](https://github.com/netty/netty-tcnative) version >= 1.1.33.Fork7 must be on classpath. Prior versions only supported NPN and only Fedora-derivatives were supported for Linux. 124 125Artifacts are available on [Maven Central](http://repo1.maven.org/maven2/io/netty/netty-tcnative/) for the following platforms: 126 127Classifier | Description 128---------------- | ----------- 129windows-x86_64 | Windows distribution 130osx-x86_64 | Mac distribution 131linux-x86_64 | Used for non-Fedora derivatives of Linux 132linux-x86_64-fedora | Used for Fedora derivatives 133 134On Linux it should be noted that OpenSSL uses a different soname for Fedora derivatives than other Linux releases. To work around this limitation, netty-tcnative deploys two separate versions for linux. 135 136##### Getting netty-tcnative from Maven 137 138In Maven, you can use the [os-maven-plugin](https://github.com/trustin/os-maven-plugin) to help simplify the dependency. 139 140```xml 141<project> 142 <dependencies> 143 <dependency> 144 <groupId>io.netty</groupId> 145 <artifactId>netty-tcnative</artifactId> 146 <version>2.0.7.Final</version> 147 <classifier>${tcnative.classifier}</classifier> 148 </dependency> 149 </dependencies> 150 151 <build> 152 <extensions> 153 <!-- Use os-maven-plugin to initialize the "os.detected" properties --> 154 <extension> 155 <groupId>kr.motd.maven</groupId> 156 <artifactId>os-maven-plugin</artifactId> 157 <version>1.5.0.Final</version> 158 </extension> 159 </extensions> 160 <plugins> 161 <!-- Use Ant to configure the appropriate "tcnative.classifier" property --> 162 <plugin> 163 <groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId> 164 <artifactId>maven-antrun-plugin</artifactId> 165 <executions> 166 <execution> 167 <phase>initialize</phase> 168 <configuration> 169 <exportAntProperties>true</exportAntProperties> 170 <target> 171 <condition property="tcnative.classifier" 172 value="${os.detected.classifier}-fedora" 173 else="${os.detected.classifier}"> 174 <isset property="os.detected.release.fedora"/> 175 </condition> 176 </target> 177 </configuration> 178 <goals> 179 <goal>run</goal> 180 </goals> 181 </execution> 182 </executions> 183 </plugin> 184 </plugins> 185 </build> 186</project> 187``` 188 189##### Getting netty-tcnative from Gradle 190 191Gradle you can use the [osdetector-gradle-plugin](https://github.com/google/osdetector-gradle-plugin), which is a wrapper around the os-maven-plugin. 192 193```gradle 194buildscript { 195 repositories { 196 mavenCentral() 197 } 198 dependencies { 199 classpath 'com.google.gradle:osdetector-gradle-plugin:1.4.0' 200 } 201} 202 203// Use the osdetector-gradle-plugin 204apply plugin: "com.google.osdetector" 205 206def tcnative_classifier = osdetector.classifier; 207// Fedora variants use a different soname for OpenSSL than other linux distributions 208// (see http://netty.io/wiki/forked-tomcat-native.html). 209if (osdetector.os == "linux" && osdetector.release.isLike("fedora")) { 210 tcnative_classifier += "-fedora"; 211} 212 213dependencies { 214 compile 'io.netty:netty-tcnative:2.0.7.Final:' + tcnative_classifier 215} 216``` 217 218## TLS with JDK (Jetty ALPN/NPN) 219 220**WARNING: DON'T DO THIS!!** 221 222*For non-Android systems, the recommended approach is to use [OpenSSL](#tls-with-openssl). Using the JDK for ALPN is generally much slower and may not support the necessary ciphers for HTTP2.* 223 224*Jetty ALPN brings its own baggage in that the Java bootclasspath needs to be modified, which may not be an option for some environments. In addition, a specific version of Jetty ALPN has to be used for a given version of the JRE. If the versions don't match the negotiation will fail, but you won't really know why. And since there is such a tight coupling between Jetty ALPN and the JRE, there are no guarantees that Jetty ALPN will support every JRE out in the wild.