Use customer-managed encryption keys

By default, Dataflow encrypts customer content at rest. Dataflow handles encryption for you without any additional actions on your part. This option is called Google default encryption.

If you want to control your encryption keys, then you can use customer-managed encryption keys (CMEKs) in Cloud KMS with CMEK-integrated services including Dataflow. Using Cloud KMS keys gives you control over their protection level, location, rotation schedule, usage and access permissions, and cryptographic boundaries. Using Cloud KMS also lets you track key usage, view audit logs, and control key life cycles. Instead of Google owning and managing the symmetric key encryption keys (KEKs) that protect your data, you control and manage these keys in Cloud KMS.

After you set up your resources with CMEKs, the experience of accessing your Dataflow resources is similar to using Google default encryption. For more information about your encryption options, see Customer-managed encryption keys (CMEK).

You can create a batch or streaming pipeline that is protected with a CMEK or access CMEK-protected data in sources and sinks.

Cloud KMS quotas and Dataflow

When you use CMEK in Dataflow, your projects can consume Cloud KMS cryptographic requests quotas. For example, Dataflow pipelines can consume these quotas when your pipeline accesses CMEK-protected data in sources and sinks or when the state of a CMEK-encrypted pipeline is retrieved. For more information, see the Encryption of pipeline state locations section in this page.

Encryption and decryption operations using CMEK keys affect Cloud KMS quotas in these ways:

  • For software CMEK keys generated in Cloud KMS, no Cloud KMS quota is consumed.
  • For hardware CMEK keys—sometimes called Cloud HSM keys—encryption and decryption operations count against Cloud HSM quotas in the project that contains the key.
  • For external CMEK keys—sometimes called Cloud EKM keys—encryption and decryption operations count against Cloud EKM quotas in the project that contains the key.

For more information, see Cloud KMS quotas.

Support and limitations

  • Cloud KMS is supported in the following Apache Beam SDK versions:

    • Java SDK versions 2.13.0 and later
    • Python SDK versions 2.13.0 and later
    • Go SDK versions 2.40.0 and later
  • Cloud KMS with Dataflow supports regional keys. If you override the worker region or zone of the pipeline to use a region other than the one associated with your keys, regional keys don't work.

  • The region for your CMEK and the region for your Dataflow job must be the same.

  • Multi-region and global locations are not supported. You can't use global and multi-regional keys with Dataflow pipelines.

Encryption of pipeline state artifacts

Data that a Dataflow pipeline reads from user-specified data sources is encrypted, except for the data keys that you specify for key-based transforms in streaming jobs.

For batch jobs, all data, including data keys that you specify for key-based transforms, is always protected by CMEK encryption.

For streaming jobs created after March 7, 2024, all user data is encrypted with CMEK.

For streaming jobs created before March 7, 2024, data keys used in key-based operations, such as windowing, grouping, and joining, are not protected by CMEK encryption. To enable this encryption for your jobs, drain or cancel the job, and then restart it.

Job metadata is not encrypted with Cloud KMS keys. Job metadata includes the following:

  • User-supplied data, such as Job Names, Job Parameter values, and Pipeline Graph
  • System-generated data, such as Job IDs and IP addresses of workers

Encryption of pipeline state locations

The following storage locations are protected with Cloud KMS keys:

  • Persistent Disks attached to Dataflow workers and used for Persistent Disk-based shuffle and streaming state storage.
  • Dataflow Shuffle state for batch pipelines.
  • Cloud Storage buckets that store temporary export or import data. Dataflow only supports default keys set by the user on the bucket level.
  • Cloud Storage buckets used to store binary files containing pipeline code. Dataflow only supports default keys set by the user on the bucket level.
  • Cloud Storage buckets used to store sampled pipeline data, when data sampling is enabled.
  • Dataflow Streaming Engine state for streaming pipelines.

External keys

You can use Cloud External Key Manager (Cloud EKM) to encrypt data within Google Cloud using external keys that you manage.

When you use a Cloud EKM key, Google has no control over the availability of your externally managed key. If the key becomes unavailable during the job or pipeline creation period, your job or pipeline is canceled.

For more considerations when using external keys, see Cloud External Key Manager.

Before you begin

  1. Verify that you have the Apache Beam SDK for Java 2.13.0 or later, the Apache Beam SDK for Python 2.13.0 or later, or the Apache Beam SDK for Go 2.40.0 or later.

    For more information, see Installing the Apache Beam SDK.

  2. Decide whether you're going to run Dataflow and Cloud KMS in the same Google Cloud project or in different projects. This page uses the following convention:

    • PROJECT_ID is the project ID of the project that is running Dataflow.
    • PROJECT_NUMBER is the project number of the project that is running Dataflow.
    • KMS_PROJECT_ID is the project ID of the project that is running Cloud KMS.

