Full path to a CSFLE shared library to be used (instead of mongocryptd).
This needs to be the path to the file itself, not a directory.
It can be an absolute or relative path. If the path is relative and
its first component is $ORIGIN
, it will be replaced by the directory
containing the mongodb-client-encryption native addon file. Otherwise,
the path will be interpreted relative to the current working directory.
Currently, loading different CSFLE shared library files from different MongoClients in the same process is not supported.
If this option is provided and no CSFLE shared library could be loaded from the specified location, creating the MongoClient will fail.
If this option is not provided and csfleRequired
is not specified,
the AutoEncrypter will attempt to spawn and/or use mongocryptd according
to the mongocryptd-specific extraOptions
options.
Specifying a path prevents mongocryptd from being used as a fallback.
If specified, never use mongocryptd and instead fail when the CSFLE shared library could not be loaded.
This is always true when csflePath
is specified.
If true, autoEncryption will not attempt to spawn a mongocryptd before connecting
Command line arguments to use when auto-spawning a mongocryptd
The path to the mongocryptd executable on the system
A local process the driver communicates with to determine how to encrypt values in a command. Defaults to "mongodb://%2Fvar%2Fmongocryptd.sock" if domain sockets are available or "mongodb://localhost:27020" otherwise
A MongoClient
used to fetch keys from a key vault
The namespace where keys are stored in the key vault
Configuration options that are used by specific KMS providers during key generation, encryption, and decryption.
Configuration options for using 'aws' as your KMS provider
The access key used for the AWS KMS provider
The secret access key used for the AWS KMS provider
An optional AWS session token that will be used as the X-Amz-Security-Token header for AWS requests.
Configuration options for using 'azure' as your KMS provider
The client ID to authenticate a registered application
The client secret to authenticate a registered application
If present, a host with optional port. E.g. "example.com" or "example.com:443". This is optional, and only needed if customer is using a non-commercial Azure instance (e.g. a government or China account, which use different URLs). Defaults to "login.microsoftonline.com"
The tenant ID identifies the organization for the account
Configuration options for using 'gcp' as your KMS provider
The service account email to authenticate
If present, a host with optional port. E.g. "example.com" or "example.com:443". Defaults to "oauth2.googleapis.com"
A PKCS#8 encrypted key. This can either be a base64 string or a binary representation
Configuration options for using 'kmip' as your KMS provider
The output endpoint string. The endpoint consists of a hostname and port separated by a colon. E.g. "example.com:123". A port is always present.
Configuration options for using 'local' as your KMS provider
The master key used to encrypt/decrypt data keys. A 96-byte long Buffer or base64 encoded string.
An optional hook to catch logging messages from the underlying encryption engine
A map of namespaces to a local JSON schema for encryption
NOTE: Supplying options.schemaMap provides more security than relying on JSON Schemas obtained from the server. It protects against a malicious server advertising a false JSON Schema, which could trick the client into sending decrypted data that should be encrypted. Schemas supplied in the schemaMap only apply to configuring automatic encryption for client side encryption. Other validation rules in the JSON schema will not be enforced by the driver and will result in an error.
The TLS options to use connecting to the KMS provider
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Allows the user to bypass auto encryption, maintaining implicit decryption