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Identify and tokenize sensitive data automatically using Cloud DLP and Dataflow

License: Apache License 2.0

Java 99.23% Shell 0.77%

auto-data-tokenize's Introduction

Automatic data tokenizing pipelines

codecov Language grade: Java Total alerts

This document discusses how to identify and tokenize data with an automated data transformation pipeline to detect sensitive data like personally identifiable information (PII), using Cloud Data Loss Prevention (Cloud DLP) and Cloud KMS. De-identification techniques like encryption lets you preserve the utility of your data for joining or analytics while reducing the risk of handling the data by obfuscating the raw sensitive identifiers.

To minimize the risk of handling large volumes of sensitive data, you can use an automated data transformation pipeline to create de-identified datasets that can be used for migrating from on-premise to cloud or keep a de-identified replica for Analytics. Cloud DLP can inspect the data for sensitive information when the dataset has not been characterized, by using more than 100 built-in classifiers.

One of the daunting challenges during data migration to cloud is to manage sensitive data. The sensitive data can be in structured forms like analytics tables or unstructured like chat history or transcription records. One needs to use Cloud DLP to identify sensitive data from both of these kinds of sources, followed by tokenizing the sensitive parts.

Tokenizing structured data can be optimized for cost and speed by using representative samples for each of the columns to categorize the kind of information, followed by bulk encryption of sensitive columns. This approach reduces cost of using Cloud DLP, by limiting the use to classification of a small representative sample, instead of all the records. The throughput and cost of tokenization can be optimized by using envelope encryption for columns classified as sensitive.

This document demonstrates a reference implementation of tokenizing structured data through two tasks: sample and identify, followed by bulk tokenization using encryption.

This document is intended for a technical audience whose responsibilities include data security, data processing, or data analytics. This guide assumes that you're familiar with data processing and data privacy, without the need to be an expert.

Watch the video to learn how the tool works:

Understand code Youtube video

Architecture

The solution comprises two pipelines (one for each of the tasks):

  1. Sample + Identify
  2. Tokenize

Sample & Identify Pipeline

Identify pipeline

The sample & identify pipeline extracts a few sample records from the source files. The identify part of pipeline then decomposes each sample record into columns to categorize them into one of the in-built infotypes or custom infotypes using Cloud DLP. The sample & identify pipeline outputs following files to Cloud Storage:

  • Avro schema of the file
  • Detected info-types for each of the input columns.

Tokenization Pipeline

Tokenization pipeline

The tokenize pipeline then encrypts the user-specified source columns using the schema information from the sample & identify pipeline and user provided enveloped data encryption key. The tokenizing pipeline performs following of transforms on each of the records in the source file:

  1. Unwrap data-encryption key using Cloud KMS
  2. un-nest each record into a flat record.
  3. tokenize required values using deterministic AEAD encryption.
  4. re-nest the flat record into Avro record
  5. Write Avro file with encrypted fields

Concepts

  • Envelope Encryption is a form of multi-layer encryption, involving use of multiple layers of keys for encrypting data. It is the process of encrypting the actual data encryption key with another key to secure the data-encryption key.

  • Cloud KMS provides easy management of encryption keys at scale.

  • Tink is an open-source library that provides easy and secure APIs for handling encryption/decryption. It reduces common crypto pitfalls with user-centered design, careful implementation and code reviews, and extensive testing. At Google, Tink is one of the standard crypto libraries, and has been deployed in hundreds of products and systems. Tink natively integrates with Cloud KMS for use with envelope encryption technique.

  • Deterministic AEAD encryption is used by to serve following purposes:

    1. Permits use of the cipher-text as join keys. The deterministic property of the cipher ensures that cipher-text for the same plain-text is always the same. Using this property one can safely use the encrypted data for performing statistical analysis like cardinality analysis, frequency analysis etc.
    2. store signed plain-text within the cipher to assert authenticity.
    3. reversibility, use of 2-way encryption algorithm permits reversing the algorithm to obtain original plain-text. Hashing does not permit such operations.
  • Cloud Data Loss Prevention is a Google Cloud service providing data classification, de-identification and re-identification features, allowing you to easily manage sensitive data in your enterprise.