    For information about Google Cloud project IDs and project numbers, see Identifying projects.

  3. On the Google Cloud project that you want to run Cloud KMS:

    1. Enable the Cloud KMS API.
    2. Create a key ring and a key as described in Creating symmetric keys. Cloud KMS and Dataflow are both regionalized services. The region for your CMEK and the region of your Dataflow job must be the same. Don't use global or multi-regional keys with your Dataflow pipelines. Instead, use regional keys.

Grant Encrypter/Decrypter permissions

  1. Assign the Cloud KMS CryptoKey Encrypter/Decrypter role to the Dataflow service account. This permission grants your Dataflow service account the permission to encrypt and decrypt with the CMEK you specify. If you use the Google Cloud console and the Create job from template page, this permission is granted automatically and you can skip this step.

    Use the Google Cloud CLI to assign the role:

    gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding KMS_PROJECT_ID \
    --member serviceAccount:service-PROJECT_NUMBER@dataflow-service-producer-prod.iam.gserviceaccount.com \
    --role roles/cloudkms.cryptoKeyEncrypterDecrypter

    Replace KMS_PROJECT_ID with the ID of your Google Cloud project that is running Cloud KMS, and replace PROJECT_NUMBER with the project number (not project ID) of your Google Cloud project that is running the Dataflow resources.

  2. Assign the Cloud KMS CryptoKey Encrypter/Decrypter role to the Compute Engine service account. This permission grants your Compute Engine service account the permission to encrypt and decrypt with the CMEK you specify.

    Use the Google Cloud CLI to assign the role:

    gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding KMS_PROJECT_ID \
    --member serviceAccount:service-PROJECT_NUMBER@compute-system.iam.gserviceaccount.com \
    --role roles/cloudkms.cryptoKeyEncrypterDecrypter

    Replace KMS_PROJECT_ID with the ID of your Google Cloud project that is running Cloud KMS, and replace PROJECT_NUMBER with the project number (not project ID) of your Google Cloud project that is running the Compute Engine resources.

Create a pipeline protected by Cloud KMS

When you create a batch or streaming pipeline, you can select a Cloud KMS key to encrypt the pipeline state. The pipeline state is the data that is stored by Dataflow in temporary storage.

Command-line interface

To create a new pipeline with pipeline state that is protected by a Cloud KMS key, add the relevant flag to the pipeline parameters. The following example demonstrates running a word count pipeline with Cloud KMS.

Java

Dataflow does not support creating default Cloud Storage paths for temporary files when using a Cloud KMS key. Specifying gcpTempLocation is required.

mvn compile exec:java -Dexec.mainClass=org.apache.beam.examples.WordCount \
  -Dexec.args="--inputFile=gs://dataflow-samples/shakespeare/kinglear.txt \
               --output=gs://STORAGE_BUCKET/counts \
               --runner=DataflowRunner --project=PROJECT_ID \
               --gcpTempLocation=gs://STORAGE_BUCKET/tmp \
               --dataflowKmsKey=KMS_KEY"
  -Pdataflow-runner

Python

Dataflow does not support creating default Cloud Storage paths for temporary files when using a Cloud KMS key. Specifying gcpTempLocation is required.

python -m apache_beam.examples.wordcount \
  --input gs://dataflow-samples/shakespeare/kinglear.txt \
  --output gs://STORAGE_BUCKET/counts \
  --runner DataflowRunner \
  --region HOST_GCP_REGION \
  --project PROJECT_ID \
  --temp_location gs://STORAGE_BUCKET/tmp/ \
  --dataflow_kms_key=KMS_KEY

Go

Dataflow does not support creating default Cloud Storage paths for temporary files when using a Cloud KMS key. Specifying gcpTempLocation is required.

wordcount
  --project HOST_PROJECT_ID \
  --region HOST_GCP_REGION \
  --runner dataflow \
  --staging_location gs://STORAGE_BUCKET/staging \
  --temp_location gs://STORAGE_BUCKET/temp \
  --input gs://dataflow-samples/shakespeare/kinglear.txt \
  --output gs://STORAGE_BUCKET/output \
  --dataflow_kms_key=KMS_KEY

Google Cloud console

  1. Open the Dataflow monitoring interface.
    Go to the Dataflow Web Interface
  2. Select Create job from template.
  3. In the Encryption section, select Customer-managed key.
The encryption options on the Create job from template page to use
              a Google-owned and Google-managed key or customer-managed keys.

The first time you attempt to run a job with a particular Cloud KMS key, your Compute Engine service account or Dataflow service account might not have been granted the permissions to encrypt and decrypt using that key. In this case, a warning message appears to prompt you to grant the permission to your service account.

