Cloudera Enterprise 5.15.x | Other versions

Configuring a Dedicated MIT KDC for Cross-Realm Trust

Using Cloudera Manager to configure Kerberos authentication for the cluster creates several principals and keytabs automatically. Cloudera Manager also deploys the keytab files to every host in the cluster. See Hadoop Users (user:group) and Kerberos Principals for complete listing.

  Note: The example below is specific for creating and deploying principals and keytab files for MIT Kerberos. See the appropriate documentation for other Kerberos implementations, such as Microsoft Active Diretory, as needed.

Local and Remote Kerberos Admin Tools

Kerberos administrator commands can be run directly on the KDC server host or remotely, as shown in the table:

kadmin.local Requires root access or Kerberos admin account. Use to log on directly to the KDC host.
kadmin Use the logon to the KDC host system from another remote host over the network.
  • To run Kerberos administration commands locally on the KRB host system:
    $ sudo kadmin.local
    Enter your Linux system password (for the sudo).
  • To run Kerberos administration commands from any host:
    $ kadmin
    Enter your Kerberos administrator password.
  Note: Commands shown for the kadmin shell can also be run at the kadmin.local shell.

Setting up a Cluster-Dedicated KDC and Default Realm for the Hadoop Cluster

Cloudera has tested the following configuration approaches to Kerberos security for clusters managed by Cloudera Manager. For administration teams that are just getting started with Kerberos security, we recommend starting with these approaches to the configuration of KDC services for a number of reasons.

The number of Service Principal Names (SPNs) that are created and managed by the Cloudera Manager server for a CDH cluster can be significant, so it is important to realize the potential impact on cluster uptime and overall operations if you choose to manage keytabs manually instead. The Cloudera Manager server manages the creation of service keytabs on the proper hosts based on the current configuration of the database. Manual keytab management can be error prone and introduce delays when deploying or moving services within the cluster, especially under time-sensitive conditions.

Cloudera Manager creates SPNs within a KDC that it can access with the kadmin command based on configuration of the /etc/krb5.conf file on the Cloudera Manager host. SPNs are created with the format service-name/host.fqdn.name@EXAMPLE.COM where service-name is the relevant CDH service name such as hue or hbase or hdfs.

If your site already has a working KDC, and any existing principals share the same name as any of the principals that Cloudera Manager creates, the Cloudera Manager Server generates a new randomized key for those principals, and consequently causes existing keytabs to become invalid.

This is why Cloudera recommends using a dedicated local MIT Kerberos KDC and realm for the Hadoop cluster. You can set up a one-way cross-realm trust from the cluster-dedicated KDC and realm to your existing central MIT Kerberos KDC, or to an existing Active Directory realm. Using this method, there is no need to create Hadoop service principals in the central MIT Kerberos KDC or in Active Directory, but principals (users) in the central MIT KDC or in Active Directory can be authenticated to Hadoop. The steps to implement this approach are as follows:

  1. Install and configure a cluster-dedicated MIT Kerberos KDC that will be managed by Cloudera Manager for creating and storing principals for the services supported by the cluster.
      Note: The krb5-server package includes a logrotate policy file to rotate log files monthly. To take advantage of this, install the logrotate package. No additional configuration is necessary.
  2. See the example kdc.conf and krb5.conf files in Sample Kerberos Configuration Files for configuration considerations for the KDC and Kerberos clients.
  3. Configure a default Kerberos realm for the cluster you want Cloudera Manager to manage and set up one-way cross-realm trust between the cluster-dedicated KDC and either your central KDC or Active Directory, using the appropriate steps:
Cloudera strongly recommends the method above because:
  • It requires minimal configuration in Active Directory.
  • It is comparatively easy to script the creation of many principals and keytabs. A principal and keytab must be created for every daemon in the cluster, and in a large cluster this can be extremely onerous to do directly in Active Directory.
  • There is no need to involve central Active Directory administrators to get service principals created.
  • It allows for incremental configuration. The Hadoop administrator can completely configure and verify the functionality the cluster independently of integrating with Active Directory.

