Introduction
Memory object caching systems like Memcached can optimize backend database performance by temporarily storing information in memory, retaining frequently or recently requested records. In this way, they reduce the number of direct requests to your databases.
Because systems like Memcached can contribute to denial of service attacks if improperly configured, it is important to secure your Memcached servers. In this guide, we will cover how to protect your Memcached server by binding your installation to a local or private network interface and creating an authorized user for your Memcached instance.
Installing Memcached from Official Repositories
If you don’t already have Memcached installed on your server, you can install it from the official CentOS repositories. First, make sure that your local package index is updated:
sudo yum update
Next, install the official package as follows:
sudo yum install memcached
We can also install libmemcached
, a library that provides several tools to work with your Memcached server:
sudo yum install libmemcached
Memcached should now be installed as a service on your server, along with tools that will allow you to test its connectivity. We can now move on to securing its configuration settings.
Securing Memcached Configuration Settings
To ensure that our Memcached instance is listening on the local interface 127.0.0.1
, we will modify the OPTIONS
variable in the configuration file located at /etc/sysconfig/memcached
. We will also disable the UDP listener. Both of these actions will protect our server from denial of service attacks.
You can open /etc/sysconfig/memcached
with nano
:
sudo nano /etc/sysconfig/memcached
Locate the OPTIONS
variable, which will initially look like this:
. . .
OPTIONS=""
Binding to our local network interface will restrict traffic to clients on the same machine. We will do this by adding -l 127.0.0.1
to our OPTIONS
variable. This may be too restrictive for certain environments, but it can make a good starting point as a security measure.
Because UDP protocol is much more effective for denial of service attacks than TCP, we can also disable the UDP listener. To do this, we will add the -U 0
parameter to our OPTIONS
variable. The file in full should look like this:
PORT="11211"
USER="memcached"
MAXCONN="1024"
CACHESIZE="64"
OPTIONS="-l 127.0.0.1 -U 0"
Save and close the file when you are done.
Restart your Memcached service to apply your changes:
sudo systemctl restart memcached
Verify that Memcached is currently bound to the local interface and listening only for TCP connections by typing:
sudo netstat -plunt
You should see the following output:
Output
Active Internet connections (only servers)
Proto Recv-Q Send-Q Local Address Foreign Address State PID/Program name
. . .
tcp 0 0 127.0.0.1:11211 0.0.0.0:* LISTEN 2383/memcached
. . .
This confirms that memcached
is bound to the 127.0.0.1
address using only TCP.
Adding Authorized Users
To add authenticated users to your Memcached service, it is possible to use Simple Authentication and Security Layer (SASL), a framework that de-couples authentication procedures from application protocols. We will enable SASL within our Memcached configuration file and then move on to adding a user with authentication credentials.
Configuring SASL Support
We can first test the connectivity of our Memcached instance with the memstat
command. This will help us establish that SASL and user authentication are enabled after we make changes to our configuration files.
To check that Memcached is up and running, type the following:
memstat --servers="127.0.0.1"
You should see output like the following:
Output
Server: 127.0.0.1 (11211)
pid: 3831
uptime: 9
time: 1520028517
version: 1.4.25
. . .
Now we can move on to enabling SASL. First, we can add the -S
parameter to our OPTIONS
variable in /etc/sysconfig/memcached
, which will enable SASL. Open the file again:
sudo nano /etc/sysconfig/memcached
We will add both the -S
and -vv
parameters to our OPTIONS
variable. The -vv
option will provide verbose output to /var/log/memcached
, which will help us as we debug. Add these options to the OPTIONS
variable as follows:
. . .
OPTIONS="-l 127.0.0.1 -U 0 -S -vv"
Save and close the file.
Restart the Memcached service:
sudo systemctl restart memcached
Next, we can take a look at the logs to be sure that SASL support has been enabled:
sudo journalctl -u memcached
You should see the following line, indicating that SASL support has been initialized:
Output
. . .
Mar 05 18:16:11 memcached-server memcached[3846]: Initialized SASL.
. . .
We can check the connectivity again, but because SASL has been initialized, this command should fail without authentication:
memstat --servers="127.0.0.1"
This command should not produce output. We can type the following to check its status:
echo $?
$?
will always return the exit code of the last command that exited. Typically, anything besides 0
indicates process failure. In this case, we should see an exit status of 1
, which tells us that the memstat
command failed.
