Bill Buchanan - A Bluffer’s Guide To Encryption In The Cloud: Top 100

ASecuritySite Podcast - A podcast by Professor Bill Buchanan OBE

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In cybersecurity, the teaching of Cloud security is often weak. So, here are my Top 100 things about encryption in the Cloud. I’ve focused on AWS, but Azure is likely to also be applicable. Keys are created in the AWS KMS (Key Management Store). In Azure, this is named KeyVault. The cost of using a key in KMS is around $1/month (prorated hourly). When a key is disabled, it is not charged. With AWS KMS, we use a shared customer HSM (Hardware Security Module), and with AWS CloudHSM it is dedidated to one customer. For data at rest, with file storage, we can integrate encryption with Amazon EBS (Elastic Block Storage) and Amazon S3. Amazon EBS drives are encrypted with AES-256 with XTS mode. For AWS-managed keys, a unique key is used for every object within S3 buckets. Amazon S3 uses server-side encryption to store encrypted data. The customer can use client-side encryption to encrypt data before it is stored in the AWS infrastructure. AWS uses 256-bit Advanced Encryption Standard Galois/Counter Mode (AES-GCM) for its symmetric key encryption. In AWS S3, by default, all the objects are encrypted. A customer can use client-side encryption to encrypt data before it goes into the AWS infrastructure. For data at rest, for databases, we can integrate encryption with Amazon RDS (AWS’s relational database service) and Amazon Redshift (AWS’s data warehousing). For data at rest, we can integrate encryption into ElastiCache (AWS’s content caching service), AWS Lambda (AWS’s serverless computing service), and Amazon SageMake (AWS’s machine learning service). Keys are tokenized and have an ARN (Amazon Resource Names) and alias. An example ARN for a key is arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:103269750866:key/de30e8e6-c753–4a2c-881a-53c761242644, and an example alias is “Bill’s Key”. Both of these should be unique in the user’s account. To define a KMS key, we can either use its key ID, its key ARN, its alias name, or alias ARN. You can link keys to other AWS Accounts. For this, we specify in the form of “arn:aws:iam::[AWS ID]:root”, and where AWS ID is the ID of the other AWS account. To enhance security, we can use AWS CloudHSM (Hardware Security Module). For simpler and less costly solutions, we typically use AWS KMS (Key Management Solution). For CloudHSM, we pay per hour, but for KMS, we just pay for the usage of the keys. The application of the keys is restricted to defined services. Key identifiers and policies are defined with a JSON key-value pair for data objects. Each key should have a unique GUID, such as “de30e8e6-c753–4a2c-881a-53c761242644”. Users are identified and roles are identified with an ARN, such as : “arn:aws:iam::222222:root”. With the usage of keys we have Key Administrative Permission and a Key Usage policies. There is an explicit denial on a policy if there is not a specific allow defined in a policy. For key permissions, we have fields of “Sid” (the descriptive name of the policy), “Effect” (typically “Allow”), Principal (the ARN of the user/group), “Action” (such as Create, Disable and Delete) and “Resource”. A wildcard (“*”) allows or disallows all. To enable a user of “root” access to everything with a key would be : “Sid”: “Enable IAM User Permissions”, “Effect”: “Allow”,“Principal”: {“AWS”: “arn:aws:iam::22222222:root”},“Action”: “kms:*”, “Resource”: “*”}. The main operations within the KMS are to encrypt/decrpyt data, sign/verify signatures, export data keys, and generate/verify MACs (Message Authentication Codes). Key are either AWS managed (such as for the Lambda service), Customer managed keys (these are created and managed by the customer). Custom key stores are where the customer has complete control over the keys). The main use of keys are for EC2 (Compute), EBS (Elastic Block Storage) and S3 (Storage). AES symmetric keys or an RSA key pair are used to encrypt and decrypt. RSA uses 2K, 3K or 4K keys, and with either “RSA PCKS1 v1.5” or “RSA PSS” padding. RSA PCKS1 v1.5 padding is susceptible to Bleichenbacher’s attack, so it should only be used for legacy applications, and for all others, we should use RSA PSS. For RSA, we can use a hashing method of SHA-256, SHA-384 or SHA-512. In RSA, we encrypt with the public key and decrypt with the private key. For signatures, we can use either RSA or ECC signing. For RSA, we have 2K, 3K, or 4K keys, whereas ECC signing uses NIST P256, NIST P384, NIST P521, and SECG P256k1 (as used in Bitcoin and Ethereum). For MACs (Message Authentication Codes), Bob and Alice have the