Encrypting Records in Database

In order to improve the security of sensitive records stored in the database (e.g. private keys and PUKs), we recommend taking following additional steps when configuring your database and database access.

Transparent Data Encryption

As a basic security measure, we suggest using data encryption support of your database engine to protect the records stored in the database. Most of the database engines support the mechanism of “transparent data encryption”, see for example:

Additional Record Encryption

To separate database administrators from the access to raw private records, you can additionally encrypt database records such as server private keys and recovery PUKs in the database using an application level record encryption.

Enabling Record Encryption

In order to enable the additional database record encryption, you need to set the following property to the application:

powerauth.server.db.master.encryption.key=[16 random bytes Base64 encoded, for example 'MTIzNDU2Nzg5MDEyMzQ1Ng==']

In case you lose the original master DB encryption key, there is no way to recover original data and your users will need to re-activate their mobile applications.

The value of the key must be 16 random bytes, Base64 encoded.

Using HashiCorp Vault

Instead of providing a hard-coded value of powerauth.server.db.master.encryption.key in your application properties, you can also use a HashiCorp Vault to store the database encryption key securely. For high security environment, this is the preferred way of storing the database encryption key.

Note on Private Key Encryption Cryptography

In case additional private key encryption is enabled, PowerAuth Server uses application level encryption/decryption routines whenever storing/loading a KEY_SERVER_PRIVATE value takes place. For this purpose, a new key MASTER_DB_ENCRYPTION_KEY is introduced. Also, since there is the good old rule “Same data should result in different encrypted values”, a random IV value for the encryption is generated and stored with the value for the purpose of a later decryption.

Pseudo-code for the encryption and decryption routines is following:

public byte[] encrypt(byte[] orig, SecretKey derivedDbEncryptionKey) {
    byte[] iv = Bytes.random(16);
    byte[] encrypted = aes.encrypt(orig, iv, derivedDbEncryptionKey);
    byte[] record = iv.append(encrypted)
    return record;
}

public byte[] decrypt(byte[] record, SecretKey derivedDbEncryptionKey) {
    byte[] iv = record.byteRange(0, 16); // offset, length
    byte[] encrypted = record.byteRange(16, -1); // offset, remaining
    byte[] orig = aes.decrypt(encrypted, iv, derivedDbEncryptionKey);
    return orig;
}

In order to achieve a consistency between activation record and encrypted server private key (to prevent a partial record swap attack, where admin replaces part of the record with own known values), we pay special attention to how we derive the encryption key from MASTER_DB_ENCRYPTION_KEY in the above mentioned routines. The encryption key DERIVED_DB_ENCRYPTION_KEY is derived from the master DB encryption key MASTER_DB_ENCRYPTION_KEY using a KDF_INTERNAL function, with a user ID and activation ID in concatenated String as a base for deriving the index, like so:

public SecretKey deriveSecretKey(SecretKey masterDbEncryptionKey, String userId, String activationId) {
    // Use concatenated user ID and activation ID bytes as index for KDF_INTERNAL
    byte[] index = (userId + "&" + activationId).getBytes();
    // Derive secretKey from master DB encryption key using KDF_INTERNAL with constructed index
    return KDF_INTERNAL.deriveSecretKeyHmac(masterDbEncryptionKey, index);
}

Note on Recovery PUK Encryption Cryptography

The Recovery PUKs are encrypted using the same encrypt and decrypt methods as described above, however the secret key derivation index parameters differ:

public SecretKey deriveSecretKey(SecretKey masterDbEncryptionKey, long applicationId, String userId, String recoveryCode, long pukIndex) {
    // Use concatenated application ID, user ID, recovery code and PUK index bytes as index for KDF_INTERNAL
    byte[] index = (applicationId + "&" + userId + "&" + recoveryCode + "&" + pukIndex).getBytes(StandardCharsets.UTF_8);
    // Derive secretKey from master DB encryption key using KDF_INTERNAL with constructed index
    return KDF_INTERNAL.deriveSecretKeyHmac(masterDbEncryptionKey, index);
}

Note that PUK values are hashed using the Argon2i hashing algorithm before optional encryption. Raw PUK values are never stored in PowerAuth database.

Note on Recovery Private Key Encryption Cryptography

The recovery postcard private keys are encrypted using the same encrypt and decrypt methods as described above, however the secret key derivation index parameters differ:

public SecretKey deriveSecretKey(SecretKey masterDbEncryptionKey, long applicationId) {
    // Use application ID bytes as index for KDF_INTERNAL
    byte[] index = String.valueOf(applicationId).getBytes(StandardCharsets.UTF_8);
    // Derive secretKey from master DB encryption key using KDF_INTERNAL with constructed index
    return KDF_INTERNAL.deriveSecretKeyHmac(masterDbEncryptionKey, index);
}

Note on the Backward Compatibility

Every database record carries an information about how it was created - with encryption or without encryption. In case you do not use encryption in the beginning, you can turn it on anytime later. However, the records that were created before you enabled the encryption will remain un-encrypted. You need to convert them manually in the database in case you need them encrypted.

More problematic situation is changing the master encryption key. The server currently has no easy way to re-encrypt the records with the new key and hence the conversion must be performed using a custom database migration.

Last updated on Feb 06, 2023 (07:28) Edit on Github Send Feedback
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PowerAuth Server