* 225 226*The moral of the story is: Don't use the JDK for ALPN! But if you absolutely have to, here's how you do it... :)* 227 228--- 229 230If not using the Netty transport (or you are unable to use OpenSSL for some reason) another alternative is to use the JDK for TLS. 231 232No standard Java release has built-in support for ALPN today ([there is a tracking issue](https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8051498) so go upvote it!) so we need to use the [Jetty-ALPN](https://github.com/jetty-project/jetty-alpn) (or [Jetty-NPN](https://github.com/jetty-project/jetty-npn) if on Java < 8) bootclasspath extension for OpenJDK. To do this, add an `Xbootclasspath` JVM option referencing the path to the Jetty `alpn-boot` jar. 233 234```sh 235java -Xbootclasspath/p:/path/to/jetty/alpn/extension.jar ... 236``` 237 238Note that you must use the [release of the Jetty-ALPN jar](http://www.eclipse.org/jetty/documentation/current/alpn-chapter.html#alpn-versions) specific to the version of Java you are using. However, you can use the JVM agent [Jetty-ALPN-Agent](https://github.com/jetty-project/jetty-alpn-agent) to load the correct Jetty `alpn-boot` jar file for the current Java version. To do this, instead of adding an `Xbootclasspath` option, add a `javaagent` JVM option referencing the path to the Jetty `alpn-agent` jar. 239 240```sh 241java -javaagent:/path/to/jetty-alpn-agent.jar ... 242``` 243 244### JDK Ciphers 245 246Java 7 does not support [the cipher suites recommended](https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-httpbis-http2-17#section-9.2.2) by the HTTP2 specification. To address this we suggest servers use Java 8 where possible or use an alternative JCE implementation such as [Bouncy Castle](https://www.bouncycastle.org/java.html). If this is not practical it is possible to use other ciphers but you need to ensure that the services you intend to call have [allowed out-of-spec ciphers](https://github.com/grpc/grpc/issues/681) and have evaluated the security risks of doing so. 247 248Users should be aware that GCM is [_very_ slow (1 MB/s)](https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1135504) before Java 8u60. With Java 8u60 GCM is 10x faster (10-20 MB/s), but that is still slow compared to OpenSSL (~200 MB/s), especially with AES-NI support (~1 GB/s). GCM cipher suites are the only suites available that comply with HTTP2's cipher requirements. 249 250### Configuring Jetty ALPN in Web Containers 251 252Some web containers, such as [Jetty](http://www.eclipse.org/jetty/documentation/current/jetty-classloading.html) restrict access to server classes for web applications. A gRPC client running within such a container must be properly configured to allow access to the ALPN classes. In Jetty, this is done by including a `WEB-INF/jetty-env.xml` file containing the following: 253 254```xml 255<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?> 256<!DOCTYPE Configure PUBLIC "-//Mort Bay Consulting//DTD Configure//EN" "http://www.eclipse.org/jetty/configure.dtd"> 257<Configure class="org.eclipse.jetty.webapp.WebAppContext"> 258 <!-- Must be done in jetty-env.xml, since jetty-web.xml is loaded too late. --> 259 <!-- Removing ALPN from the blacklisted server classes (using "-" to remove). --> 260 <!-- Must prepend to the blacklist since order matters. --> 261 <Call name="prependServerClass"> 262 <Arg>-org.eclipse.jetty.alpn.</Arg> 263 </Call> 264</Configure> 265``` 266## Enabling TLS on a server 267 268To use TLS on the server, a certificate chain and private key need to be 269specified in PEM format. The standard TLS port is 443, but we use 8443 below to 270avoid needing extra permissions from the OS. 271 272```java 273Server server = ServerBuilder.forPort(8443) 274 // Enable TLS 275 .useTransportSecurity(certChainFile, privateKeyFile) 276 .addService(serviceImplementation) 277 .build(); 278server.start(); 279``` 280 281If the issuing certificate authority is not known to the client then a properly 282configured SslContext or SSLSocketFactory should be provided to the 283NettyChannelBuilder or OkHttpChannelBuilder, respectively. 