Using a Cluster-Dedicated KDC with a Central MIT KDC

  Important: If you plan to use Oozie or the Hue Kerberos Ticket Renewer in your cluster, you must configure your KDC to allow tickets to be renewed, and you must configure krb5.conf to request renewable tickets. Typically, you can do this by adding the max_renewable_life setting to your realm in kdc.conf, and by adding the renew_lifetime parameter to the libdefaults section of krb5.conf. about renewable tickets, see the Kerberos documentation. See the Sample Kerberos Configuration Files for an example of configuration for ticket renewal.
  1. In the /var/kerberos/krb5kdc/kdc.conf file on the local dedicated KDC server host, configure the default realm for the Hadoop cluster by substituting your Kerberos realm in the following realms property:
    [realms]
     HADOOP.EXAMPLE.COM = {
  2. In the /etc/krb5.conf file on all cluster hosts and all Hadoop client user hosts, configure the default realm for the Hadoop cluster by substituting your Kerberos realm in the following realms property. Also specify the local dedicated KDC server hostname in the /etc/krb5.conf file (for example, kdc01.example.com).
    [libdefaults]
      default_realm = HADOOP.EXAMPLE.COM
    [realms]
      HADOOP.EXAMPLE.COM = {
        kdc = kdc01.hadoop.example.com:88
        admin_server = kdc01.hadoop.example.com:749
        default_domain = hadoop.example.com
      }
      EXAMPLE.COM = {
        kdc = kdc01.example.com:88
        admin_server = kdc01.example.com:749
        default_domain = example.com
      }
    [domain_realm]
      .hadoop.example.com = HADOOP.EXAMPLE.COM
      hadoop.example.com = HADOOP.EXAMPLE.COM
      .example.com = EXAMPLE.COM
      example.com = EXAMPLE.COM
  3. To set up the cross-realm trust in the cluster-dedicated KDC, type the following command in the kadmin.local or kadmin shell on the cluster-dedicated KDC host to create a krbtgt principal. Substitute your cluster-dedicated KDC realm for HADOOP.EXAMPLE.COM, and substitute your central KDC realm for EXAMPLE.COM. Enter a trust password when prompted. Note the password because you will need to enter the exact same password in the central KDC in the next step.
    kadmin:  addprinc krbtgt/HADOOP.EXAMPLE.COM@EXAMPLE.COM 
  4. Each of your Hadoop client users must also place this information in their local core-site.xml file. The easiest way to do so is by using the Cloudera Manager Admin Console to generate a client configuration file.
  5. To set up the cross-realm trust in the central KDC, type the same command in the kadmin.local or kadmin shell on the central KDC host to create the exact same krbtgt principal and password.
    kadmin:  addprinc krbtgt/HADOOP.EXAMPLE.COM@EXAMPLE.COM 
      Important: For a cross-realm trust to operate properly, both KDCs must have the same krbtgt principal and password, and both KDCs must be configured to use the same encryption type.
  6. To properly translate principal names from the central KDC realm into the cluster-dedicated KDC realm for the Hadoop cluster, configure the Trusted Kerberos Realms property of the HDFS service.
    1. Open the Cloudera Manager Admin Console.
    2. Go to the HDFS service.
    3. Click the Configuration tab.
    4. Select Scope > HDFS (Service Wide)
    5. Select Category > Security.
    6. Type Kerberos in the Search box.
    7. Edit the Trusted Kerberos Realms property to add the name of your central KDC realm. If you need to use more advanced mappings which do more than just allow principals from another domain, you may enter them in the Additional Rules to Map Kerberos Principals to Short Names property. For more information about name mapping rules, see Mapping Kerberos Principals to Short Names.
  7. Each of your Hadoop client users must also place this information in their local core-site.xml file. The easiest way to do so is by using the Cloudera Manager Admin Console to generate a client configuration file.
  8. Later in this procedure, you will restart the services to have the configuration changes in core-site.xml take effect.

Using a Cluster-Dedicated MIT KDC with Active Directory

For Cloudera Manager clusters, the openldap-clients package must be installed on the Cloudera Manager Server host before configuring the cluster to use Kerberos for authentication.

On the Active Directory Server

  1. On the Active Directory server host, type the following command to add the local realm trust to Active Directory:
    netdom trust HADOOP.EXAMPLE.COM /Domain:EXAMPLE.COM /add /realm /passwordt:TrustPassword
  2. On the Active Directory server host, type the following command to set the proper encryption type:

    Windows 2003 RC2

    Windows 2003 server installations do not support AES encryption for Kerberos. Therefore RC4 should be used. Please see the Microsoft reference documentation for more information.
    ktpass /MITRealmName HADOOP.EXAMPLE.COM /TrustEncryp RC4
    Windows 2008
    ksetup /SetEncTypeAttr HADOOP.EXAMPLE.COM <enc_type>
    Where the <enc_type> parameter can be replaced with parameter strings for AES, DES, or RC4 encryption modes. For example, for AES encryption, replace <enc_type> with AES256-CTS-HMAC-SHA1-96 or AES128-CTS-HMAC-SHA1-96 and for RC4 encryption, replace with RC4-HMAC-MD5. See the Microsoft reference documentation for more information.
      Important: Make sure that the encryption type you specify is supported on both your version of Windows Active Directory and your version of MIT Kerberos.

