Geo security review (Q&A) (PREMIUM SELF)
The following security review of the Geo feature set focuses on security aspects of the feature as they apply to customers running their own GitLab instances. The review questions are based in part on the OWASP Application Security Verification Standard Project from owasp.org.
Business Model
What geographic areas does the application service?
- This varies by customer. Geo allows customers to deploy to multiple areas, and they get to choose where they are.
- Region and node selection is entirely manual.
Data Essentials
What data does the application receive, produce, and process?
- Geo streams almost all data held by a GitLab instance between sites. This includes full database replication, most files such as user-uploaded attachments, and repository + wiki data. In a typical configuration, this will happen across the public Internet, and be TLS-encrypted.
- PostgreSQL replication is TLS-encrypted.
- See also: only TLSv1.2 should be supported
How can the data be classified into categories according to its sensitivity?
- The GitLab model of sensitivity is centered around public vs. internal vs. private projects. Geo replicates them all indiscriminately. "Selective sync" exists for files and repositories (but not database content), which would permit only less-sensitive projects to be replicated to a secondary site if desired.
- See also: GitLab data classification policy.
What data backup and retention requirements have been defined for the application?
- Geo is designed to provide replication of a certain subset of the application data. It is part of the solution, rather than part of the problem.
End-Users
Who are the application's end‐users?
- Secondary sites are created in regions that are distant (in terms of Internet latency) from the main GitLab installation (the primary site). They are intended to be used by anyone who would ordinarily use the primary site, who finds that the secondary site is closer to them (in terms of Internet latency).
How do the end‐users interact with the application?
- Secondary sites provide all the interfaces a primary site does (notably a HTTP/HTTPS web application, and HTTP/HTTPS or SSH Git repository access), but is constrained to read-only activities. The principal use case is envisioned to be cloning Git repositories from the secondary site in favor of the primary site, but end-users may use the GitLab web interface to view information like projects, issues, merge requests, and snippets.
What security expectations do the end‐users have?
- The replication process must be secure. It would typically be unacceptable to transmit the entire database contents or all files and repositories across the public Internet in plaintext, for instance.
- Secondary sites must have the same access controls over its content as the primary site - unauthenticated users must not be able to gain access to privileged information on the primary site by querying the secondary site.
- Attackers must not be able to impersonate the secondary site to the primary site, and thus gain access to privileged information.
Administrators
Who has administrative capabilities in the application?
- Nothing Geo-specific. Any user where
admin: true
is set in the database is considered an administrator with super-user privileges. - See also: more granular access control (not Geo-specific).
- Much of Geo's integration (database replication, for instance) must be configured with the application, typically by system administrators.
What administrative capabilities does the application offer?
- Secondary sites may be added, modified, or removed by users with administrative access.
- The replication process may be controlled (start/stop) via the Sidekiq administrative controls.
Network
What details regarding routing, switching, firewalling, and load‐balancing have been defined?
- Geo requires the primary site and secondary site to be able to communicate with each other across a TCP/IP network. In particular, the secondary sites must be able to access HTTP/HTTPS and PostgreSQL services on the primary site.
What core network devices support the application?
- Varies from customer to customer.
What network performance requirements exist?
- Maximum replication speeds between primary site and secondary site is limited by the available bandwidth between sites. No hard requirements exist - time to complete replication (and ability to keep up with changes on the primary site) is a function of the size of the data set, tolerance for latency, and available network capacity.
What private and public network links support the application?
- Customers choose their own networks. As sites are intended to be geographically separated, it is envisioned that replication traffic will pass over the public Internet in a typical deployment, but this is not a requirement.
Systems
What operating systems support the application?
- Geo imposes no additional restrictions on operating system (see the GitLab installation page for more details), however we recommend using the operating systems listed in the Geo documentation.
What details regarding required OS components and lock‐down needs have been defined?
- The supported installation method (Omnibus) packages most components itself.
- There are significant dependencies on the system-installed OpenSSH daemon (Geo requires users to set up custom authentication methods) and the omnibus or system-provided PostgreSQL daemon (it must be configured to listen on TCP, additional users and replication slots must be added, etc).
- The process for dealing with security updates (for example, if there is a significant vulnerability in OpenSSH or other services, and the customer wants to patch those services on the OS) is identical to the non-Geo situation: security updates to OpenSSH would be provided to the user via the usual distribution channels. Geo introduces no delay there.
Infrastructure Monitoring
What network and system performance monitoring requirements have been defined?
- None specific to Geo.
What mechanisms exist to detect malicious code or compromised application components?
- None specific to Geo.
What network and system security monitoring requirements have been defined?
- None specific to Geo.
Virtualization and Externalization
What aspects of the application lend themselves to virtualization?
- All.
