Awesome
Console1984
A Rails console extension that protects sensitive accesses and makes them auditable.
“If you want to keep a secret, you must also hide it from yourself.”
― George Orwell, 1984
If you are looking for the auditing tool, check audits1984
.
Installation
Important: console1984
depends on Active Record encryption which is a Rails 7 feature.
Add it to your Gemfile
:
gem 'console1984'
Create tables to store console activity in the database:
rails console1984:install:migrations
rails db:migrate
By default, console1984 is only enabled in production
. You can configure the target environments in your application.rb
:
config.console1984.protected_environments = %i[ production staging ]
Finally, you need to configure Active Record Encryption in your project. This is because the library stores the tracked console commands encrypted.
How it works
Session activity logging
When starting a console session, it will ask for a reason. Internally, it will use this reason to document the console session and record all the commands executed in it.
$ rails c
You have access to production data here. That's a big deal. As part of our promise to keep customer data safe and private, we audit the commands you type here. Let's get started!
Commands:
* decrypt!: enter unprotected mode with access to encrypted information
Unnamed, why are you using this console today?
> ...
Auditing sessions
Check out audits1984
, a companion auditing tool prepared to work with console1984
database session trails.
Access to encrypted data
By default, console1984
won't decrypt data encrypted with Active Record encryption. Users will just see the ciphertexts.
To decrypt data, enter the command decrypt!
. It will ask for a justification, and these accesses will be flagged internally as sensitive.
irb(main)> Topic.last.name
Topic Load (1.4ms) SELECT `topics`.* FROM `topics` ORDER BY `topics`.`id` DESC LIMIT 1
=> "{\"p\":\"iu6+LfnNlurC6sL++JyOIDvedjNSz/AvnZQ=\",\"h\":{\"iv\":\"BYa86+JNM/LdkC18\",\"at\":\"r4sQNoSyIlAjJdZEKHVMow==\",\"k\":{\"p\":\"7L1l/5UiYsFQqqo4jfMZtLwp90KqcrIgS7HqgteVjuM=\",\"h\":{\"iv\":\"ItwRYxZAerKIoSZ8\",\"at\":\"ZUSNVfvtm4wAYWLBKRAx/g==\",\"e\":\"QVNDSUktOEJJVA==\"}},\"i\":\"OTdiOQ==\"}}"
irb(main)> decrypt!
Before you can access personal information, you need to ask for and get explicit consent from the user(s). Unnamed, where can we find this consent (a URL would be great)?
> ...
Ok! You have access to encrypted information now. We pay extra close attention to any commands entered while you have this access. You can go back to protected mode with 'encrypt!'
WARNING: Make sure you don`t save objects that were loaded while in protected mode, as this can result in saving the encrypted texts.
irb(main)> Topic.last.name
Topic Load (1.2ms) SELECT `topics`.* FROM `topics` ORDER BY `topics`.`id` DESC LIMIT 1
=> "Thanks for the inspiration"
You can type encrypt!
to go back to protected mode again.
irb(main):004:0> encrypt!
Great! You are back in protected mode. When we audit, we may reach out for a conversation about the commands you entered. What went well? Did you solve the problem without accessing personal data?
irb(main)> Topic.last.name
Topic Load (1.4ms) SELECT `topics`.* FROM `topics` ORDER BY `topics`.`id` DESC LIMIT 1
=> "{\"p\":\"iu6+LfnNlurC6sL++JyOIDvedjNSz/AvnZQ=\",\"h\":{\"iv\":\"BYa86+JNM/LdkC18\",\"at\":\"r4sQNoSyIlAjJdZEKHVMow==\",\"k\":{\"p\":\"7L1l/5UiYsFQqqo4jfMZtLwp90KqcrIgS7HqgteVjuM=\",\"h\":{\"iv\":\"ItwRYxZAerKIoSZ8\",\"at\":\"ZUSNVfvtm4wAYWLBKRAx/g==\",\"e\":\"QVNDSUktOEJJVA==\"}},\"i\":\"OTdiOQ==\"}}"
While in protected mode, you can't modify encrypted data, but can save unencrypted attributes normally. If you try to modify an encrypted column it will raise an error.
