Client Side Encryption

New in MongoDB 4.2 client side encryption allows administrators and developers to encrypt specific data fields in addition to other MongoDB encryption features.

With field level encryption, developers can encrypt fields client side without any server-side configuration or directives. Client-side field level encryption supports workloads where applications must guarantee that unauthorized parties, including server administrators, cannot read the encrypted data.

Installation

The recommended way to get started using field level encryption in your project is with a dependency management system. Field level encryption requires additional packages to be installed as well as the driver itself.
See the installation for instructions on how to install the MongoDB driver.

libmongocrypt

There is a separate jar file containinglibmongocrypt bindings.


<dependencies>
    <dependency>
        <groupId>org.mongodb</groupId>
        <artifactId>mongodb-crypt</artifactId>
        <version>1.0.1</version>
    </dependency>
</dependencies>

Note: You can also download the mongodb-crypt jar directly from sonatype.

mongocryptd configuration

libmongocrypt requires the mongocryptd daemon / process to be running. A specific daemon / process uri can be configured in the AutoEncryptionSettings class by setting mongocryptdURI in the extraOptions.

For more information about mongocryptd see the official documentation.

Examples

The following is a sample app that assumes the key and schema have already been created in MongoDB. The example uses a local key, however using AWS Key Management Service is also an option. The data in the encryptedField field is automatically encrypted on the insert and decrypted when using find on the client side. The following code snippet comes from the ClientSideEncryptionSimpleTour.java example code that can be found with the driver source on github:

import com.mongodb.AutoEncryptionSettings;
import com.mongodb.MongoClientSettings;
import com.mongodb.client.MongoClient;
import com.mongodb.client.MongoClients;
import com.mongodb.client.MongoCollection;
import org.bson.Document;

import java.security.SecureRandom;
import java.util.HashMap;
import java.util.Map;

public class ClientSideEncryptionSimpleTour {

    public static void main(final String[] args) {

        // This would have to be the same master key as was used to create the encryption key
        final byte[] localMasterKey = new byte[96];
        new SecureRandom().nextBytes(localMasterKey);

        Map<String, Map<String, Object>> kmsProviders = new HashMap<String, Map<String, Object>>() {{
           put("local", new HashMap<String, Object>() {{
               put("key", localMasterKey);
           }});
        }};

        String keyVaultNamespace = "admin.datakeys";

        AutoEncryptionSettings autoEncryptionSettings = AutoEncryptionSettings.builder()
                .keyVaultNamespace(keyVaultNamespace)
                .kmsProviders(kmsProviders)
                .build();

        MongoClientSettings clientSettings = MongoClientSettings.builder()
                .autoEncryptionSettings(autoEncryptionSettings)
                .build();

        MongoClient mongoClient = MongoClients.create(clientSettings);
        MongoCollection<Document> collection = mongoClient.getDatabase("test").getCollection("coll");
        collection.drop(); // Clear old data

        collection.insertOne(new Document("encryptedField", "123456789"));

        System.out.println(collection.find().first().toJson());
    }
}
Note

Auto encryption is an enterprise only feature.

The following example shows how to configure the AutoEncryptionSettings instance to create a new key and setting the json schema map. The full code snippet can be found in ClientSideEncryptionAutoEncryptionSettingsTour.java:

import com.mongodb.ClientEncryptionSettings;
import com.mongodb.ConnectionString;
import com.mongodb.client.model.vault.DataKeyOptions;
import com.mongodb.client.vault.ClientEncryption;
import com.mongodb.client.vault.ClientEncryptions;
import org.bson.BsonBinary;
import org.bson.BsonDocument;

import java.util.Base64;

...

String keyVaultNamespace = "admin.datakeys";
ClientEncryptionSettings clientEncryptionSettings = ClientEncryptionSettings.builder()
        .keyVaultMongoClientSettings(MongoClientSettings.builder()
                .applyConnectionString(new ConnectionString("mongodb://localhost"))
                .build())
        .keyVaultNamespace(keyVaultNamespace)
        .kmsProviders(kmsProviders)
        .build();

