18.9. Secure TCP/IP Connections with SSL
PostgreSQL has native support for using SSL connections to encrypt client/server communications for increased security. This requires that OpenSSL is installed on both client and server systems and that support in PostgreSQL is enabled at build time (see Chapter 16 ).
18.9.1. Basic Setup
   With
   
    SSL
   
   support compiled in, the
   
    PostgreSQL
   
   server can be started with
   
    SSL
   
   enabled by setting the parameter
   
    ssl
   
   to
   
    on
   
   in
   
    postgresql.conf
   
   .  The server will listen for both normal
   and
   
    SSL
   
   connections on the same TCP port, and will negotiate
   with any connecting client on whether to use
   
    SSL
   
   .  By
   default, this is at the client's option; see
   
    Section 20.1
   
   about how to set up the server to require
   use of
   
    SSL
   
   for some or all connections.
  
   To start in
   
    SSL
   
   mode, files containing the server certificate
   and private key must exist.  By default, these files are expected to be
   named
   
    server.crt
   
   and
   
    server.key
   
   , respectively, in
   the server's data directory, but other names and locations can be specified
   using the configuration parameters
   
    ssl_cert_file
   
   and
   
    ssl_key_file
   
   .
  
   On Unix systems, the permissions on
   
    server.key
   
   must
   disallow any access to world or group; achieve this by the command
   
    chmod 0600 server.key
   
   .  Alternatively, the file can be
   owned by root and have group read access (that is,
   
    0640
   
   permissions).  That setup is intended for installations where certificate
   and key files are managed by the operating system.  The user under which
   the
   
    PostgreSQL
   
   server runs should then be made a
   member of the group that has access to those certificate and key files.
  
If the data directory allows group read access then certificate files may need to be located outside of the data directory in order to conform to the security requirements outlined above. Generally, group access is enabled to allow an unprivileged user to backup the database, and in that case the backup software will not be able to read the certificate files and will likely error.
If the private key is protected with a passphrase, the server will prompt for the passphrase and will not start until it has been entered. Using a passphrase by default disables the ability to change the server's SSL configuration without a server restart, but see ssl_passphrase_command_supports_reload . Furthermore, passphrase-protected private keys cannot be used at all on Windows.
   The first certificate in
   
    server.crt
   
   must be the
   server's certificate because it must match the server's private key.
   The certificates of
   
    "
    
     intermediate
    
    "
   
   certificate authorities
   can also be appended to the file.  Doing this avoids the necessity of
   storing intermediate certificates on clients, assuming the root and
   intermediate certificates were created with
   
    v3_ca
   
   extensions.  (This sets the certificate's basic constraint of
   
    CA
   
   to
   
    true
   
   .)
   This allows easier expiration of intermediate certificates.
  
   It is not necessary to add the root certificate to
   
    server.crt
   
   .  Instead, clients must have the root
   certificate of the server's certificate chain.
  
18.9.2. OpenSSL Configuration
   
    PostgreSQL
   
   reads the system-wide
   
    OpenSSL
   
   configuration file. By default, this
   file is named
   
    openssl.cnf
   
   and is located in the
   directory reported by
   
    openssl version -d
   
   .
   This default can be overridden by setting environment variable
   
    OPENSSL_CONF
   
   to the name of the desired configuration file.
  
   
    OpenSSL
   
   supports a wide range of ciphers
   and authentication algorithms, of varying strength.  While a list of
   ciphers can be specified in the
   
    OpenSSL
   
   configuration file, you can specify ciphers specifically for use by
   the database server by modifying
   
    ssl_ciphers
   
   in
   
    postgresql.conf
   
   .
  
Note
    It is possible to have authentication without encryption overhead by
    using
    
     NULL-SHA
    
    or
    
     NULL-MD5
    
    ciphers.  However,
    a man-in-the-middle could read and pass communications between client
    and server.  Also, encryption overhead is minimal compared to the
    overhead of authentication.  For these reasons NULL ciphers are not
    recommended.
   
18.9.3. Using Client Certificates
   To require the client to supply a trusted certificate,
   place certificates of the root certificate authorities
   (
   
    CA
   
   s) you trust in a file in the data
   directory, set the parameter
   
    ssl_ca_file
   
   in
   
    postgresql.conf
   
   to the new file name, and add the
   authentication option
   
    clientcert=verify-ca
   
   or
   
    clientcert=verify-full
   
   to the appropriate
   
    hostssl
   
   line(s) in
   
    pg_hba.conf
   
   .
   A certificate will then be requested from the client during SSL
   connection startup.  (See
   
    Section 33.18
   
   for a description
   of how to set up certificates on the client.)
  
   For a
   
    hostssl
   
   entry with
   
    clientcert=verify-ca
   
   , the server will verify
   that the client's certificate is signed by one of the trusted
   certificate authorities. If
   
    clientcert=verify-full
   
   is specified, the server will not only verify the certificate
   chain, but it will also check whether the username or its mapping
   matches the
   
    cn
   
   (Common Name) of the provided certificate.
   Note that certificate chain validation is always ensured when the
   
    cert
   
   authentication method is used
   (see
   
    Section 20.12
   
   ).
  
   Intermediate certificates that chain up to existing root certificates
   can also appear in the
   
    ssl_ca_file
   
   file if
   you wish to avoid storing them on clients (assuming the root and
   intermediate certificates were created with
   
    v3_ca
   
   extensions).  Certificate Revocation List (CRL) entries are also
   checked if the parameter
   
    ssl_crl_file
   
   is set.
  
   The
   
    clientcert
   
   authentication option is available for
   all authentication methods, but only in
   
    pg_hba.conf
   
   lines
   specified as
   
    hostssl
   
   .  When
   
    clientcert
   
   is
   not specified or is set to
   
    no-verify
   
   , the server will still
   verify any presented client certificates against its CA file, if one is
   configured - but it will not insist that a client certificate be presented.
  