Access to external systems
While Active Record encryption can protect personal information in the database, there are other systems can contain very sensitive information. For example: Elasticsearch indexing user information or Redis caching template fragments.
To protect the access to such systems, you can add their URLs to config.console1984.protected_urls
in the corresponding environment config file (e.g: production.rb
):
config.console1984.protected_urls = [ "https://my-app-us-east-1-whatever.us-east-1.es.amazonaws.com", "redis://my-app-cache-1.whatever.cache.amazonaws.com:6379" ]
In the default protected mode, trying to read data from a protected system will be aborted with an error:
irb(main)> Rails.cache.read("some key") # raises Console1984::Errors::ProtectedConnection
Running decrypt!
will switch you to unprotected mode and let you access these systems normally. The system will ask for a justification and will flag those accesses as sensitive.
This will work for systems that use Ruby sockets as the underlying communication mechanism.
Automatic scheduled incineration for sessions
By default, sessions will be incinerated with a job 30 days after they are created. You can configure this period by setting config.console1984.incinerate_after = 1.year
and you can disable incineration completely by setting config.console1984.incinerate = false
.
Eager loading
When starting a console session, console1984
will eager load all the application classes if necessary. In practice, production environments already load classes eagerly, so this won't represent any change for those.
Configuration
These config options are namespaced in config.console1984
:
Name | Description |
---|---|
protected_environments | The list of environments where console1984 will act on. Defaults to %i[ production ] . |
protected_urls | The list of URLs corresponding with external systems to protect. |
session_logger | The system used to record session data. The default logger is Console1984::SessionsLogger::Database . |
username_resolver | Configure how the current user is determined for a given console session. The default is Console1984::Username::EnvResolver.new("CONSOLE_USER") , which returns the value of the environment variable CONSOLE_USER . |
ask_for_username_if_empty | If true , the console will ask for a username if it is empty. If false , it will raise an error if no username is set. Defaults to false . |
production_data_warning | The text to show when a console session starts. |
enter_unprotected_encryption_mode_warning | The text to show when user enters into unprotected mode. |
enter_protected_mode_warning | The text to show when user go backs to protected mode. |
incinerate | Whether incinerate sessions automatically after a period of time or not. Default to true . |
incinerate_after | The period to keep sessions around before incinerate them. Default 30.days . |
incineration_queue | The name of the queue for session incineration jobs. Default console1984_incineration . |
base_record_class | The host application base class that will be the parent of console1984 records. By default it's ::ApplicationRecord . |
SSH Config
To automatically set the CONSOLE_USER
env var for sessions, you'll need to configure SSH on the server to accept the environment variable.
On the server, edit /etc/ssh/sshd_config
to accept the environment variable:
AcceptEnv LANG LC_* CONSOLE_USER
Restart the SSH server to use the new config:
service sshd restart
On the client side, you can provide this env var from your clients by adding the variable to the ssh config:
Host *
SetEnv CONSOLE_USER=david
About built-in protection mechanisms
console1984
adds many protection mechanisms to prevent tampering. This includes attempts to alter data in auditing tables or monkey patching certain classes to change how the system works. If you find a way to circumvent these tampering controls, please report an issue.
We aim to make these defense mechanisms as robust as possible, but there might always be open doors because Ruby is highly dynamic. If your organization needs bullet-proof protection against malicious actors using the console, you should consider additional security measures. An example would be using a read-only database user for auditing data while in a console. The gem doesn't offer direct support for doing this, but it's on our radar for future improvement.
Running the test suite
The test suite runs against SQLite by default, but can be run against Postgres and MySQL too. It will run against the three in the CI server.
To run the suite in your computer, first, run bin/setup
to create the docker containers for MySQL/PostgreSQL and create the databases. Then run:
bin/rails test # against SQLite (default)
bin/rails test TARGET_DB=mysql
bin/rails test TARGET_DB=postgres
bin/rails test TARGET_DB=sqlite