New in version 4.2.
KeyVault.createKey(keyManagementService, customerMasterKey, ["keyAltName"])Adds a data encryption key to the key vault associated to the database connection. Client-side field level encryption uses data encryption keys for supporting encryption and decryption of field values.
createKey()has the following syntax:keyVault = db.getMongo().getKeyVault() keyVault.createKey( keyManagementService, customerMasterKey, [ "keyAltName" ] ) ParameterTypeDescriptionkeyManagementServicestring
Required
The Key Management Service (KMS) to use for retrieving the Customer Master Key (CMK). Accepts the following parameters:
awsfor Amazon Web Services KMS. Requires specifying a Customer Master Key (CMK) string forcustomerMasterKey.azurefor Azure Key Vault. Requires specifying a Customer Master Key (CMK) document forcustomerMasterKey.New in version 4.4.5.
gcpfor Google Cloud Platform KMS. Requires specifying a Customer Master Key (CMK) document forcustomerMasterKey.New in version 4.4.5.
localfor a locally managed key.
If the
database connectionwas not configured with the specified KMS, data encryption key creation fails.customerMasterKeystring or document
The Customer Master Key (CMK) to use for encrypting the data encryption key. Required if
keyManagementServiceisaws,azure, orgcp.Provide the CMK as follows depending on your KMS provider:
For the Amazon Web Services KMS, specify the full Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the master key as a single string.
For the Azure Key Vault KMS, specify a document containing the following key value pairs:
keyName- The Azure Key Vault NamekeyVaultEndpoint- The DNS name of the Azure Key Vault to usekeyVersion- Optional. The version of the key specified inkeyName, if applicable
New in version 4.4.5.
For the Google Cloud Platform KMS, specify a document containing the following key value pairs:
projectId- The GCP project namelocation- The location of the KMS keyringkeyRing- The name of the KMS keyring (often 'global')keyName- The name of the key to usekeyVersion- Optional. The version of the key specified inkeyName, if applicable
New in version 4.4.5.
createKey()requests that the KMS encrypt the data encryption key material using the specified CMK. If the CMK does not exist or if theClientSideFieldLevelEncryptionOptionsconfiguration does not have sufficient privileges to use the CMK,createKey()returns an error.Changed in version 4.2.3: This parameter has no effect if
keyManagementServiceislocaland can be safely omitted. Prior to MongoDB 4.2.3, ifkeyManagementServiceislocalthis parameter must be an empty string".keyAltNamearray of strings
Optional
The alternative name for the data encryption key. Use
keyAltNameto improve findability of a specific data encryption key, or as an analog to a comment.The
getKeyVault()method automatically creates a unique index on thekeyAltNamesfield with a partial index filter for only documents wherekeyAltNamesexists.Returns: The UUIDunique identifier of the created data encryption key.
Behavior
Requires Configuring Client-Side Field Level Encryption on Database Connection
The mongo client-side field level encryption methods
require a database connection with client-side field level encryption
enabled. If the current database connection was not initiated with
client-side field level encryption enabled, either:
Use the
Mongo()constructor from themongoshell to establish a connection with the required client-side field level encryption options. TheMongo()method supports the following Key Management Service (KMS) providers for Customer Master Key (CMK) management:or
Use the
mongoshell command line options to establish a connection with the required options. The command line options only support the Amazon Web Services KMS provider for CMK management.
Example
The following example is intended for rapid evaluation of
client-side field level encryption. For specific examples of using
KeyVault.createKey() with each supported
KMS provider, see
Create a Data Encryption Key.
Configuring client-side field level encryption for a locally
managed key requires specifying a base64-encoded 96-byte
string with no line breaks. The following operation generates
a key that meets the stated requirements and loads it into
the mongo shell:
TEST_LOCAL_KEY=$(echo "$(head -c 96 /dev/urandom | base64 | tr -d '\n')") mongo --nodb --shell --eval "var TEST_LOCAL_KEY='$TEST_LOCAL_KEY'"
Create the client-side field level encryption object using the generated local key string:
var ClientSideFieldLevelEncryptionOptions = { "keyVaultNamespace" : "encryption.__dataKeys", "kmsProviders" : { "local" : { "key" : BinData(0, TEST_LOCAL_KEY) } } }
Use the Mongo() constructor to create a database connection
with the client-side field level encryption options. Replace the
mongodb://myMongo.example.net URI with the connection string
URI of the target cluster.
encryptedClient = Mongo( "mongodb://myMongo.example.net:27017/?replSetName=myMongo", ClientSideFieldLevelEncryptionOptions )
Retrieve the keyVault object and
use the KeyVault.createKey() method to
create a new data encryption key using the locally managed key:
keyVault = encryptedClient.getKeyVault() keyVault.createKey("local", ["data-encryption-key"])
If successful, createKey() returns the UUID of
the new data encryption key. To retrieve the new data encryption
key document from the key vault, either:
Use
getKey()to retrieve the created key byUUID.-or-
Use
getKeyByAltName()to retrieve the key by its alternate name.