Boundary
Please note: We take Boundary's security and our users' trust very
seriously. If you believe you have found a security issue in Boundary,
please responsibly disclose by contacting us at
security@hashicorp.com.
Boundary provides simple and secure access to hosts and services.
Traditional approaches like SSH bastion hosts or VPNs require distributing and managing
credentials, configuring network controls like firewalls, and exposing the private
network. Boundary provides a secure way to access hosts and critical systems without
having to manage credentials or expose your network, and is entirely open source.
Boundary is designed to be straightforward to understand, highly scalable, and
resilient. It can run in clouds, on-prem, secure enclaves and more, and does not require
an agent to be installed on every end host.
Unlike firewalls, Boundary performs per-access authentication and
authorization checks, allowing for much higher level mappings of users to
services or hosts than at network layers. Although complementary to secrets
managers (like HashiCorp's own Vault),
Boundary fills a different niche, allowing the credential that is eventually
used to be hidden entirely from the user.
Getting Started
Boundary consists of two server components: Controllers, which serve the API
and coordinate session requests; and Workers, which perform the actual session
handling. A normal Boundary installation will consist of one or more
Controllers paired with one or more Workers. A single Boundary binary can act
in either of these two modes.
Additionally, Boundary provides a client that provides access to request and
connect to authorized sessions.
Boundary does not require software to be installed on the endpoint hosts
and services.
Requirements
Boundary has two external dependencies: a SQL database, and one or more
KMSes. Both are readily available from cloud vendors, but can be satisfied by
on-premises technologies as well.
-
The database contains Boundary's configuration and session information and
must be accessible by Controller nodes. Values that are secrets (such as
credentials) are encrypted in the database. Currently, PostgreSQL is supported
as a database and has been tested with Postgres 11 and above. Boundary uses
only common extensions and both hosted and self-run instances are supported.
In most instances all that is needed is a database endpoint and appropriate
credentials. -
Any cloud KMS or Vault's Transit Secrets Engine can be used to satisfy the KMS
requirement. Currently, two keys within the KMS are required: one for
authenticating other cluster components, which must be accessible by both
Controllers and Workers; and one for encrypting secret values in the database,
which need only be accessible to Controllers. These keys can be changed over
time (so long as the original key remains available for any decryption needs),
and key derivation is used extensively to avoid key sprawl of these high-value
keys. If available, other keys can be used for other purposes, such as
recovery functionality and encryption of sensitive values in Boundary's config
file.
Boundary has a dev
mode that can be used for testing. In this mode both a
Controller and Worker are started with a single command, and they have the
following properties:
- The Controller will start a PostgreSQL Docker container to use as storage.
This container will be shut down and removed (if possible) when the
Controller is (gracefully) shut down. - The Controller will use an internal KMS with ephemeral keys
Trying out Boundary
Running Boundary in a more permanent context requires a few more steps, such
as writing some simple configuration files to tell the nodes how to reach their
database and KMS. The steps below, along with the extra information needed
for permanent installations, are detailed in our Installation Guide.
Build and Start Boundary in Dev Mode
If you have the following requirements met locally:
- Golang v1.14 or greater
- Docker
You can get up and running with Boundary quickly. Simply run:
make dev
This will build Boundary. (The first time this is run it will fetch and compile
UI assets; which will take a few extra minutes.) Once complete, run Boundary in
dev
mode:
./$GOPATH/bin/boundary dev
Please note that building the UI requires go-bindata
; the easiest way to install
Boundary's dependent tools is to simply run:
make tools
Without doing so, you may encounter errors while running make dev
. It is important
to also note that using make tools
will install various tools used for Boundary
development to the normal Go binary directory; this may overwrite or take precedence
over tools that might already be installed on the system.
Specify a UI Commitish at Build Time
By default the UI will be built from a preselected commit ID from the UI
repo. A different commitish from
which to build UI assets may be specified via the UI_COMMITISH environment
variable. For example:
UI_COMMITISH=feature-branch make build-ui
will update your local UI assets.
UI Build Troubleshooting
UI assets are built within a Docker container. If you encounter issues with
this build step, trying increasing memory and swap available to Docker.
UI Development
It would be impractical to rebuild the binary on every change when actively
developing the UI. To make UI development more convenient, the binary supports a
passthrough directory. This is an arbitrary local directory from which UI
assets are served. Note this option is only available in dev mode. For example:
BOUNDARY_DEV_PASSTHROUGH_DIRECTORY=/boundary-ui/ui/core/dist ~/go/bin/boundary dev
Download and Run from Release Page
Download the latest release of the server binary and appropriate desktop
client(s) from our releases page
Start Boundary
Start the server binary with:
boundary dev
This will start a Controller service listening on http://127.0.0.1:9200
for
incoming API requests and a Worker service listening on http://127.0.0.1:9202
for incoming session requests. It will also create various default resources and
display various useful pieces of information, such as a login name and password
that can be used to authenticate.
Configuring Resources
For a simple test of Boundary in dev
mode you don't generally need to
configure any resources at all! But it's useful to understand what dev
mode
did for you so you can then take further steps. By default, dev
mode will
create:
- The
global
Scope for initial authentication, containing a Password-type
Auth Method, along with an Account for login. - An organization Scope under
global
, and a project Scope inside the
organization. - A Host Catalog with a default Host Set, which itself contains a Host with the
address of the local machine (127.0.0.1
) - A Target mapping the Host Set to a set of connection parameters, with a
default port of22
(e.g. SSH)
You can of course go into Boundary's web UI or use its API to change these
default values, for instance if you want to connect to a different host or need
to modify the port on which to to connect.
Making the Connection
Next, let's actually make a connection to your local SSH daemon via Boundary:
- Authenticate to Boundary; using default
dev
values, this would beboundary authenticate password -auth-method-id ampw_1234567890 -login-name admin -password password
. (Note that if you do not include thepassword
flag you
will be prompted for it.) - Run
boundary connect ssh -target-id ttcp_1234567890
. If you want to adjust
the username, pass-username <name>
to the command.
A lot more is possible with Boundary, even at this early stage. Check out the
possibilities for target configuration to test out limiting (or increasing) the
number of connections per session or setting a maximum time limit; try canceling
an active session from the sessions page or via boundary sessions
, make your
own commands with boundary connect -exec
, and so on.
Going Further
This example is a simple way to get started but omits several key steps that
could be taken in a production context:
- Using a firewall or other means to restrict the set of hosts allowed to
connect to a local service to only Boundary Worker nodes, thereby making
Boundary the only means of ingress to a host - Using the Boundary Terraform provider to easily integrate Boundary with your
existing code-based infrastructure - Pointing a BI tool (PowerBI, Tableau, etc.) at Boundary's session warehouse to
generate insights and look for anomalies with respect to session access
There are many, many more things that Boundary will do in the future in terms of
integrations, features, and more. We have a long roadmap planned out, so stay
tuned for information about new features and capabilities!