What virtualization requirements have been defined for the application?
- Nothing Geo-specific, but everything in GitLab needs to have full functionality in such an environment.
What aspects of the product may or may not be hosted via the cloud computing model?
- GitLab is "cloud native" and this applies to Geo as much as to the rest of the product. Deployment in clouds is a common and supported scenario.
If applicable, what approach(es) to cloud computing will be taken (Managed Hosting versus "Pure" Cloud, a "full machine" approach such as AWS-EC2 versus a "hosted database" approach such as AWS-RDS and Azure, etc)?
- To be decided by our customers, according to their operational needs.
Environment
What frameworks and programming languages have been used to create the application?
- Ruby on Rails, Ruby.
What process, code, or infrastructure dependencies have been defined for the application?
- Nothing specific to Geo.
What databases and application servers support the application?
- PostgreSQL >= 12, Redis, Sidekiq, Puma.
How will database connection strings, encryption keys, and other sensitive components be stored, accessed, and protected from unauthorized detection?
- There are some Geo-specific values. Some are shared secrets which must be
securely transmitted from the primary site to the secondary site at setup time. Our
documentation recommends transmitting them from the primary site to the system
administrator via SSH, and then back out to the secondary site in the same manner.
In particular, this includes the PostgreSQL replication credentials and a secret
key (
db_key_base
) which is used to decrypt certain columns in the database. Thedb_key_base
secret is stored unencrypted on the file system, in/etc/gitlab/gitlab-secrets.json
, along with a number of other secrets. There is no at-rest protection for them.
Data Processing
What data entry paths does the application support?
- Data is entered via the web application exposed by GitLab itself. Some data is
also entered using system administration commands on the GitLab servers (for example
gitlab-ctl set-primary-node
). - Secondary sites also receive inputs via PostgreSQL streaming replication from the primary site.
What data output paths does the application support?
-
Primary sites output via PostgreSQL streaming replication to the secondary site.
Otherwise, principally via the web application exposed by GitLab itself, and via
SSH
git clone
operations initiated by the end-user.
How does data flow across the application's internal components?
- Secondary sites and primary sites interact via HTTP/HTTPS (secured with JSON web tokens) and via PostgreSQL streaming replication.
- Within a primary site or secondary site, the SSOT is the file system and the database (including Geo tracking database on secondary site). The various internal components are orchestrated to make alterations to these stores.
What data input validation requirements have been defined?
- Secondary sites must have a faithful replication of the primary site's data.
What data does the application store and how?
- Git repositories and files, tracking information related to the them, and the GitLab database contents.
What data is or may need to be encrypted and what key management requirements have been defined?
- Neither primary sites or secondary sites encrypt Git repository or file system data at
rest. A subset of database columns are encrypted at rest using the
db_otp_key
. - A static secret shared across all hosts in a GitLab deployment.
- In transit, data should be encrypted, although the application does permit communication to proceed unencrypted. The two main transits are the secondary site's replication process for PostgreSQL, and for Git repositories/files. Both should be protected using TLS, with the keys for that managed via Omnibus per existing configuration for end-user access to GitLab.
What capabilities exist to detect the leakage of sensitive data?
- Comprehensive system logs exist, tracking every connection to GitLab and PostgreSQL.
What encryption requirements have been defined for data in transit - including transmission over WAN, LAN, SecureFTP, or publicly accessible protocols such as http: and https:?
- Data must have the option to be encrypted in transit, and be secure against both passive and active attack (for example, MITM attacks should not be possible).
Access
What user privilege levels does the application support?
- Geo adds one type of privilege: secondary sites can access a special Geo API to download files over HTTP/HTTPS, and to clone repositories using HTTP/HTTPS.
What user identification and authentication requirements have been defined?
- Secondary sites identify to Geo primary sites via OAuth or JWT authentication based on the shared database (HTTP access) or a PostgreSQL replication user (for database replication). The database replication also requires IP-based access controls to be defined.
What user authorization requirements have been defined?
- Secondary sites must only be able to read data. They are not currently able to mutate data on the primary site.
What session management requirements have been defined?
- Geo JWTs are defined to last for only two minutes before needing to be regenerated.
- Geo JWTs are generated for one of the following specific scopes:
- Geo API access.
- Git access.
- LFS and File ID.
- Upload and File ID.
- Job Artifact and File ID.
What access requirements have been defined for URI and Service calls?
- Secondary sites make many calls to the primary site's API. This is how file replication proceeds, for instance. This endpoint is only accessible with a JWT token.
- The primary site also makes calls to the secondary site to get status information.
Application Monitoring
What application auditing requirements have been defined? How are audit and debug logs accessed, stored, and secured?
- Structured JSON log is written to the file system, and can also be ingested into a Kibana installation for further analysis.