3.1 KiB
Step Certificates Database
step certificates
uses a simple key-value interface over popular database
implementations to store persistent certificate management meta-data.
Our recommended default database implementation is nosql-Badger - a NoSQL interface over the popular Badger database.
What will the database store?
As a first pass, the database layer will store every certificate (along with metadata surrounding the provisioning of the certificate) and revocation data that will be used to enforce passive revocation.
Implementations
Current implementations include Badger (default), BoltDB, and MysQL.
- Memory
- No database
- BoltDB -- etcd fork.
- Badger
- MySQL/MariaDB
- PostgreSQL
- Cassandra
Let us know which integration you would like to see next by opening an issue or PR.
Configuration
Configuring step certificates
to use a database is as simple as adding a
top-level db
stanza to $(step path)/config/ca.json
. Below are a few examples for supported databases:
Badger
{
...
"db": {
"type": "badger",
"dataSource": "./.step/db",
"valueDir": "./.step/valuedb"
"badgerFileLoadingMode": "MemoryMap"
},
...
}
Options for db
:
type
badger
- currently refers to Badger V1. However, as Badger V1 is deprecated, this will refer to Badger V2 starting with a the next major version release.badgerV1
- explicitly select Badger V1.badgerV2
- explicitly select Badger V2. Anyone looking to use Badger V2 will need to set it explicitly until it becomes the default.
dataSource
- path, database directory.valueDir
[optional] - path, value directory, only if different fromdataSource
.badgerFileLoadingMode
[optional] - can be set toFileIO
(instead of the defaultMemoryMap
) to avoid memory-mapping log files. This can be useful in environments with low RAM. Make sure to usebadgerV2
as the databasetype
if using this option.MemoryMap
- default.FileIO
- This can be useful in environments with low RAM.
BoltDB
{
...
"db": {
"type": "bbolt",
"dataSource": "./stepdb"
},
...
},
MySQL
{
...
"db": {
"type": "mysql",
"dataSource": "user:password@tcp(127.0.0.1:3306)/",
"database": "myDatabaseName"
},
...
},
Schema
As the interface is a key-value store, the schema is very simple. We support
tables
, keys
, and values
. An entry in the database is a []byte value
that is indexed by []byte table
and []byte key
.
Data Backup
Backing up your data is important, and it's good hygiene. We chose Badger as our default file based data storage backend because it has mature tooling for running common database tasks. See the documentation for a guide on backing up your data.