Configuring the Client
There are a number of connection parameters for configuring the client for SSL. See SSL Connection parameters
The simplest being
ssl=true
, passing this into the driver will cause the driver to validate both
the SSL certificate and verify the hostname (same as
verify-full
).
Note
this is different than
libpq which defaults to a non-validating SSL connection.
In this mode, when establishing a SSL connection the JDBC driver will validate the server’s identity preventing "man in the middle" attacks. It does this by checking that the server certificate is signed by a trusted authority, and that the host you are connecting to is the same as the hostname in the certificate.
If you
require
encryption and want the connection to fail if it can’t be encrypted then set
sslmode=require
this ensures that the server is configured to accept SSL connections for this
Host/IP address and that the server recognizes the client certificate. In other words if the server
does not accept SSL connections or the client certificate is not recognized the connection will fail.
Note
in this mode we will accept all server certificates.
If
sslmode=verify-ca
, the server is verified by checking the certificate chain up to the root
certificate stored on the client.
If
sslmode=verify-full
, the server host name will be verified to make sure it matches the name
stored in the server certificate.
The SSL connection will fail if the server certificate cannot be verified.
verify-full
is recommended
in most security-sensitive environments.
The default SSL Socket factory is the LibPQFactory
In the case where the certificate validation is failing you can try
sslcert=
and LibPQFactory will
not send the client certificate. If the server is not configured to authenticate using the certificate
it should connect.
The location of the client certificate, the PKCS-8 client key and root certificate can be overridden with the
sslcert
,
sslkey
, and
sslrootcert
settings respectively. These default to /defaultdir/postgresql.crt,
/defaultdir/postgresql.pk8, and /defaultdir/root.crt respectively where defaultdir is
${user.home}/.postgresql/ in *nix systems and %appdata%/postgresql/ on windows
As of version 42.2.9 PKCS-12 is also supported. In this archive format the client key and the client
certificate are in one file, which needs to be set with the
sslkey
parameter. For the PKCS-12 format
to be recognized, the file extension must be ".p12" (supported since 42.2.9) or ".pfx" (since 42.2.16).
(In this case the
sslcert
parameter is ignored.)
Finer control of the SSL connection can be achieved using the
sslmode
connection parameter.
This parameter is the same as the libpq
sslmode
parameter and currently implements the
following
sslmode | Eavesdropping Protection | MITM Protection | |
---|---|---|---|
disable | No | No | I don't care about security and don't want to pay the overhead for encryption |
allow | Maybe | No | I don't care about security but will pay the overhead for encryption if the server insists on it |
prefer | Maybe | No | I don't care about encryption but will pay the overhead of encryption if the server supports it |
require | Yes | No | I want my data to be encrypted, and I accept the overhead. I trust that the network will make sure I always connect to the server I want. |
verify-ca | Yes | Depends on CA policy | I want my data encrypted, and I accept the overhead. I want to be sure that I connect to a server that I trust. |
verify-full | Yes | Yes | I want my data encrypted, and I accept the overhead. I want to be sure that I connect to a server I trust, and that it's the one I specify. |
Note
If you are using Java’s default mechanism (not LibPQFactory) to create the SSL connection you will need to make the server certificate available to Java, the first step is to convert it to a form Java understands.
openssl x509 -in server.crt -out server.crt.der -outform der
From here the easiest thing to do is import this certificate into Java’s system truststore.
keytool -keystore $JAVA_HOME/lib/security/cacerts -alias postgresql -import -file server.crt.der
The default password for the cacerts keystore is
changeit
. Setting the alias to postgresql
is not required. You may apply any name you wish.
If you do not have access to the system cacerts truststore you can create your own truststore.
keytool -keystore mystore -alias postgresql -import -file server.crt.der
When starting your Java application you must specify this keystore and password to use.
java -Djavax.net.ssl.trustStore=mystore -Djavax.net.ssl.trustStorePassword=mypassword com.mycompany.MyApp
In the event of problems extra debugging information is available by adding
-Djavax.net.debug=ssl
to your command line.
Using SSL without Certificate Validation
In some situations it may not be possible to configure your Java environment to make the server certificate available, for example in an applet. For a large scale deployment it would be best to get a certificate signed by recognized certificate authority, but that is not always an option. The JDBC driver provides an option to establish a SSL connection without doing any validation, but please understand the risk involved before enabling this option.
A non-validating connection is established via a custom
SSLSocketFactory
class that is provided
with the driver. Setting the connection URL parameter
sslfactory=org.postgresql.ssl.NonValidatingFactory
will turn off all SSL validation.