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README.md

NeoFS S3 Gateway

NeoFS S3 gateway provides API compatible with Amazon S3 cloud storage service.

Installation

go get -u github.com/nspcc-dev/neofs-s3-gw

Or you can call make to build it from the cloned repository (the binary will end up in bin/neofs-s3-gw with authmate helper in bin/neofs-authmate).

Notable make targets:

dep          Check and ensure dependencies
image        Build clean docker image
dirty-image  Build dirty docker image with host-built binaries
format       Run all code formatters
lint         Run linters
version      Show current version

Or you can also use a Docker image provided for released (and occasionally unreleased) versions of gateway (:latest points to the latest stable release).

Execution

Minimalistic S3 gateway setup needs:

  • NeoFS node(s) address (S3 gateway itself is not a NeoFS node) Passed via -p parameter or via S3_GW_PEERS_<N>_ADDRESS and S3_GW_PEERS_<N>_WEIGHT environment variables (gateway supports multiple NeoFS nodes with weighted load balancing).
  • a key used to communicate with NeoFS nodes Passed via --neofs-key parameter or S3_GW_NEOFS-KEY environment variable.

These two commands are functionally equivalent, they run the gate with one backend node, some keys and otherwise default settings:

$ neofs-s3-gw -p 192.168.130.72:8080 --neofs-key KxDgvEKzgSBPPfuVfw67oPQBSjidEiqTHURKSDL1R7yGaGYAeYnr

$ S3_GW_PEERS_0_ADDRESS=192.168.130.72:8080 \
  S3_GW_NEOFS-KEY=KxDgvEKzgSBPPfuVfw67oPQBSjidEiqTHURKSDL1R7yGaGYAeYnr \
  neofs-s3-gw

It's also possible to specify uri scheme (grpc or grpcs) when using -p or environment variables:

$ neofs-s3-gw -p grpc://192.168.130.72:8080 --neofs-key KxDgvEKzgSBPPfuVfw67oPQBSjidEiqTHURKSDL1R7yGaGYAeYnr

$ S3_GW_PEERS_0_ADDRESS=grpcs://192.168.130.72:8080 \
  S3_GW_NEOFS-KEY=KxDgvEKzgSBPPfuVfw67oPQBSjidEiqTHURKSDL1R7yGaGYAeYnr \
  neofs-s3-gw

Configuration

In general, everything available as CLI parameter can also be specified via environment variables, so they're not specifically mentioned in most cases (see --help also).

Nodes and weights

You can specify multiple -p options to add more NeoFS nodes, this will make gateway spread requests equally among them (using weight 1 for every node):

$ neofs-s3-gw -p 192.168.130.72:8080 -p 192.168.130.71:8080

If you want some specific load distribution proportions, use weights, but they can only be specified via environment variables:

$ HTTP_GW_PEERS_0_ADDRESS=192.168.130.72:8080 HTTP_GW_PEERS_0_WEIGHT=9 \
  HTTP_GW_PEERS_1_ADDRESS=192.168.130.71:8080 HTTP_GW_PEERS_1_WEIGHT=1 neofs-s3-gw

This command will make gateway use 192.168.130.72 for 90% of requests and 192.168.130.71 for remaining 10%.

Key

NeoFS (--neofs-key) is mandatory parameter. NeoFS key can be a path to private key file (as raw bytes), a hex string or (unencrypted) WIF string.

Binding and TLS

Gateway binds to 0.0.0.0:8080 by default and you can change that with --listen_address option.

It can also provide TLS interface for its users, just specify paths to key and certificate files via --tls.key_file and --tls.cert_file parameters. Note that using these options makes gateway TLS-only, if you need to serve both TLS and plain text you either have to run two gateway instances or use some external redirecting solution.

Example to bind to 192.168.130.130:443 and serve TLS there (keys and nodes omitted):

$ neofs-s3-gw --listen_address 192.168.130.130:443 \
  --tls.key_file=key.pem --tls.cert_file=cert.pem

Monitoring and metrics

Pprof and Prometheus are integrated into the gateway, but not enabled by default. To enable them use --pprof and --metrics flags or HTTP_GW_PPROF/HTTP_GW_METRICS environment variables.

S3 API supported

Reference:

Bucket/Object-Level Actions

# Method Name Status
1 AbortMultipartUpload Unsupported
2 CompleteMultipartUpload Unsupported
3 CopyObject Supported
4 CopyObjectPart Unsupported
5 DeleteBucket Unsupported
6 DeleteBucketEncryption Unsupported
7 DeleteBucketLifecycle Unsupported
8 DeleteBucketPolicy Unsupported
9 DeleteBucketTagging Unsupported
10 DeleteBucketWebsite Unsupported
11 DeleteMultipleObjects Supported
12 DeleteObject Supported
13 DeleteObjectTagging Unsupported
14 GetBucketACL Unsupported
15 GetBucketAccelerate Supported
16 GetBucketCors Unsupported
17 GetBucketEncryption Unsupported
18 GetBucketLifecycle Unsupported
19 GetBucketLocation Unsupported
20 GetBucketLogging Unsupported
21 GetBucketNotification Unsupported
22 GetBucketObjectLockConfig Unsupported
23 GetBucketPolicy Unsupported
24 GetBucketReplication Unsupported
25 GetBucketRequestPayment Unsupported
26 GetBucketTagging Unsupported
27 GetBucketVersioning Unsupported
28 GetBucketWebsite Unsupported
29 GetObject Supported
30 GetObjectACL Unsupported
31 GetObjectLegalHold Unsupported
32 GetObjectRetention Unsupported
33 HeadBucket Supported
34 HeadObject Supported
35 ListBucketObjectVersions Unsupported
36 ListBuckets Supported
37 ListMultipartUploads Unsupported
38 ListObjectParts Unsupported
39 ListObjectsV1 Supported
40 ListObjectsV2 Supported
41 ListenBucketNotification Unsupported
42 NewMultipartUpload Unsupported
43 PostPolicyBucket Unsupported
44 PutBucket Unsupported
45 PutBucketACL Unsupported
46 PutBucketEncryption Unsupported
47 PutBucketLifecycle Unsupported
48 PutBucketNotification Unsupported
49 PutBucketObjectLockConfig Unsupported
50 PutBucketPolicy Unsupported
51 PutBucketTagging Unsupported
52 PutBucketVersioning Unsupported
53 PutObject Supported
54 PutObjectACL Unsupported
55 PutObjectLegalHold Unsupported
56 PutObjectPart Unsupported
57 PutObjectRetention Unsupported
58 PutObjectTagging Unsupported
59 SelectObjectContent Unsupported