284 285## Mutual TLS 286 287[Mutual authentication][] (or "client-side authentication") configuration is similar to the server by providing truststores, a client certificate and private key to the client channel. The server must also be configured to request a certificate from clients, as well as truststores for which client certificates it should allow. 288 289```java 290Server server = NettyServerBuilder.forPort(8443) 291 .sslContext(GrpcSslContexts.forServer(certChainFile, privateKeyFile) 292 .trustManager(clientCAsFile) 293 .clientAuth(ClientAuth.REQUIRE) 294 .build()); 295``` 296 297Negotiated client certificates are available in the SSLSession, which is found in the `TRANSPORT_ATTR_SSL_SESSION` attribute of <a href="https://github.com/grpc/grpc-java/blob/master/core/src/main/java/io/grpc/Grpc.java">Grpc</a>. A server interceptor can provide details in the current Context. 298 299```java 300public final static Context.Key<SSLSession> SSL_SESSION_CONTEXT = Context.key("SSLSession"); 301 302@Override 303public <ReqT, RespT> ServerCall.Listener<ReqT> interceptCall(ServerCall<RespT> call, 304 Metadata headers, ServerCallHandler<ReqT, RespT> next) { 305 SSLSession sslSession = call.attributes().get(Grpc.TRANSPORT_ATTR_SSL_SESSION); 306 if (sslSession == null) { 307 return next.startCall(call, headers) 308 } 309 return Contexts.interceptCall( 310 Context.current().withValue(SSL_SESSION_CONTEXT, clientContext), call, headers, next); 311} 312``` 313 314[Mutual authentication]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transport_Layer_Security#Client-authenticated_TLS_handshake 315 316## Troubleshooting 317 318If you received an error message "ALPN is not configured properly" or "Jetty ALPN/NPN has not been properly configured", it most likely means that: 319 - ALPN related dependencies are either not present in the classpath 320 - or that there is a classpath conflict 321 - or that a wrong version is used due to dependency management 322 - or you are on an unsupported platform (e.g., 32-bit OS, Alpine with `musl` libc). See [Transport Security](#transport-security-tls) for supported platforms. 323 324### Netty 325If you aren't using gRPC on Android devices, you are most likely using `grpc-netty` transport. 326 327If you are developing for Android and have a dependency on `grpc-netty`, you should remove it as `grpc-netty` is unsupported on Android. Use `grpc-okhttp` instead. 328 329If you are on a 32-bit operating system, or not on a [Transport Security supported platform](#transport-security-tls), you should use Jetty ALPN (and beware of potential issues), or you'll need to build your own 32-bit version of `netty-tcnative`. 330 331If you are using `musl` libc (e.g., with Alpine Linux), then 332`netty-tcnative-boringssl-static` won't work. There are several alternatives: 333 - Use [netty-tcnative-alpine](https://github.com/pires/netty-tcnative-alpine) 334 - Use a distribution with `glibc` 335 336If you are running inside of an embedded Tomcat runtime (e.g., Spring Boot), 337then some versions of `netty-tcnative-boringssl-static` will have conflicts and 338won't work. You must use gRPC 1.4.0 or later. 339 340Most dependency versioning problems can be solved by using 341`io.grpc:grpc-netty-shaded` instead of `io.grpc:grpc-netty`, although this also 342limits your usage of the Netty-specific APIs. `io.grpc:grpc-netty-shaded` 343includes the proper version of Netty and `netty-tcnative-boringssl-static` in a 344way that won't conflict with other Netty usages. 345 346Find the dependency tree (e.g., `mvn dependency:tree`), and look for versions of: 347 - `io.grpc:grpc-netty` 348 - `io.netty:netty-handler` (really, make sure all of io.netty except for 349 netty-tcnative has the same version) 350 - `io.netty:netty-tcnative-boringssl-static:jar` 351 352If `netty-tcnative-boringssl-static` is missing, then you either need to add it as a dependency, or use alternative methods of providing ALPN capability by reading the *Transport Security (TLS)* section carefully. 