  • Record Flattening is the process of converting nested/repeated records as flat table. Each leaf-node of the record gets a unique identifier. This flattening process enables sending data to DLP for identification purposes as the DLP API supports a simple data-table.

    Consider a contact record, for Jane Doe, it has a nested and repeated field contacts.

    {
       "name": "Jane Doe",
       "contacts": [
       {
          "type": "WORK",
          "number": 2124567890
       },
       {
          "type": "HOME",
          "number": 5304321234
       }
       ]
    }

    Flattening this record yields a FlatRecord with following data. Notice the values map, which demonstrates that each leaf node of the contact record is mapped using a JsonPath notation. The keySchema shows a mapping between the leaf value's key's to a schema key to demonstrate that leaf-nodes of same type share the same key-schema, for example: $.contacts[0].contact.number is logically same as $.contacts[1].contact.number as both of them have the same key-schema $.contacts.contact.number.

    {
       "values": {
        "$.name": "Jane Doe",
        "$.contacts[0].contact.type": "WORK",
        "$.contacts[0].contact.number": 2124567890,
        "$.contacts[1].contact.type": "WORK",
        "$.contacts[1].contact.number": 5304321234
       },
    
       "keySchema": {
        "$.name": "$.name",
        "$.contacts[0].contact.type": "$.contacts.contact.type",
        "$.contacts[0].contact.number": "$.contacts.contact.number",
        "$.contacts[1].contact.type": "$.contacts.contact.type",
        "$.contacts[1].contact.number": "$.contacts.contact.number"
       }
    }

Prerequisites

This tutorial assumes some familiarity with shell scripts and basic knowledge of Google Cloud.

Objectives

  1. Understand record sampling and identify sensitive columns using DLP.
  2. Use of symmetric encryption to tokenize data using KMS wrapped data-encryption key.

Costs

This tutorial uses billable components of Google Cloud, including the following:

Use the pricing calculator to generate a cost estimate based on your projected usage.

Before you begin

For this tutorial, you need a Google Cloud project. To make cleanup easiest at the end of the tutorial, we recommend that you create a new project for this tutorial.

  1. Create a Google Cloud project.

  2. Make sure that billing is enabled for your Google Cloud project.

  3. Open Cloud Shell.

    At the bottom of the Cloud Console, a Cloud Shell session opens and displays a command-line prompt. Cloud Shell is a shell environment with the Cloud SDK already installed, including the gcloud command-line tool, and with values already set for your current project. It can take a few seconds for the session to initialize.

  4. Enable APIs for Cloud DLP, Cloud KMS, Compute Engine, Cloud Storage, Dataflow and BigQuery services with the following command:

    gcloud services enable \
    dlp.googleapis.com \
    cloudkms.googleapis.com \
    compute.googleapis.com \
    storage.googleapis.com \
    dataflow.googleapis.com \
    bigquery.googleapis.com

Setting up your environment

  1. In Cloud Shell, clone the source repository and go to the directory for this tutorial:

    git clone https://github.com/GoogleCloudPlatform/auto-data-tokenize.git
    cd auto-data-tokenize/
  2. Use a text editor of your choice to modify the set_variables.sh file to set required environment variables.

    # The Google Cloud project to use for this tutorial
    export PROJECT_ID="<your-project-id>"
    
    # The Compute Engine region to use for running Dataflow jobs and create a
    # temporary storage bucket
    export REGION_ID="<compute-engine-region>"
    
    # define the GCS bucket to use as temporary bucket for Dataflow
    export TEMP_GCS_BUCKET="<name-of-the-bucket>"
    
    # Name of the service account to use (not the email address)
    export DLP_RUNNER_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_NAME="<service-account-name-for-runner>"
    
    # Name of the GCP KMS key ring name
    export KMS_KEYRING_ID="<key-ring-name>"
    
    # name of the symmetric Key encryption kms-key-id
    export KMS_KEY_ID="<key-id>"
    
    # The JSON file containing the TINK Wrapped data-key to use for encryption
    export WRAPPED_KEY_FILE="<path-to-the-data-encryption-key-file>"
  3. Run the script to set the environment variables:

    source set_variables.sh

Creating resources

The tutorial uses following resources

  • Service account to run data flow pipelines enabling fine-grain access control
  • A symmetric Cloud KMS managed Key Encryption key, this is used to wrap the actual data encryption key
  • Cloud Storage bucket for temporary data storage and test data

Create service accounts

We recommend that you run pipelines with fine-grained access control to improve access partitioning. If your project does not have a user-created service account, create one using following instructions.

