Contents

Configuration

pgsodium can be used in two ways:

  • either as a "pure" library extension with no server managed keys that you can load into your SQL session at any time with the LOAD command

  • "preload" mode where you place pgsodium in your postgres server's shared_preload_libraries configuration variable.

If you add pgsodium to your shared_preload_libraries configuration and place a special script in your postgres shared extension directory, the server can preload a libsodium key on server start. This root secret key cannot be accessed from SQL. The only way to use the server secret key is to derive other keys from it using derive_key() or use the key_id variants of the API that take key ids and contexts instead of raw bytea keys.

Server managed keys are completely optional, pgsodium can still be used without putting it in shared_preload_libraries, but you will need to provide your own key management.

See the file ../getkey_scripts/pgsodium_getkey_urandom.sh for an example script that returns a libsodium key using the linux /dev/urandom CSPRNG.

pgsodium also comes with example scripts for:

Next place pgsodium in your shared_preload_libraries. For docker containers, you can append this after the run:

docker run -d ... -c 'shared_preload_libraries=pgsodium'

When the server starts, it will load the secret key into memory, but this key is never accessible to SQL. It's possible that a sufficiently clever malicious superuser can access the key by invoking external programs, causing core dumps, looking in swap space, or other attack paths beyond the scope of pgsodium. Databases that work with encryption and keys should be extra cautious and use as many process hardening mitigations as possible.

It is up to you to edit the get key script to get or generate the key however you want. pgsodium can be used to generate a new random key with select encode(randombytes_buf(32), 'hex'). Other common patterns including prompting for the key on boot, fetching it from an ssh server or managed cloud secret system, or using a command line tool to get it from a hardware security module.

You can specify the location of the get key script with a database configuration variable in either postgresql.conf or using ALTER SYSTEM:

pgsodium.getkey_script = 'path_to_script'