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236 lines
14 KiB
236 lines
14 KiB
# MinIO Security Overview [![Slack](https://slack.min.io/slack?type=svg)](https://slack.min.io)
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## Server-Side Encryption
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MinIO supports two different types of server-side encryption ([SSE](#sse)):
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- **SSE-C**: The MinIO server en/decrypts an object with a secret key provided by the S3 client
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as part of the HTTP request headers. Therefore, [SSE-C](#ssec) requires TLS/HTTPS.
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- **SSE-S3**: The MinIO server en/decrypts an object with a secret key managed by a KMS.
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Therefore, MinIO requires a valid KMS configuration for [SSE-S3](#sses3).
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### Server-Side Encryption - Preliminaries
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#### Secret Keys
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The MinIO server uses an unique, randomly generated secret key per object also known as,
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Object Encryption Key ([OEK](#oek)). Neither the client-provided SSE-C key nor the KMS-managed
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key is directly used to en/decrypt an object. Instead, the OEK is stored as part of the object
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metadata next to the object in an encrypted form. To en/decrypt the OEK another secret key is
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needed also known as, Key Encryption Key ([KEK](#kek)).
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The MinIO server runs a key-derivation algorithm to generate the KEK using a pseudo-random
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function ([PRF](#prf)):
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`KEK := PRF(EK, IV, context_values)` where
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- [EK](#ek): is the external key. In case of SSE-C this is the client-provided key. In case of SSE-S3
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this is secret key generated by the KMS. For further details see
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[SSE-C](#Server-Side-Encryption-with-client-provided-Keys) or
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[SSE-S3](#Server-Side-Encryption-with-a-KMS).
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- [IV](#iv): is a randomly generated initialization vector. It is public and part of the
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object metadata.
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- `context_values`: are values like the bucket and object name and other information which should be
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cryptographically bound to the KEK.
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To summarize for any encrypted object there exists (at least) three different keys:
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1. [OEK](#oek): A secret and unique key used to encrypted the object, stored in an encrypted form as
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part of the object metadata and only loaded to RAM in plaintext during en/decrypting the object.
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2. [KEK](#kek): A secret and unique key used to en/decrypt the OEK and never stored anywhere.
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It is(re-)generated whenever en/decrypting an object using an external secret key and public
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parameters.
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3. [EK](#ek): An external secret key - either the SSE-C client-provided key or a secret key
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generated by the KMS.
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#### Content Encryption
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The MinIO server uses an authenticated encryption scheme ([AEAD](#aead)) to en/decrypt and
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authenticate the object content. The AEAD is combined with some state to build a
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*Secure Channel*. A *Secure Channel* is a cryptographic construction that ensures confidentiality
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and integrity of the processed data. In particular the *Secure Channel* splits the plaintext content
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into fixed size chunks and en/decrypts each chunk separately using an unique key-nonce combination.
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```
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plaintext := chunk_0 || chunk_1 || chunk_2 || ...
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AEAD <- key, nonce + 0 AEAD <- key, nonce + 1 AEAD <- key, nonce + 2 ...
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ciphertext := sealed_chunk_0 || sealed_chunk_1 || sealed_chunk_2 || ...
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```
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<center>Figure 1 - Secure Channel construction</center>
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In case of a S3 multi-part operation each part is en/decrypted with the scheme shown in
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Figure 1. However, for each part an unique secret key is derived from the OEK and the part
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number using a PRF. So in case of multi-part not the OEK but the output of `PRF(OEK, part_id)`
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is used as secret key.
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#### Cryptographic Primitives
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The SSE schemes described in [Secret Keys](#Secret-Keys) and [Content Encryption](#Content-Encryption)
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are generic over the cryptographic primitives. However, the MinIO server uses the following
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cryptographic primitive implementations:
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- [PRF](#prf): HMAC-SHA-256
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- [AEAD](#aead): AES-256-GCM if the CPU supports AES-NI, ChaCha20-Poly1305 otherwise.