same shared secret key and can authenticate the hash version of a message. In the KMS, we can have HMAC-224, HMAC-256, HMAC-384 and HMAC-512. KMS uses hardware security modules (HSMs) with FIPS 140–2 and which cannot be accessed by AWS employees (or any other customer). Keys will never appear in an AWS disk or backup, and only existing the memory of the HSM. They are only loaded when used. Encryption keys can be restricted to one region of the world (unless defined by the user). With symmetric keys, the key never appears outside the HSM, and for asymmetric keys (public key encryption), the private key stays inside the HSM, and only the public key is exported outside. AWS CloudWatch shows how and when the encryption keys are being used. The minimum time that can be set for a key to be deleted is seven days (and up to 30 days maximum). An organisation can also create its own HSM with the CloudHSM cluster. When a key is then created in KMS, it is then stored in the cluster. The usage of encryption keys should be limited to a minimal set of service requirements. If possible, separate key managers and key users. With a key management (KEY_ADMINISTRATOR) role, we typically have the rights to create, revoke, put, get, list and disable keys. The key management role will typically not be able to encrypt and decrypt. For a key user (KEY_WORKER) role, we cannot create or delete keys and typically focus on tasks such as encrypting and decrypting. Hae a rule of minimum access rights, and simplify user access by defining key administration and usage roles. Users are then added to these roles. Avoid manual updates to keys and use key rotation. The system keeps track of keys that are rotated and can use previously defined ones. The default time to rotate keys is once every year. Key rotation shows up in the CloudWatch and CloudTrail logs. KMS complies with PCI DSS Level 1, FIPS 140–2, FedRAMP, and HIPAA. AWS KMS is matched to FIPS 140–2 Level 2. AWS CloudHSM complies with FIPS 140–2 Level 3 validated HSMs. AWS CloudHSM costs around $1.45 per hour to run, and the costs end when it is disabled or deleted. The CloudHSM is backed-up every 24 hours, and where we can cluster the HSMs into a single logical HSM. CloudHSM can be replicated in AWS regions. AWS KSM is limited to the popular encryption methods, whereas the CloudHSM can implement a wider range of methods. The CloudHSM can support methods such as 3DES with AWS Payment Cryptography. This complies with payment card industry (PCI) standards, such as PCI PIN, PCI P2PE, and PCI DSS. In the CloudHSM for payments, we can generate CVV, CVV2 and ARQC values, and where sensitive details never exist outside the HSM in an unprotected form. With the CloudHSM, we have a command line interface where we can issue commands, and is named CloudHSM CLI. Within the CloudHSM CLI, we can use the genSymKey command to generate symmetric key within the HSM, such as where -t is a key type (31 is AES), -s is a key size (32 bytes) and -l is the label: genSymKey -t 31 -s 32 -l aes256 With genSymKey the key types are: 16 (Generic Secret), 18 (RC4), 21 (Triple DES), and 31 (AES). Within the CloudHSM CLI, we can use the genRSAKeyPair command to generate an RSA key pair, such as where -m is the modulus and -e is the public exponent: genRSAKeyPair -m 2048 -e 65537 -l mykey AWS CloudHSM is integrated with AWS CloudTrail, and where we can track user, role, or an AWS service within AWS CloudHSM. With AWS Payments Cryptography, the 2KEY TDES is Two-key Triple DES and has a 112-bit equivalent key size. The Pin Encryption Key (PEK) is used to encryption PIN values and uses a KEY TDES key. This can store PINs in a secure way, and then decrypt them when required. S3 buckets can be encrypted either with Amazon S3-managed keys (SSE-S3) or AWS Key Management Service (AWS KMS) keys. There is no cost to use SSE keys. For symmetric key encryption, AWS uses envelope encryption, and where a random key is used to encrypt data, and then the key is encrypted with the user’s key. AWS should not be able to access the key used for the encryption. The default in creating an encryption key is for it only be to used in a single region, but this can be changed to multi-region, and where the key will be replicated across more than one region. In AWS, a region is a geographical area, and which is split into isolated locations. US-East-1 (N.Virginia) and US-East-2 (Ohio) are different regions, while us-east-1a, us-east-1b and us-east-1c are in the same region. A single region key the US-East-1 region would replicate across eu-east-1a, eu-east-1b and eu-east-1c, and not to eu-east-2a, eu-east-2b and eu-east-2c. When creating a key, you can either create in the KMS, import