Help Center/ Data Encryption Workshop/ Getting Started/ Getting Started with Common Practices
Updated on 2024-11-29 GMT+08:00

Getting Started with Common Practices

After completing basic operations such as creating keys, key pairs, and secrets, you can get started with common Data Encryption Workshop (DEW) practices as needed.

Table 1 Common practices

Practice

Description

Data protection

Encrypting and Decrypting Small Amounts of Data

You can use online tools on the Key Management Service (KMS) console or call the necessary KMS APIs to directly encrypt or decrypt small-size data with a Customer Master Key (CMK), such as passwords, certificates, or phone numbers.

Encrypting and Decrypting Large Amounts of Data

If you want to encrypt or decrypt large volumes of data, such as pictures, videos, and database files, you can use envelope encryption, which allows you to encrypt and decrypt files without having to transfer a large amount of data over the network.

Using the Encryption SDK to Encrypt and Decrypt Local Files

Encryption Software Development Kit (SDK) can encrypt and decrypt data and file streams. You can easily encrypt and decrypt massive amounts of data simply by calling APIs. If large files and images are sent to KMS through HTTPS for encryption, a large number of network resources will be consumed and the encryption will be slow. You can use the encryption SDK to encrypt and decrypt local files.

Encrypting and Decrypting Data Through Cross-region DR

If a fault occurs during encryption or decryption in a region, you can use KMS to implement cross-region DR encryption and decryption, ensuring service continuity.

Using KMS to Protect File Integrity

When a large amount of files (such as images, electronic insurance policies, and important files) need to be transmitted or stored securely, you can use KMS to sign the file digest. When the files are used again, you can recalculate the digest for signature verification. Ensure that files are not tampered with during transmission or storage.

Cloud services use KMS for encryption

Encryption in ECS

KMS supports one-click encryption for Elastic Cloud Server (ECS). The images and data disks of ECS can be encrypted.

  • When creating an ECS, if you select an encrypted image, the system disk of the created ECS automatically has encryption enabled, with its encryption mode same as the image encryption mode.
  • When creating an ECS, you can encrypt added data disks.

Encryption in OBS

When you enable server-side encryption in Object Storage Service (OBS):

  • An object uploaded to OBS is encrypted on the server before being stored.
  • When the object is downloaded, data is decrypted on the server first.

Server-side encryption with KMS-managed keys (SSE-KMS) can be implemented for the objects to be uploaded.

Encryption in EVS

In case your services require encryption for the data stored on disks, KMS is integrated with Elastic Volume Service (EVS). You can use the key provided by KMS to encrypt the disk.

Encryption in IMS

When creating a private image, you can select KMS encryption and use the key provided by KMS to encrypt the image, ensuring image data security.

Encrypting an RDS Database

After encryption is enabled, disk data will be encrypted and stored on the server when you create a Relational Database Service (RDS) database instance or expand disk capacity. When you download encrypted objects, the encrypted data will be decrypted on the server and displayed in plaintext.

Encrypting a DDS Database

After encryption is enabled, disk data will be encrypted and stored on the server when you create a Document Database Service (DDS) database instance or expand disk capacity. When you download encrypted objects, the encrypted data will be decrypted on the server first.

Secret encryption

Using CSMS to Change Hard-coded Database Account Passwords

Generally, the secrets used for access are embedded in applications. To update a secret, you need to create a secret and spend time updating your applications. CSMS is required to manage credentials more conveniently, efficiently, and securely.

Using CSMS to Prevent AK and SK Leakage

You can use Identity and Access Management (IAM) to obtain temporary access keys for ECS to protect AKs and SKs.

Using CSMS to Automatically Rotate Security Passwords

Use FunctionGraph and CSMS to generate, host, and rotate strong secure passwords periodically.

Rotating a Secret for a User

You can update the information of a user in a secret. This is the most commonly used secret rotation policy.

Rotating a Secret for Two Users

You can update the information of two users in a secret. To prevent access failures when changing the user password and updating the secret content, use the multi-user secret rotation policy to ensure high availability of applications.

Rotating IAM Secrets Using FunctionGraph

Use the function workflow template and CSMS to rotate IAM secrets.

API calling

Retrying Failed DEW Requests by Using Exponential Backoff

If you receive an error message when calling an API, you can use exponential backoff to retry the request.