You can use your browser by going to Service accounts in the Cloud Console.

  1. Create a service account to use as the user-managed controller service account for Dataflow:

    gcloud iam service-accounts create  ${DLP_RUNNER_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_NAME} \
    --project="${PROJECT_ID}" \
    --description="Service Account for Tokenizing pipelines." \
    --display-name="Tokenizing pipelines"
  2. Create a custom role with required permissions for accessing DLP, Dataflow and KMS:

    export TOKENIZING_ROLE_NAME="tokenizing_runner2"
    
    gcloud iam roles create ${TOKENIZING_ROLE_NAME} \
    --project=${PROJECT_ID} \
    --file=tokenizing_runner_permissions.yaml
  3. Apply the custom role to the service account:

    gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding ${PROJECT_ID} \
    --member="serviceAccount:${DLP_RUNNER_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL}" \
    --role=projects/${PROJECT_ID}/roles/${TOKENIZING_ROLE_NAME}
  4. Assign the dataflow.worker role to allow the service account to allow it to run as a Dataflow worker:

    gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding ${PROJECT_ID} \
    --member="serviceAccount:${DLP_RUNNER_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL}" \
    --role=roles/dataflow.worker

Create Key encryption key

The data would be encrypted using a Data Encryption Key (DEK). You will use envelope encryption technique to encrypt the DEK using a Key in Cloud KMS, this ensures that the DEK can be safely stored without compromising it.

  1. Create KMS Key-ring

    gcloud kms keyrings create --project ${PROJECT_ID} --location ${REGION_ID} ${KMS_KEYRING_ID}
  2. Create KMS symmetric key to use for encrypting your data encryption key.

    gcloud kms keys create --project ${PROJECT_ID} --keyring=${KMS_KEYRING_ID} --location=${REGION_ID} --purpose="encryption" ${KMS_KEY_ID}
  3. Download and unpack the latest version of Tinkey. Tinkey is an open source utility to create wrapped encryption keys.

    mkdir tinkey/
    tar zxf tinkey-<version>.tar.gz -C tinkey/
    export TINKEY="${PWD}/tinkey/tinkey"
    alias tinkey="${TINKEY}"
  4. Create a new wrapped data encryption key.

    tinkey create-keyset \
    --master-key-uri="${MAIN_KMS_KEY_URI}" \
    --key-template=AES256_SIV \
    --out="${WRAPPED_KEY_FILE}" \
    --out-format=json

Create Cloud Storage bucket

Create a Cloud Storage bucket for storing test data and Dataflow staging location.

gsutil mb -p ${PROJECT_ID} -l ${REGION_ID} "gs://${TEMP_GCS_BUCKET}"

Copy test data to Cloud Storage

You can use your own file datasets or copy the included demo dataset (userdata.avro or userdata.parquet).

gsutil cp userdata.avro gs://${TEMP_GCS_BUCKET}

Compile modules

You need to compile all the modules to build executables for deploying the sample & identify and bulk tokenize pipelines.

./gradlew clean buildNeeded shadowJar

Add -x test flag to skip running tests.

Run Sample and Identify pipeline

Run the sample & identify pipeline to identify sensitive columns in the data you need to tokenize.

The pipeline extracts sampleSize number of records, flattens the record and identifies sensitive columns using Data Loss Prevention (DLP). Cloud DLP provides functionality to identify sensitive information-types. The DLP identify methods supports only flat tables, hence the pipeline flattens the Avro/Parquet records as they can contain nested and/or repeated fields.

Launch sample & identify pipeline

sample_and_identify_pipeline --project="${PROJECT_ID}" \
--region="${REGION_ID}" \
--runner="DataflowRunner" \
--serviceAccount=${DLP_RUNNER_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL} \
--gcpTempLocation="gs://${TEMP_GCS_BUCKET}/temp" \
--stagingLocation="gs://${TEMP_GCS_BUCKET}/staging" \
--tempLocation="gs://${TEMP_GCS_BUCKET}/bqtemp" \
--workerMachineType="n1-standard-1" \
--sampleSize=500 \
--sourceType="AVRO" \
--inputPattern="gs://${TEMP_GCS_BUCKET}/userdata.avro" \
--reportLocation="gs://${TEMP_GCS_BUCKET}/dlp_report/"

Note: Use sampleSize=0 to process all records.