ClientEncryption clientEncryption = ClientEncryptions.create(clientEncryptionSettings);
BsonBinary dataKeyId = clientEncryption.createDataKey("local", new DataKeyOptions());
final String base64DataKeyId = Base64.getEncoder().encodeToString(dataKeyId.getData());

final String dbName = "test";
final String collName = "coll";
AutoEncryptionSettings autoEncryptionSettings = AutoEncryptionSettings.builder()
        .keyVaultNamespace(keyVaultNamespace)
        .kmsProviders(kmsProviders)
        .schemaMap(new HashMap<String, BsonDocument>() {{
            put(dbName + "." + collName,
                    // Need a schema that references the new data key
                    BsonDocument.parse("{"
                            + "  properties: {"
                            + "    encryptedField: {"
                            + "      encrypt: {"
                            + "        keyId: [{"
                            + "          \"$binary\": {"
                            + "            \"base64\": \"" + base64DataKeyId + "\","
                            + "            \"subType\": \"04\""
                            + "          }"
                            + "        }],"
                            + "        bsonType: \"string\","
                            + "        algorithm: \"AEAD_AES_256_CBC_HMAC_SHA_512-Deterministic\""
                            + "      }"
                            + "    }"
                            + "  },"
                            + "  \"bsonType\": \"object\""
                            + "}"));
        }}).build();

Explicit Encryption and Decryption

Explicit encryption and decryption is a MongoDB community feature and does not use the mongocryptd process. Explicit encryption is provided by the ClientEncryption class. The full code snippet can be found in ClientSideEncryptionExplicitEncryptionAndDecryptionTour.java:

// This would have to be the same master key as was used to create the encryption key
final byte[] localMasterKey = new byte[96];
new SecureRandom().nextBytes(localMasterKey);

Map<String, Map<String, Object>> kmsProviders = new HashMap<String, Map<String, Object>>() {{
    put("local", new HashMap<String, Object>() {{
        put("key", localMasterKey);
    }});
}};

MongoClientSettings clientSettings = MongoClientSettings.builder().build();
MongoClient mongoClient = MongoClients.create(clientSettings);

// Set up the key vault for this example
MongoNamespace keyVaultNamespace = new MongoNamespace("encryption.testKeyVault");
MongoCollection<Document> keyVaultCollection = mongoClient
    .getDatabase(keyVaultNamespace.getDatabaseName())
    .getCollection(keyVaultNamespace.getCollectionName());
keyVaultCollection.drop();

// Ensure that two data keys cannot share the same keyAltName.
keyVaultCollection.createIndex(Indexes.ascending("keyAltNames"),
        new IndexOptions().unique(true)
           .partialFilterExpression(Filters.exists("keyAltNames")));

MongoCollection<Document> collection = mongoClient.getDatabase("test").getCollection("coll");
collection.drop(); // Clear old data

// Create the ClientEncryption instance
ClientEncryptionSettings clientEncryptionSettings = ClientEncryptionSettings.builder()
        .keyVaultMongoClientSettings(MongoClientSettings.builder()
                .applyConnectionString(new ConnectionString("mongodb://localhost"))
                .build())
        .keyVaultNamespace(keyVaultNamespace.getFullName())
        .kmsProviders(kmsProviders)
        .build();

ClientEncryption clientEncryption = ClientEncryptions.create(clientEncryptionSettings);

BsonBinary dataKeyId = clientEncryption.createDataKey("local", new DataKeyOptions());

// Explicitly encrypt a field
BsonBinary encryptedFieldValue = clientEncryption.encrypt(new BsonString("123456789"),
        new EncryptOptions("AEAD_AES_256_CBC_HMAC_SHA_512-Deterministic").keyId(dataKeyId));

collection.insertOne(new Document("encryptedField", encryptedFieldValue));

Document doc = collection.find().first();
System.out.println(doc.toJson());

// Explicitly decrypt the field
BsonString decryptedFieldValue = clientEncryption.decrypt(
    new BsonBinary(doc.get("encryptedField", Binary.class).getData())).asString();
System.out.println(decryptedFieldValue.getValue());

Explicit Encryption and Auto Decryption

Although automatic encryption requires MongoDB 4.2 enterprise or a MongoDB 4.2 Atlas cluster, automatic decryption is supported for all users. To configure automatic decryption without automatic encryption set bypassAutoEncryption(true). The full code snippet can be found in ClientSideEncryptionExplicitEncryptionOnlyTour.java:

...
MongoClientSettings clientSettings = MongoClientSettings.builder()
    .autoEncryptionSettings(AutoEncryptionSettings.builder()
            .keyVaultNamespace(keyVaultNamespace.getFullName())
            .kmsProviders(kmsProviders)
            .bypassAutoEncryption(true)
            .build())
    .build();
MongoClient mongoClient = MongoClients.create(clientSettings);

...

// Explicitly encrypt a field
BsonBinary encryptedFieldValue = clientEncryption.encrypt(new BsonString("123456789"),
        new EncryptOptions("AEAD_AES_256_CBC_HMAC_SHA_512-Deterministic").keyId(dataKeyId));

collection.insertOne(new Document("encryptedField", encryptedFieldValue));

// Automatically decrypts the encrypted field.
Document doc = collection.find().first();
System.out.println(doc.toJson());
System.out.println(doc.get("encryptedField"));