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More specifically AES-256-GCM is only selected for X86-64 CPUs with AES-NI extension.
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Further any secret key (apart from the KMS-generated ones) is 256 bits long. The KMS-generated keys
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may be 256 bits but this depends on the KMS capabilities and configuration.
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The *Secure Channel* splits the object content into chunks of a fixed size of `65536` bytes. The last
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chunk may be smaller to avoid adding additional overhead and is treated specially to prevent truncation
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attacks. The nonce value is 96 bits long and generated randomly per object / multi-part part. The
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*Secure Channel* supports plaintexts up to `65536 * 2^32 = 256 TiB`.
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#### Randomness
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The MinIO server generates unique keys and other cryptographic values using a cryptographically
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secure pseudo-random number generator ([CSPRNG](#csprng)). However, in the context of SSE,
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the MinIO server does not require that the CSPRNG generates values that are indistinguishable
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from truly random bit strings. Instead, it is sufficient if the generated values are unique - which
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is a weaker requirement. Nevertheless other parts - for example the TLS-stack - may require that
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CSPRNG-generated values are indistinguishable from truly random bit strings.
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### Server-Side Encryption with client-provided Keys
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SSE-C allows an S3 client to en/decrypt an object at the MinIO server. Therefore the S3 client
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sends a secret key as part of the HTTP request. This secret key is **never** stored by the
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MinIO server and only resides in RAM during the en/decryption process.
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MinIO does not assume or require that the client-provided key is unique. It may be used for
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multiple objects or buckets. Especially a single client-provided key may be used for all
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objects - even though all objects must be treated as compromised if that key is ever compromised.
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#### Key rotation
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S3 clients can change the client-provided key of an existing object. Therefore an S3 client
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must perform a S3 COPY operation where the copy source and destination are equal. Further the
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COPY request headers must contain the current and the new client key:
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- `X-Amz-Server-Side-Encryption-Customer-Key`: Base64 encoded new key.
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- `X-Amz-Copy-Source-Server-Side-Encryption-Customer-Key`: Base64 encoded current key.
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Such a special COPY request is also known as S3 SSE-C key rotation.
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### Server-Side Encryption with a KMS
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SSE-S3 allows an S3 client to en/decrypt an object at the MinIO server using a KMS. The MinIO
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server only assumes that the KMS provides two services:
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1. `GenerateKey`: Takes a key ID and generates a new data key from a master key referenced by
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the key ID. It returns the new data key in two different forms: The plain data key
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and the data key encrypted using the master key.
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2. `DecryptKey`: Takes a key ID and an encrypted data key and returns the plain data key - the
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decryption of the encrypted data key using the master key referenced by the key ID -
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on success or an error otherwise.
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More details about supported KMS implementations and configuration can be found at the [KMS guide](https://github.com/minio/minio/blob/master/docs/kms/README.md).
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The MinIO server requests a new data key from the KMS for each uploaded object and uses that data key
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as EK. Additionally it stores the encrypted form of the data key and the master key ID as part
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of the object metadata. The plain data only resides in RAM during the en/decryption process.
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The MinIO server does not store any SSE-related key at the KMS. Instead the KMS is treated as trusted
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component that performs key sealing/unsealing operations to build a key hierarchy:
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```
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CMK (master key)
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+-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
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+-------+----------------+ +-------+----------------+ ...
