Teleport
Database CA Migrations
Version preview- Older Versions
In Teleport, self-hosted databases must be configured with certificates to enable mTLS authentication via the Teleport Database Service.
Teleport 10 introduced the db
certificate
authority (CA) to decouple CA rotation for self-hosted databases from the rest of
the Teleport cluster.
Teleport 15 introduced the db_client
CA
to split the responsibilities of the Teleport db
CA, which was acting as both
host and client CA for Teleport self-hosted database access.
The db_client
CA was also added as a patch in Teleport
13.4.17 and
14.3.7.
The db
and db_client
CAs were both introduced as an automatic migration
that occurs after upgrading Teleport.
Teleport's host/client database CA split is intended to limit the potential for lateral movement to other resources in the event that a database instance's private key is compromised.
This guide will provide information about why these CAs were added to Teleport and how to complete any pending migrations for your Teleport cluster.
Prerequisites
-
A running Teleport cluster version 16.4.7 or above. If you want to get started with Teleport, sign up for a free trial or set up a demo environment.
-
The
tctl
admin tool andtsh
client tool.Visit Installation for instructions on downloading
tctl
andtsh
.
- To check that you can connect to your Teleport cluster, sign in with
tsh login
, then verify that you can runtctl
commands using your current credentials. For example:If you can connect to the cluster and run thetsh login --proxy=teleport.example.com --user=email@example.comtctl statusCluster teleport.example.com
Version 16.4.7
CA pin sha256:abdc1245efgh5678abdc1245efgh5678abdc1245efgh5678abdc1245efgh5678
tctl status
command, you can use your current credentials to run subsequenttctl
commands from your workstation. If you host your own Teleport cluster, you can also runtctl
commands on the computer that hosts the Teleport Auth Service for full permissions. - A Teleport cluster that was upgraded from a version that predates either the
db
ordb_client
CA. If your Teleport cluster was created in Teleport 15 or later, then this guide does not apply to your cluster, because yourdb
anddb_client
CAs were not migrated.
Teleport db
CA migration
Your Teleport cluster's db
CA can be used to issue certificates to self-hosted
databases.
This is convenient, because the Teleport Database Service trusts certificates
issued by the db
CA by default, so there is no additional TLS configuration
in Teleport required.
Alternatively, you can issue certificates to your self-hosted databases using an external CA - you just need to configure the Teleport Database Service to trust that CA when connecting to your database(s).
For a static database defined in your Teleport Database Service teleport.yaml
configuration file, set tls.ca_cert_file
to a file containing your CA's root
certificate.
For a dynamic database, put your CA's root certificate in spec.tls.ca_cert
.
For examples and more information, consult the Database Access Configuration Reference.
Prior to Teleport 10, the Teleport host
CA was used
to issue certificates to self-hosted databases (via tctl auth sign
).
The db
CA was introduced to decouple self-hosted database CA rotation
from the rest of your Teleport cluster.
The idea is that you should be able to rotate the CA used for self-hosted
databases without affecting other resources connected to your cluster.
Likewise, when you rotate your cluster's host
CA, you should not have to worry
about affecting self-hosted databases.
To avoid breaking database access after upgrading to Teleport
10, Teleport clusters are automatically migrated to
create the db
CA as a copy of the host
CA.
If your cluster was upgraded to Teleport 10 and you
use Teleport to issue certificates to your self-hosted databases, then you
should ensure that you have completed the db
CA migration.
Otherwise, if you later rotate just one CA for any reason, a copy of the old CA
will still exist.
While this does not necessarily lead to a vulnerability in your cluster, it is
bad security practice to keep an old CA around after rotating it.
To complete the db
CA migration:
- we recommend rotating your
host
CA - we strongly recommend rotating your
db
CA
Teleport db_client
CA migration
The Teleport Database Service needs to authenticate itself to self-hosted
database(s) using a client certificate, which requires that you configure your
database(s) to trust Teleport's db_client
CA.
Prior to the introduction of the db_client
CA, self-hosted databases had to be
configured to trust the Teleport db
CA for client authentication.
With the old approach - trusting the db
CA for client connections - if a
database's private key is compromised, and a db
certificate was issued for
that key, then it could be used to gain access to other databases.
Not all self-hosted databases are vulnerable to lateral movement after a private
key compromise.
For example, MySQL and PostgreSQL both verify that a client's certificate
subject matches the client's database user.
Other databases only verify that a client's certificate is trusted, but do not
match the certificate subject to the database username.
For example, Cassandra, ScyllaDB, and Redis do not verify the client cert
subject.
All of these databases can be configured to require password authentication
after a successful mTLS handshake.
However, for defense in depth, these databases should only mTLS handshake with
a client that presents a db_client
CA-issued certificate.
If your Teleport cluster was upgraded to Teleport
>=13.4.17,
>=14.3.7, or
>=15,
then you should ensure that you have completed the db_client
migration.
To complete the db_client
CA migration:
- we recommend rotating your
db
CA - we strongly recommend rotating your
db_client
CA. - we strongly recommend reconfiguring your databases' certificates after
you complete the
db_client
CA rotation.
If you use tctl auth sign
to reconfigure a database's certificates during
a db_client
CA rotation, then the trusted certificate output will include
both the old and the new CA certificates.
To complete the migration, you should reconfigure those databases again after
the rotation - that way they will only trust the new CA.
If you don't want to reconfigure each database both during and after the
db_client
CA rotation, and you do not mind temporarily losing connectivity
to your databases via Teleport, then you can just complete the db_client
CA
rotation and reconfigure your databases afterward.
1/2. Check for Teleport CA migrations
If you upgraded an existing cluster to Teleport
>=10
and you have not rotated both your host
and db
CAs at least once since
upgrading, then you should complete the db
CA migration.
If you upgraded an existing cluster to Teleport
>=13.4.17,
>=14.3.7, or
>=15
and you have not rotated both your
db
and db_client
CAs at least once since upgrading, then you should complete
the db_client
CA migration.
If you are unsure whether you need to complete the migration for either the db
or db_client
CAs, you can check for duplicated CAs.
Use these commands to print the X.509 certificate serial number for your host
,
db
, and db_client
CAs (in that order):
tctl auth export --type=tls-host | openssl x509 -noout -serialtctl auth export --type=db | openssl x509 -noout -serialtctl auth export --type=db-client | openssl x509 -noout -serial
If the db
CA serial number matches the host
CA serial number, then you
need to complete the db
CA migration.
If the db_client
CA serial number matches the db
CA serial number, then you
need to complete the db_client
CA migration.
2/2. Rotate CAs
If you need to complete both the db
and db_client
migrations, then a single
rotation of each of the host
, db
, and db_client
CAs is enough: you do not
need to rotate the db
CA twice.
If you need to rotate the host
CA, we recommend completing that rotation
before starting either of the db
or db_client
CA rotations: do not rotate
other CAs in parallel with a host
CA rotation.
Database CA rotations are a little different, because they involve configuring
external resources (self-hosted databases) with new certificates during the
rotation.
You can (and should) rotate the db
and db_client
CAs at the same time to
avoid repeating the database certificate reconfiguration steps.
For information about CA rotation, refer to the CA Rotation Guide.
Further reading
- How the Teleport Certificate Authority works.
- How Teleport Agents work.