NeoFS AuthMate

Authmate is a tool to create gateway key pairs and AWS credentials. AWS users are authenticated with access key IDs and secrets, while NeoFS users are authenticated with key pairs. To complicate things further we have S3 gateway that usually acts on behalf of some user, but user doesn't necessarily want to give his keys to the gateway.

To solve this we use NeoFS bearer tokens that are signed by the owner (NeoFS "user") and that can implement any kind of policy for NeoFS requests allowed using this token. But tokens can't be used directly as AWS credentials, thus they're stored on NeoFS as regular objects and access key ID is just an address of this object while secret is an SHA256 hash of this key.

Tokens are not stored on NeoFS in plaintext, they're encrypted with a set of gateway keys. So in order for gateway to be able to successfully extract bearer token the object needs to be stored in a container available for the gateway to read and it needs to be encrypted with this gateway's key (among others potentially).

Generation of key pairs

To generate neofs key pairs for gateways, run the following command (--count is 1 by default):

$ ./neofs-authmate generate-keys --count=2

[
  {
    "private_key": "b8ba980eb70b959be99915d2e0ad377809984ccd1dac0a6551907f81c2b33d21",
    "public_key": "dd34f6dce9a4ce0990869ec6bd33a40e102a5798881cfe61d03a5659ceee1a64"
  },
  {
    "private_key": "407c351b17446ca07521faceb8b7d3e738319635f39f892419e2bf94462b4419",
    "public_key": "20453af9d7f245ff6fdfb1260eaa411ae3be9c519a2a9bf1c98233522cbd0156"
  }
]

Private key is the one to use for neofs-s3-gw command, public one can be used to create new AWS credentials.

Issuance of a secret

To issue a secret means to create a Bearer and (optionally) Session tokens and put them as an object into container on the NeoFS network. The tokens are encrypted by a set of gateway keys, so you need to pass them as well.

If a parameter container-id is not set, a new container will be created.

Creation of the bearer token is mandatory, and creation of the session token is optional. If you want to add the session token you need to add a parameter create-session-token.

Rules for bearer token can be set via param bearer-rules, if it is not set, it will be auto-generated with values:

{
    "version": {
        "major": 2,
        "minor": 6
    },
    "containerID": {
        "value": "%CID"
    },
    "records": [
        {
            "operation": "GET",
            "action": "ALLOW",
            "filters": [],
            "targets": [
                {
                    "role": "OTHERS",
                    "keys": []
                }
            ]
        }
    ]
}

Rules for session token can be set via param session-rules, default value is:

{
    "verb": "PUT",
    "wildcard": true,
    "containerID": null
}

If session-rules is set, but create-session-token is not, the session token will not be created.

Example of a command to issue a secret with custom rules for multiple gates:

$ ./neofs-authmate issue-secret --neofs-key user.key \
--peer 192.168.130.71:8080 \ 
--bearer-rules '{"records":[{"operation":"PUT","action":"ALLOW","filters":[],"targets":[{"role":"OTHERS","keys":[]}]}]}' \ 
--gate-public-key dd34f6dce9a4ce0990869ec6bd33a40e102a5798881cfe61d03a5659ceee1a64 \
--gate-public-key 20453af9d7f245ff6fdfb1260eaa411ae3be9c519a2a9bf1c98233522cbd0156 \
--create-session-token \
--session-rules '{"verb":"DELETE","wildcard":false,"containerID":{"value":"%CID"}}'

{
  "access_key_id": "5g933dyLEkXbbAspouhPPTiyLZRg4axBW1axSPD87eVT_AiXsH4AjYy1iTJ4C1WExzjBrSobJsQFWEyKLREe5sQYM",
  "secret_access_key": "438bbd8243060e1e1c9dd4821756914a6e872ce29bf203b68f81b140ac91231c",
  "owner_private_key": "274fdd6e71fc6a6b8fe77bec500254115d66d6d17347d7db0880d2eb80afc72a"
}

Access key ID and secret access key are AWS credentials that you can use with any S3 client.

Obtainment of a secret access key

You can get a secret access key associated with access key ID by obtaining a secret stored on the NeoFS network:

$ ./neofs-authmate obtain-secret --neofs-key user.key \
--peer 192.168.130.71:8080 \
--gate-private-key b8ba980eb70b959be99915d2e0ad377809984ccd1dac0a6551907f81c2b33d21 \
--access-key-id 5g933dyLEkXbbAspouhPPTiyLZRg4axBW1axSPD87eVT_AiXsH4AjYy1iTJ4C1WExzjBrSobJsQFWEyKLREe5sQYM

{
 "secret_access_key": "438bbd8243060e1e1c9dd4821756914a6e872ce29bf203b68f81b140ac91231c"
}