Security

The two main security components you will use with the Python driver are Authentication and SSL.

Authentication

Versions 2.0 and higher of the driver support a SASL-based authentication mechanism. To use this authentication, set auth_provider to an instance of a subclass of AuthProvider. When working with Cassandra’s PasswordAuthenticator, you can use the PlainTextAuthProvider class.

For example, suppose Cassandra is setup with its default ‘cassandra’ user with a password of ‘cassandra’:

from dse.cluster import Cluster
from dse.auth import PlainTextAuthProvider

auth_provider = PlainTextAuthProvider(username='cassandra', password='cassandra')
cluster = Cluster(auth_provider=auth_provider, protocol_version=3)

Custom Authenticators

If you’re using something other than Cassandra’s PasswordAuthenticator, SaslAuthProvider is provided for generic SASL authentication mechanisms, utilizing the pure-sasl package. If these do not suit your needs, you may need to create your own subclasses of AuthProvider and Authenticator. You can use the Sasl classes as example implementations.

SSL

To enable SSL you will need to set Cluster.ssl_options to a dict of options. These will be passed as kwargs to ssl.wrap_socket() when new sockets are created. This should be used when client encryption is enabled in Cassandra.

By default, a ca_certs value should be supplied (the value should be a string pointing to the location of the CA certs file), and you probably want to specify ssl_version as ssl.PROTOCOL_TLSv1 to match Cassandra’s default protocol.

For example:

from dse.cluster import Cluster
from ssl import PROTOCOL_TLSv1

ssl_opts = {'ca_certs': '/path/to/my/ca.certs',
            'ssl_version': PROTOCOL_TLSv1}
cluster = Cluster(ssl_options=ssl_opts)

For further reading, Andrew Mussey has published a thorough guide on Using SSL with the DataStax Python driver.