The pipeline supports multiple Source Types, use the following table to use the right combination of sourceType and inputPattern arguments.

Data source sourceType inputPattern
Avro file in Cloud Storage AVRO gs://<location of the file(s)
Parquet file in Cloud Storage PARQUET gs://<location of the file(s)
BigQuery table BIGQUERY_TABLE <project-id>:<dataset>.<table>
Query results in BigQuery BIGQUERY_QUERY BigQuery SQL statement in StandardSQL dialect.
Relational Databases (using JDBC) JDBC_TABLE [TABLE_NAME], use parameters jdbcConnectionUrl and jdbcDriverClass to specify the JDBC connection details. (Details)

The pipeline detects all the standard infotypes supported by DLP. Use --observableInfoTypes to provide additional custom info-types that you need.

Pipeline options for Sample, Identify and Tag pipeline (DlpSamplerPipelineOptions):

Sampling Pipeline Options Description
sourceType The data source to analyse/inspect. One of: [AVRO, PARQUET, BIGQUERY_TABLE, BIGQUERY_QUERY, JDBC_TABLE]
inputPattern The location of the datasource: for AVRO or PARQUET, the GCS file pattern to use as input.
For BIGQUERY_TABLE: Fully Qualified table name as {projectId}:{datasetId}.{tableId} format, for JDBC_TABLE, the name of the table.
sampleSize (Optional) The sample size to send to DLP. (Default:1000)
reportLocation (Optional) The GCS location to write the aggregated inspection results and the datasource's AVRO Schema. Atleast one of reportLocation or reportBigQueryTable must be specified.
reportBigQueryTable (Optional) The BigQuery table ({projectId}:{datasetId}.{tableId}) to write the aggregated inspection results, the table must exist. Atleast one of reportLocation or reportBigQueryTable must be specified.
observableInfoTypes (Optional) Provide a list of DLP InfoTypes to inspect the data with. Keeping EMPTY uses all DLP supported InfoTypes.
jdbcConnectionUrl The Connection URL used for connecting to a SQL datasource using JDBC. (Required when sourceType=JDBC_TABLE)
jdbcDriverClass The JDBC driver to use for reading from SQL datasource. (Required when sourceType=JDBC_TABLE)
jdbcFilterClause When using JDBC source, it is highly recommended to use a sampling filter to select random records, instead of fetching all the records from a relational database. The provided string is set as the WHERE clause of the query. (Optional when sourceType=JDBC_TABLE)
dataCatalogEntryGroupId The Entry Group Id (/projects/{projectId}/locations/{locationId}/entryGroups/{entryGroupId}) to create a new Entry for inspected datasource. Provide to enable pipeline to create new entry in DataCatalog with schema. (Not used for sourceType=BIGQUERY_TABLE)
dataCatalogInspectionTagTemplateId The Datacatalog TempalteId to use for creating the sensitivity tags.
dataCatalogForcedUpdate Force updates to Data Catalog Tags/Entry based on execution of this pipeline. (Default: false)

Sample & Identify pipeline DAG

The Dataflow execution DAG would look like following:

Sample and Identify Pipeline DAG

Retrieve report

The sample & identify pipeline outputs the Avro schema (or converted for Parquet) of the files and one file for each of the columns detected to contain sensitive information. Retrieve the report to your local machine to have a look.

mkdir -p dlp_report/ && rm dlp_report/*.json
gsutil -m cp "gs://${TEMP_GCS_BUCKET}/dlp_report/*.json" dlp_report/

List all the column names that have been identified.

cat dlp_report/col-*.json | jq .columnName

The output will match the following list.

"$.kylosample.birthdate"
"$.kylosample.cc"
"$.kylosample.email"
"$.kylosample.first_name"
"$.kylosample.ip_address"
"$.kylosample.last_name"

You can view the details of the identified column by issuing cat command for the file.

cat dlp_report/col-kylosample-cc-00000-of-00001.json

Following is a snippet of the cc column.