There are two approaches to enforce that users provide a certificate during login.
   The first approach makes use of the
   
    cert
   
   authentication
   method for
   
    hostssl
   
   entries in
   
    pg_hba.conf
   
   ,
   such that the certificate itself is used for authentication while also
   providing ssl connection security. See
   
    Section 20.12
   
   for details.
   (It is not necessary to specify any
   
    clientcert
   
   options
   explicitly when using the
   
    cert
   
   authentication method.)
   In this case, the
   
    cn
   
   (Common Name) provided in
   the certificate is checked against the user name or an applicable mapping.
  
   The second approach combines any authentication method for
   
    hostssl
   
   entries with the verification of client certificates by setting the
   
    clientcert
   
   authentication option to
   
    verify-ca
   
   or
   
    verify-full
   
   . The former option only enforces that
   the certificate is valid, while the latter also ensures that the
   
    cn
   
   (Common Name) in the certificate matches
   the user name or an applicable mapping.
  
18.9.4. SSL Server File Usage
Table 18.2 summarizes the files that are relevant to the SSL setup on the server. (The shown file names are default names. The locally configured names could be different.)
Table 18.2. SSL Server File Usage
| File | Contents | Effect | 
|---|---|---|
| ssl_cert_file
        
        ( 
         $PGDATA/server.crt
        ) | server certificate | sent to client to indicate server's identity | 
| ssl_key_file
        
        ( 
         $PGDATA/server.key
        ) | server private key | proves server certificate was sent by the owner; does not indicate certificate owner is trustworthy | 
| ssl_ca_file | trusted certificate authorities | checks that client certificate is signed by a trusted certificate authority | 
| ssl_crl_file | certificates revoked by certificate authorities | client certificate must not be on this list | 
The server reads these files at server start and whenever the server configuration is reloaded. On Windows systems, they are also re-read whenever a new backend process is spawned for a new client connection.
If an error in these files is detected at server start, the server will refuse to start. But if an error is detected during a configuration reload, the files are ignored and the old SSL configuration continues to be used. On Windows systems, if an error in these files is detected at backend start, that backend will be unable to establish an SSL connection. In all these cases, the error condition is reported in the server log.
18.9.5. Creating Certificates
   To create a simple self-signed certificate for the server, valid for 365
     days, use the following
   
    OpenSSL
   
   command,
     replacing
   
    
     dbhost.yourdomain.com
    
   
   with the
     server's host name:
  
openssl req -new -x509 -days 365 -nodes -text -out server.crt \
  -keyout server.key -subj "/CN=dbhost.yourdomain.com"
  Then do:
chmod og-rwx server.key
because the server will reject the file if its permissions are more liberal than this. For more details on how to create your server private key and certificate, refer to the OpenSSL documentation.
While a self-signed certificate can be used for testing, a certificate signed by a certificate authority ( CA ) (usually an enterprise-wide root CA ) should be used in production.
To create a server certificate whose identity can be validated by clients, first create a certificate signing request ( CSR ) and a public/private key file:
openssl req -new -nodes -text -out root.csr \
  -keyout root.key -subj "/CN=root.yourdomain.com"
chmod og-rwx root.key
  Then, sign the request with the key to create a root certificate authority (using the default OpenSSL configuration file location on Linux ):
openssl x509 -req -in root.csr -text -days 3650 \ -extfile /etc/ssl/openssl.cnf -extensions v3_ca \ -signkey root.key -out root.crt
Finally, create a server certificate signed by the new root certificate authority:
openssl req -new -nodes -text -out server.csr \
  -keyout server.key -subj "/CN=dbhost.yourdomain.com"
chmod og-rwx server.key
openssl x509 -req -in server.csr -text -days 365 \
  -CA root.crt -CAkey root.key -CAcreateserial \
  -out server.crt
  
   
    server.crt
   
   and
   
    server.key
   
   should be stored on the server, and
   
    root.crt
   
   should
    be stored on the client so the client can verify that the server's leaf
    certificate was signed by its trusted root certificate.
   
    root.key
   
   should be stored offline for use in
    creating future certificates.
  
It is also possible to create a chain of trust that includes intermediate certificates:
# root openssl req -new -nodes -text -out root.csr \ -keyout root.key -subj "/CN=root.yourdomain.com" chmod og-rwx root.key openssl x509 -req -in root.csr -text -days 3650 \ -extfile /etc/ssl/openssl.cnf -extensions v3_ca \ -signkey root.key -out root.crt # intermediate openssl req -new -nodes -text -out intermediate.csr \ -keyout intermediate.key -subj "/CN=intermediate.yourdomain.com" chmod og-rwx intermediate.key openssl x509 -req -in intermediate.csr -text -days 1825 \ -extfile /etc/ssl/openssl.cnf -extensions v3_ca \ -CA root.crt -CAkey root.key -CAcreateserial \ -out intermediate.crt # leaf openssl req -new -nodes -text -out server.csr \ -keyout server.key -subj "/CN=dbhost.yourdomain.com" chmod og-rwx server.key openssl x509 -req -in server.csr -text -days 365 \ -CA intermediate.crt -CAkey intermediate.key -CAcreateserial \ -out server.crt
   
    server.crt
   
   and
   
    intermediate.crt
   
   should be concatenated
    into a certificate file bundle and stored on the server.
   
    server.key
   
   should also be stored on the server.
   
    root.crt
   
   should be stored on the client so
    the client can verify that the server's leaf certificate was signed
    by a chain of certificates linked to its trusted root certificate.
   
    root.key
   
   and
   
    intermediate.key
   
   should be stored offline for use in creating future certificates.