On the MIT KDC Server

  1. In the /var/kerberos/krb5kdc/kdc.conf file on the local dedicated KDC server host, configure the default realm for the Hadoop cluster by substituting your Kerberos realm in the following realms property:
    [realms]
     HADOOP.EXAMPLE.COM = {
  2. Each of your Hadoop client users must also place this information in their local core-site.xml file. The easiest way to do so is by using the Cloudera Manager Admin Console to generate a client configuration file.
  3. On the local MIT KDC server host, type the following command in the kadmin.local or kadmin shell to add the cross-realm krbtgt principal:
    kadmin:  addprinc -e "<keysalt_list>" krbtgt/HADOOP.EXAMPLE.COM@EXAMPLE.COM

    where the <keysalt_list> parameter specifies the types of keys and their salt to be used for encryption of the password for this cross-realm krbtgt principal. It can be set to AES, or RC4 keytypes with a salt value of :normal. Note that DES is deprecated and should no longer be used. You can specify multiple keysalt types using the parameter in the command above. Make sure that at least one of the encryption types corresponds to the encryption types found in the tickets granted by the KDC in the remote realm. For an example of the values to use, see the examples based on the Active Directory functional domain level, below.

    Examples by Active Directory Domain or Forest "Functional level"

    Active Directory will, based on the Domain or Forest functional level, use encryption types supported by that release of the Windows Server operating system. It is not possible to use AES encryption types with an AD 2003 functional level. If you notice that DES encryption types are being used when authenticating or requesting service tickets to Active Directory then it might be necessary to enable weak encryption types in the /etc/krb5.conf. See Sample Kerberos Configuration Files for an example.
    • Windows 2003
      kadmin: addprinc -e "rc4-hmac:normal" krbtgt/HADOOP.EXAMPLE.COM@EXAMPLE.COM
    • Windows 2008
      kadmin: addprinc -e "aes256-cts:normal aes128-cts:normal rc4-hmac:normal" krbtgt/HADOOP.EXAMPLE.COM@EXAMPLE.COM
      Note: The cross-realm krbtgt principal that you add in this step must have at least one entry that uses the same encryption type as the tickets that are issued by the remote KDC. If there are no matching encryption types, principals in the local realm can successfully access the Hadoop cluster, but principals in the remote realm are unable to.

On All Cluster Hosts

  1. In the /etc/krb5.conf file on all cluster hosts and all Hadoop client user hosts, configure both Kerberos realms. Note that default_realm should be configured as the local MIT Kerberos realm for the cluster. Your krb5.conf may contain more configuration properties than those demonstrated below. This example is provided to clarify configuration parameters. See Sample Kerberos Configuration Files for more information.
    [libdefaults]
      default_realm = HADOOP.EXAMPLE.COM
    [realms]
      EXAMPLE.COM = {
        kdc = dc01.example.com:88
        admin_server = dc01.example.com:749
      }
      HADOOP.EXAMPLE.COM = {
        kdc = kdc01.hadoop.example.com:88
        admin_server = kdc01.hadoop.example.com:749
      }
    [domain_realm]
      .hadoop.example.com = HADOOP.EXAMPLE.COM
      hadoop.example.com = HADOOP.EXAMPLE.COM
      .example.com = EXAMPLE.COM
      example.com = EXAMPLE.COM
  2. Use one of the following methods to properly translate principal names from the Active Directory realm into the cluster-dedicated KDC realm for the Hadoop cluster.
    • Using Cloudera Manager: Configure the Trusted Kerberos realms property of the HDFS service:
      1. Open the Cloudera Manager Admin Console.
      2. Go to the HDFS service.
      3. Click the Configuration tab.
      4. Select Scope > HDFS (Service Wide)
      5. Select Category > Security.
      6. Type Kerberos in the Search box.
      7. Edit the Trusted Kerberos Realms property to add the name of your central KDC realm. If you need to use more advanced mappings which do more than just allow principals from another domain, you may enter them in the Additional Rules to Map Kerberos Principals to Short Names property. For more information about name mapping rules, see Mapping Kerberos Principals to Short Names.
    • Using the Command Line: Configure the hadoop.security.auth_to_local setting in the core-site.xml file on all of the cluster hosts. The following example translates all principal names with the realm EXAMPLE.COM into the first component of the principal name only. It also preserves the standard translation for the default realm (the cluster realm).
      <property>
        <name>hadoop.security.auth_to_local</name>
        <value>
          RULE:[1:$1@$0](^.*@EXAMPLE\.COM$)s/^(.*)@EXAMPLE\.COM$/$1/g
          RULE:[2:$1@$0](^.*@EXAMPLE\.COM$)s/^(.*)@EXAMPLE\.COM$/$1/g
          DEFAULT
        </value>
      </property>
Page generated May 18, 2018.