{
  "columnName": "$.kylosample.cc",
  "infoTypes": [
    {
      "infoType": "CREDIT_CARD_NUMBER",
      "count": "394"
    }
  ]
}

The "count" value will vary based on the randomly selected samples during execution.

Launch bulk tokenize pipeline

The sample & identify pipeline used few samples from the original dataset to identify sensitive information using DLP. The bulk tokenize pipeline processes the entire dataset and encrypts the desired columns using the provided Data Encryption Key (DEK).

tokenize_pipeline --project="${PROJECT_ID}" \
--region="${REGION_ID}" \
--runner="DataflowRunner" \
--tempLocation="gs://${TEMP_GCS_BUCKET}/bqtemp" \
--serviceAccount=${DLP_RUNNER_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL} \
--workerMachineType="n1-standard-1" \
--schema="$(<dlp_report/schema.json)" \
--tinkEncryptionKeySetJson="$(<${WRAPPED_KEY_FILE})" \
--mainKmsKeyUri="${MAIN_KMS_KEY_URI}" \
--sourceType="AVRO" \
--inputPattern="gs://${TEMP_GCS_BUCKET}/userdata.avro" \
--outputDirectory="gs://${TEMP_GCS_BUCKET}/encrypted/" \
--tokenizeColumns="$.kylosample.cc" \
--tokenizeColumns="$.kylosample.email"

Parameter reference:

The encryption pipeline supports two encryption modes:

Encryption Mode Parameter Parameter information
Fixed encryption --tinkEncryptionKeySetJson The wrapped encryption key details
--mainKmsKeyUri The KMS key used to wrap the tinkEncryption key.
In following format:
gcp-kms://projects/${PROJECT_ID}/locations/${REGION_ID}/keyRings/${KMS_KEYRING_ID}/cryptoKeys/${KMS_KEY_ID}
--tokenizeColumns One or more logical column names in JSONPath format
DLP De-identify --dlpEncryptConfigJson DlpEncryptConfig JSON to provide PrimitiveTransformation for each tokenizedColumn.
Use the sample configuration JSON for reference, and the transformation reference to understand each of the transformations.

The pipeline supports following destinations for storing the tokenized output.

Destination Description Pipeline parameter
File in Cloud Storage Stores as an AVRO file --outputDirectory=gs://<location of the directory/
BigQuery table uses WRITE_TRUNCATE mode to write results to a BigQuery Table. --outputBigQueryTable=<project-id>:<dataset>.<table>
You can use one or both of them simultaneously.

The pipeline executes asynchronously on Dataflow. You can check the progress by following the JobLink printed in the following format:

INFO: JobLink: https://console.cloud.google.com/dataflow/jobs/<your-dataflow-jobid>?project=<your-project-id>

The tokenize pipeline's DAG will look like following: Encrypting Pipeline DAG

Verify encrypted result

Load the bulk tokenize pipeline's output file(s) into BigQuery to verify that all the columns specified using tokenizeColumns flag have been encrypted.

  1. Create a BigQuery dataset for tokenized data Replace with a region of your choice. Ensure that BigQuery dataset region/multi-region is in the same region as the Cloud Storage bucket. You can read about considerations for batch loading data for more information.

    bq --location=<bigquery-region> \
    --project_id="${PROJECT_ID}" \
    mk --dataset tokenized_data
  2. Load tokenized data to a BigQuery table.

    bq load \
    --source_format=AVRO \
    --project_id="${PROJECT_ID}" \
    "tokenized_data.TokenizedUserdata" \
    "gs://${TEMP_GCS_BUCKET}/encrypted/*"
  3. Check some records to confirm that email and cc fields have been encrypted.

    bq query \
    --project_id="${PROJECT_ID}" \
    "SELECT first_name, encrypted_email, encrypted_cc FROM tokenized_data.TokenizedUserdata LIMIT 10"

Cleaning up

To avoid incurring charges to your Google Cloud account for the resources used in this tutorial, you can delete the project:

  1. In the Cloud Console, go to the Manage resources page.
  2. In the project list, select the project that you want to delete and then click Delete delete.
  3. In the dialog, type the project ID and then click Shut down to delete the project.

What's next

Disclaimer

License: Apache 2.0

This is not an official Google product.

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