a key (BYOK — bring your own key), create in the AWS CloudHSM, or create in an external key store (HYOK — hold you own key). For keys stored on-premise we can use an external key store (XKS) — this can be defined as Hold Your Own Keys (HYOKs), and where and where no entity in AWS will able to read any of the encrypted data. [here]. You can BYOK (bring your own key) with KMS, and import keys. KMS will keep a copy of this key. With XKS, we need a proxy URI endpoint, with the proxy credentials of an access key ID, and secret access key. To export keys from AWS CloudHSM, we can encrypt them with an AES key. This is known as key wrapping, as defined in RFC 5648 (for padding with zeros) or RFC 3394 (without padding). A strong password should always be used for key wrapping. AWS encryption operations can either be conducted from the command line or within API, such as with Python, Node.js or Golang. With KMS, the maximum data size is 4,096 bytes for a symmetric key, 190 bytes for RSA 2048 OAEP SHA-256, 318 bytes for RSA 3072 OAEP SHA-256, ad 446 bytes for RSA 4096 OAEP SHA-256. An example command to encrypt a file for 1.txt with symmetric key encryption is: aws kms encryp --key-id alias/MySymKey --plaintext fileb://1.txt --query CiphertextBlob --output text > 1.out To decrypt a file with symmetric key encryption, an example with 1.enc is: aws kms decrypt --key-id alias/BillsNewKey --output text --query Plaintext --ciphertext-blob fileb://1.enc > 2.out In Python, to integrate with KMS, we use the Boto3 library. The standard output of encrypted content is in byte format. If we need to have a text version of ciphertext, we typically use Base64 format. The base64 command can be used to convert byte format in Base64, such as with: $ base64 -i 1.out — decode > 1.enc The xxd command in the command line allows the cipher text to be dumped to a hex output and can then be edited. We can then convert it back to a binary output with: An example piece of Python code for encrypting a plaintext message with the symmetric key in Python is: ciphertext = kms_client.encrypt(KeyId=alias,Plaintext=bytes(secret, encoding=’utf8') An example piece of Python code to decrypt some cipher text (in Base64 format) is: plain_text = kms_client.decrypt(KeyId=alias,CiphertextBlob=bytes(base64.b64decode(ciphertext))) To generate an HMAC signature for a message in the command line, we have the form of: aws kms generate-mac --key-id alias/MyHMACKey --message fileb://1.txt --mac-algorithm HMAC_SHA_256 --query Mac > 4.out To verify an HMAC signature for a message in the command line, we have the form of: aws kms verify-mac -key-id alias/MyHMACKey -message fileb://1.txt \ -mac-algorithm HMAC_SHA_256 -mac fileb://4.mac To create an ECDSA signature in the command line, we have the form of: aws kms sign -key-id alias/MyPublicKeyForSigning -message fileb://1.txt -signing-algorithm ECDSA_SHA_256 -query Signature > 1.out To verify an ECDSA signature in the command line, we have the form of: aws kms verify -key-id alias/MyPublicKeyForSigning -message fileb://1.txt -signature fileb://1.sig -signing-algorithm ECDSA_SHA_256 To encrypt data using RSA in the command line, we have the form of: aws kms encrypt -key-id alias/PublicKeyForDemo -plaintext fileb://1.txt -query CiphertextBlob -output text -encryption-algorithm RSAES_OAEP_SHA_1 > 1.out To decrypt data using RSA in the command line, we have the form of: aws kms decryptb -key-id alias/PublicKeyForDemo -output text -query Plaintext -ciphertext-blob fileb://1.enc -encryption-algorithm RSAES_OAEP_SHA_1 > 2.out To sign data using RSA in the command line, we have the form of: aws kms sign --key-id alias/MyRSAKey --message fileb://1.txt --signing-algorithm RSASSA_PSS_SHA_256 --query Signature --output text > 1.out To verify data using RSA in the command line, we have the form of: aws kms verify --key-id alias/MyRSAKey --message fileb://1.txt — signature fileb://1.sig --signing-algorithm RSASSA_PSS_SHA_256 You cannot encrypt data with Elliptic Curve keys. Only RSA and AES can do that. Elliptic Curve keys are used to sign data. If you delete an encryption key, you will not be able to decrypt any ciphertext that uses it. We can store our secrets, such as application passwords, in the secrets manager. An example of a secret name of “my-secret-passphrase” and a secret string of “Qwery123” we can have: aws secretsmanager create-secret --name my-secret-passphrase --secret-string Qwerty123 In China regions, along with RSA and ECDSA, you can use SM2 KMS signing keys. In China Regions, we can use SM2PKE to encrypt data with asymmetric key encryption. Find out more here: https://asecuritysite.com/aws

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