353 354If you have both `netty-handler` and `netty-tcnative-boringssl-static` dependencies, then check the versions carefully. These versions could've been overridden by dependency management from another BOM. You would receive the "ALPN is not configured properly" exception if you are using incompatible versions. 355 356If you have other `netty` dependencies, such as `netty-all`, that are pulled in from other libraries, then ultimately you should make sure only one `netty` dependency is used to avoid classpath conflict. The easiest way is to exclude transitive Netty dependencies from all the immediate dependencies, e.g., in Maven use `<exclusions>`, and then add an explict Netty dependency in your project along with the corresponding `tcnative` versions. See the versions table below. 357 358If you are running in a runtime environment that also uses Netty (e.g., Hadoop, Spark, Spring Boot 2) and you have no control over the Netty version at all, then you should use a shaded gRPC Netty dependency to avoid classpath conflicts with other Netty versions in runtime the classpath: 359 - Remove `io.grpc:grpc-netty` dependency 360 - Add `io.grpc:grpc-netty-shaded` dependency 361 362Below are known to work version combinations: 363 364grpc-netty version | netty-handler version | netty-tcnative-boringssl-static version 365------------------ | --------------------- | --------------------------------------- 3661.0.0-1.0.1 | 4.1.3.Final | 1.1.33.Fork19 3671.0.2-1.0.3 | 4.1.6.Final | 1.1.33.Fork23 3681.1.x-1.3.x | 4.1.8.Final | 1.1.33.Fork26 3691.4.x | 4.1.11.Final | 2.0.1.Final 3701.5.x | 4.1.12.Final | 2.0.5.Final 3711.6.x | 4.1.14.Final | 2.0.5.Final 3721.7.x-1.8.x | 4.1.16.Final | 2.0.6.Final 3731.9.x-1.10.x | 4.1.17.Final | 2.0.7.Final 3741.11.x-1.12.x | 4.1.22.Final | 2.0.7.Final 3751.13.x | 4.1.25.Final | 2.0.8.Final 3761.14.x- | 4.1.27.Final | 2.0.12.Final 377 378_(grpc-netty-shaded avoids issues with keeping these versions in sync.)_ 379 380### OkHttp 381If you are using gRPC on Android devices, you are most likely using `grpc-okhttp` transport. 382 383Find the dependency tree (e.g., `mvn dependency:tree`), and look for versions of: 384 - `io.grpc:grpc-okhttp` 385 - `com.squareup.okhttp:okhttp` 386 387If you don't have `grpc-okhttp`, you should add it as a dependency. 388 389If you have both `io.grpc:grpc-netty` and `io.grpc:grpc-okhttp`, you may also have issues. Remove `grpc-netty` if you are on Android. 390 391If you have `okhttp` version below 2.5.0, then it may not work with gRPC. 392 393It is OK to have both `okhttp` 2.x and 3.x since they have different group name and under different packages. 394 395# gRPC over plaintext 396 397An option is provided to use gRPC over plaintext without TLS. While this is convenient for testing environments, users must be aware of the security risks of doing so for real production systems. 398 399# Using OAuth2 400 401The following code snippet shows how you can call the Google Cloud PubSub API using gRPC with a service account. The credentials are loaded from a key stored in a well-known location or by detecting that the application is running in an environment that can provide one automatically, e.g. Google Compute Engine. While this example is specific to Google and it's services, similar patterns can be followed for other service providers. 402 403```java 404// Create a channel to the test service. 405ManagedChannel channel = ManagedChannelBuilder.forTarget("pubsub.googleapis.com") 406 .build(); 407// Get the default credentials from the environment 408GoogleCredentials creds = GoogleCredentials.getApplicationDefault(); 409// Down-scope the credential to just the scopes required by the service 410creds = creds.createScoped(Arrays.asList("https://www.googleapis.com/auth/pubsub")); 411// Create an instance of {@link io.grpc.CallCredentials} 412CallCredentials callCreds = MoreCallCredentials.from(creds); 413// Create a stub with credential 414PublisherGrpc.PublisherBlockingStub publisherStub = 415 PublisherGrpc.newBlockingStub(channel).withCallCredentials(callCreds); 416publisherStub.publish(someMessage); 417``` 418