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| EK_1 | EK_1_encrypted | | EK_2 | EK_2_encrypted |
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+---+----------+---------+ +---+----------+---------+
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+---+---+ | +---+---+ |
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| KEK_1 | | | KEK_2 | |
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+---+---+ | +---+---+ |
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+---+---+ | +---+---+ |
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| OEK_1 | | | OEK_2 | |
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+---+---+ | +---+---+ |
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+---------+---------+ +---------+---------+
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| object_metadata_1 | | object_metadata_2 |
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+-------------------+ +-------------------+
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```
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<center>Figure 2 - KMS key hierarchy</center>
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#### Key rotation - Basic Operation
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The MinIO server supports key rotation for SSE-S3 encrypted objects. The minio server decrypts
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the OEK using the current encrypted data key and the master key ID of the object metadata. If
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this succeeds, the server requests a new data key from the KMS using the master key ID of
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the **current MinIO KMS configuration** and re-wraps the *OEK* with a new *KEK* derived from
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the new data key / EK:
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```
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object metadata KMS
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| +----------------+ 1a | +-------+
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|-------------------->| EK_1_encrypted |-----------|->| CMK_1 |
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| +----------------+ | +---+---+
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| +---------------+ +------+ 1b | |
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|------------->| OEK_encrypted | | EK_1 |<---|------+
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| +-------+-------+ +------+ |
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| \ / |
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| \___ 2 ___/ |
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| \___/ |
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| +--+--+ |
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| | OEK | | +-------+
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| +--+--+ | | CMK_2 |
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| | | +---+---+
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| 5 +----------------+ |4 +------+ 3a | |
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|<------| OEK_encrypted' |<----+-------| EK_2 |<---|------+
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| +----------------+ +------+ | |
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| +----------------+ 3b | |
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|<-------------------| EK_2_encrypted |<-----------|------+
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| +----------------+ |
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1a) Send encrypted data key and master key ID to KMS.
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1b) Receive decrypted data key.
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2) Decrypt encrypted object key with the KEK derived from the data key.
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3a) Receive new plain data key from the KMS using the master key ID of the server config.
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3b) Receive encrypted form of the data key from the KMS.
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4) Derive a new KEK from the new data key and re-encrypt the OEK with it.
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5) Store the encrypted OEK encrypted data key and master key ID in object metadata.
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```
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<center>Figure 3 - KMS data key rotation</center>
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Only the root/admin user can perform an SSE-S3 key rotation using the Admin-API via [mc](https://github.com/minio/mc).
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For more details about how to perform key management operations using the CLI refer to
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[mc admin guide](https://github.com/minio/mc/blob/master/docs/minio-admin-complete-guide.md)
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or run `mc admin kms key`.
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#### Secure Erasure and Locking
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The MinIO server requires an available KMS to en/decrypt SSE-S3 encrypted objects. Therefore it
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is possible to erase or lock some or all encrypted objects. For example in case of a detected attack
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or other emergency situations the following actions can be taken:
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- Seal the KMS such that it cannot be accessed by MinIO server anymore. That will lock **all**
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SSE-S3 encrypted objects protected by master keys stored on the KMS. All these objects
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can not be decrypted as long as the KMS is sealed.
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- Seal/Unmount one/some master keys. That will lock all SSE-S3 encrypted objects protected by
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these master keys. All these objects can not be decrypted as long as the key(s) are sealed.
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- Delete one/some master keys. From a security standpoint, this is equal to erasing all SSE-S3
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encrypted objects protected by these master keys. All these objects are lost forever as they cannot
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be decrypted. Especially deleting all master keys at the KMS is equivalent to secure erasing all
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SSE-S3 encrypted objects.
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## Acronyms
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- <a name="aead"></a>**AEAD**: Authenticated Encryption with Associated Data
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- <a name="csprng"></a>**CSPRNG**: Cryptographically Secure Pseudo Random Number Generator
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- <a name="ek"></a>**EK**: External Key
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- <a name="iv"></a>**IV**: Initialization Vector
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- <a name="kek"></a>**KEK**: Key Encryption Key
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- <a name="oek"></a>**OEK**: Object Encryption Key
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- <a name="prf"></a>**PRF**: Pseudo Random Function
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- <a name="sse"></a>**SSE**: Server-Side Encryption
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- <a name="ssec"></a>**SSE-C**: Server-Side Encryption with client-provided Keys
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- <a name="sses3"></a>**SSE-S3**: Server-Side Encryption with a KMS
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