Adding an Authenticated User
Now we can download two packages that will allow us to work with the Cyrus SASL Library and its authentication mechanisms, including plugins that support PLAIN authentication schemes. These packages, cyrus-sasl-devel
and cyrus-sasl-plain
, will allow us to create and authenticate our user. Install the packages by typing:
sudo yum install cyrus-sasl-devel cyrus-sasl-plain
Next, we will create the directory and file that Memcached will check for its SASL configuration settings:
sudo mkdir -p /etc/sasl2
sudo nano /etc/sasl2/memcached.conf
Add the following to the SASL configuration file:
mech_list: plain
log_level: 5
sasldb_path: /etc/sasl2/memcached-sasldb2
In addition to specifying our logging level, we will set mech_list
to plain
, which tells Memcached that it should use its own password file and verify a plaintext password. We will also specify the path to the user database file that we will create next. Save and close the file when you are finished.
Now we will create a SASL database with our user credentials. We will use the saslpasswd2
command to make a new entry for our user in our database using the -c
option. Our user will be sammy here, but you can replace this name with your own user. Using the -f
option, we will specify the path to our database, which will be the path we set in /etc/sasl2/memcached.conf
:
sudo saslpasswd2 -a memcached -c -f /etc/sasl2/memcached-sasldb2 sammy
Finally, we want to give the memcached
user ownership over the SASL database:
sudo chown memcached:memcached /etc/sasl2/memcached-sasldb2
Restart the Memcached service:
sudo systemctl restart memcached
Running memstat
again will confirm whether or not our authentication process worked. This time we will run it with our authentication credentials:
memstat --servers="127.0.0.1" --username=sammy --password=your_password
You should see output like the following:
Output
Server: 127.0.0.1 (11211)
pid: 3831
uptime: 9
time: 1520028517
version: 1.4.25
. . .
Our Memcached service is now successfully running with SASL support and user authentication.
Allowing Access Over the Private Network
We have covered how to configure Memcached to listen on the local interface, which can prevent denial of service attacks by protecting the Memcached interface from exposure to outside parties. There may be instances where you will need to allow access from other servers, however. In this case, you can adjust your configuration settings to bind Memcached to the private network interface.
Limiting IP Access With Firewalls
Before you adjust your configuration settings, it is a good idea to set up firewall rules to limit the machines that can connect to your Memcached server. If you followed the prerequisites and installed FirewallD on your server and do not plan on connecting to Memcached from another host, then you do not need to adjust your firewall rules. Your standalone Memcached instance should be listening on 127.0.0.1
, thanks to the OPTIONS
variable we defined earlier, and there should therefore be no concerns about incoming traffic. If you plan to allow access to your Memcached server from other hosts, however, then you will need to make changes to your firewall settings using the firewall-cmd
command.
Begin by adding a dedicated Memcached zone to your firewalld
policy:
sudo firewall-cmd --permanent --new-zone=memcached
Then, specify which port you would like to keep open. Memcached uses port 11211
by default:
sudo firewall-cmd --permanent --zone=memcached --add-port=11211/tcp
Next, specify the private IP addresses that should be allowed to access Memcached. For this, you will need to know your client server’s private IP address:
sudo firewall-cmd --permanent --zone=memcached --add-source=client_server_private_IP
Reload the firewall to ensure that the new rules take effect:
sudo firewall-cmd --reload
Packets from your client’s IP address should now be processed according to the rules in the dedicated Memcached zone. All other connections will be processed by the default public
zone.
With these changes in place, we can move on to making the necessary configuration changes to our Memcached service, binding it to our server’s private networking interface.
Binding Memcached to the Private Network Interface
The first step in binding to our server’s private networking interface will be modifying the OPTIONS
variable we set earlier.
We can open /etc/sysconfig/memcached
again by typing:
sudo nano /etc/sysconfig/memcached
Inside, locate the OPTIONS
variable. We can now modify -l 127.0.0.1
to reflect our Memcached server’s private IP:
. . .
OPTIONS="-l memcached_servers_private_IP -U 0 -S -vv"
Save and close the file when you are finished.
Restart the Memcached service again:
sudo systemctl restart memcached
Check your new settings with netstat
to confirm the change:
sudo netstat -plunt
Active Internet connections (only servers)
Proto Recv-Q Send-Q Local Address Foreign Address State PID/Program name
. . .
tcp 0 0 memcached_servers_private_IP:11211 0.0.0.0:* LISTEN 2383/memcached
Test connectivity from your external client to ensure that you can still reach the service. It is a good idea to also check access from a non-authorized client to ensure that your firewall rules are effective.