node_exporter/https
Brian Brazil e92c7b5bbf Use our standard config doc format.
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
2020-05-30 12:49:26 +02:00
..
testdata tls: enable the selection of more TLS settings (#1695) 2020-05-13 20:26:01 +02:00
README.md Use our standard config doc format. 2020-05-30 12:49:26 +02:00
tls_config.go tls: enable the selection of more TLS settings (#1695) 2020-05-13 20:26:01 +02:00
tls_config_test.go tls: enable the selection of more TLS settings (#1695) 2020-05-13 20:26:01 +02:00
users.go Add basic authentication (#1683) 2020-05-01 14:26:51 +02:00
web-config.yml Make TLS config consistent with Prometheus (#1685) 2020-04-25 13:42:45 +02:00

HTTPS Package for Prometheus

The https directory contains a Go package and a sample configuration file for running node_exporter with HTTPS instead of HTTP. We currently support TLS 1.3 and TLS 1.2.

To run a server with TLS, use the flag --web.config.

e.g. ./node_exporter --web.config="web-config.yml" If the config is kept within the https directory.

The config file should be written in YAML format, and is reloaded on each connection to check for new certificates and/or authentication policy.

Sample Config

tls_server_config:
  # Certificate and key files for server to use to authenticate to client.
  cert_file: <filename>
  key_file: <filename>

  # Server policy for client authentication. Maps to ClientAuth Policies.
  # For more detail on clientAuth options: [ClientAuthType](https://golang.org/pkg/crypto/tls/#ClientAuthType)
  [ client_auth_type: <string> | default = "NoClientCert" ]

  # CA certificate for client certificate authentication to the server.
  [ client_ca_file: <filename> ]

  # Minimum TLS version that is acceptable.
  [ min_version: <string> | default = "TLS12" ]

  # Maximum TLS version that is acceptable.
  [ max_version: <string> | default = "TLS13" ]

  # List of supported cipher suites for TLS versions up to TLS 1.2. If empty,
  # Go default cipher suites are used. Available cipher suites are documented
  # in the go documentation:
  # https://golang.org/pkg/crypto/tls/#pkg-constants
  [ cipher_suites:
    [ - <string> ] ]

  # prefer_server_cipher_suites controls whether the server selects the
  # client's most preferred ciphersuite, or the server's most preferred
  # ciphersuite. If true then the server's preference, as expressed in
  # the order of elements in cipher_suites, is used.
  [ prefer_server_cipher_suites: <bool> | default = true ]

  # Elliptic curves that will be used in an ECDHE handshake, in preference
  # order. Available curves are documented in the go documentation:
  # https://golang.org/pkg/crypto/tls/#CurveID
  [ curve_preferences:
    [ - <string> ] ]

http_server_config:
  # Enable HTTP/2 support. Note that HTTP/2 is only supported with TLS.
  # This can not be changed on the fly.
  [ http2: <bool> | default = true ]

# Usernames and hashed passwords that have full access to the web
# server via basic authentication. If empty, no basic authentication is
# required. Passwords are hashed with bcrypt.
basic_auth_users:
  [ <string>: <secret> ... ]

About bcrypt

There are several tools out there to generate bcrypt passwords, e.g. htpasswd:

htpasswd -nBC 10 "" | tr -d ':\n'

That command will prompt you for a password and output the hashed password, which will look something like: $2y$10$X0h1gDsPszWURQaxFh.zoubFi6DXncSjhoQNJgRrnGs7EsimhC7zG

The cost (10 in the example) influences the time it takes for computing the hash. A higher cost will en up slowing down the authentication process. Depending on the machine, a cost of 10 will take about ~70ms where a cost of 18 can take up to a few seconds. That hash will be computed on every password-protected request.