Prompts to grant permissions to encrypt and decrypt on your
              Compute Engine and Dataflow service accounts using a
              particular CMEK.

Verify Cloud KMS key usage

You can verify whether your pipeline uses a Cloud KMS key using the Google Cloud console or the Google Cloud CLI.

Console

  1. Open the Dataflow monitoring interface.
    Go to the Dataflow Web Interface
  2. To view job details, select your Dataflow job.
  3. In the Job info side panel, to see the key type, check the Encryption type field.

    • For Encryption type: "Google-Managed key"
      Job info side panel listing the details of a Dataflow job.
      The type of key your job uses is listed in the Encryption type field.
    • For Encryption type: "Customer-Managed key"
      Job info side panel listing the details of a Dataflow job.
      The type of key your job uses is listed in the Encryption type field.

CLI

Run the describe command using the gcloud CLI:

gcloud dataflow jobs describe JOB_ID

Search for the line that contains serviceKmsKeyName. This information shows that a Cloud KMS key was used for Dataflow pipeline state encryption.

You can verify Cloud KMS key usage for encrypting sources and sinks by using the Google Cloud console pages and tools of those sources and sinks, including Pub/Sub, Cloud Storage, and BigQuery. You can also verify Cloud KMS key usage through viewing your Cloud KMS audit logs.

Disable or destroy the key

If for any reason you may need to disable or destroy the key, you can use the Google Cloud console. Both disable and destroy operations cancel the jobs using that key. This operation is permanent.

If you're using Cloud EKM, disable or destroy the key in your external key manager.

If you're using the Streaming Engine option, taking a snapshot of the job before disabling the key is recommended.

Remove Dataflow access to the Cloud KMS key

You can remove Dataflow access to the Cloud KMS key by using the following steps:

  1. Revoke Cloud KMS CryptoKey Encrypter/Decrypter role to the Dataflow service account using the Google Cloud console or the gcloud CLI.
  2. Revoke Cloud KMS CryptoKey Encrypter/Decrypter role to the Compute Engine service account using the Google Cloud console or the gcloud CLI.
  3. Optionally, you can also destroy the key version material to further prevent Dataflow and other services from accessing the pipeline state.

Although you can destroy the key version material, you cannot delete keys and key rings. Key rings and keys don't have billable costs or quota limitations, so their continued existence doesn't affect costs or production limits.

Dataflow jobs periodically validate whether the Dataflow service account can successfully use the given Cloud KMS key. If an encrypt or decrypt request fails, the Dataflow service halts all data ingestion and processing as soon as possible. Dataflow immediately begins cleaning up the Google Cloud resources attached to your job.

Use sources and sinks that are protected with Cloud KMS keys

Dataflow can access Google Cloud sources and sinks that are protected by Cloud KMS keys. If you're not creating new objects, you don't need to specify the Cloud KMS key of those sources and sinks. If your Dataflow pipeline might create new objects in a sink, you must define pipeline parameters. These parameters specify the Cloud KMS keys for that sink and pass this Cloud KMS key to appropriate I/O connector methods.

For Dataflow pipeline sources and sinks that don't support CMEK managed by Cloud KMS, the Dataflow CMEK settings are irrelevant.

Cloud KMS key permissions

When accessing services that are protected with Cloud KMS keys, verify that you have assigned the Cloud KMS CryptoKey Encrypter/Decrypter role to that service. The accounts are of the following form:

  • Cloud Storage: service-{project_number}@gs-project-accounts.iam.gserviceaccount.com
  • BigQuery: bq-{project_number}@bigquery-encryption.iam.gserviceaccount.com
  • Pub/Sub: service-{project_number}@gcp-sa-pubsub.iam.gserviceaccount.com

Cloud Storage

If you want to protect the temporary and staging buckets that you specified with the TempLocation/temp_location and stagingLocation/staging_location pipeline parameters, see setting up CMEK-protected Cloud Storage buckets.

BigQuery

Java

Use the with_kms_key() method on return values from BigQueryIO.readTableRows(), BigQueryIO.read(), BigQueryIO.writeTableRows(), and BigQueryIO.write().

You can find an example in the Apache Beam GitHub repository.

Python

Use the kms_key argument in BigQuerySource and BigQuerySink.

You can find an example in the Apache Beam GitHub repository.

Go

BigQuery IOs don't support using the kms key in Go.

Pub/Sub

Dataflow handles access to CMEK-protected topics by using your topic CMEK configuration.

To read from and write to CMEK-protected Pub/Sub topics, see Pub/Sub instructions for using CMEK.

Audit logging for Cloud KMS key usage

Dataflow enables Cloud KMS to use Cloud Audit Logs for logging key operations, such as encrypt and decrypt. Dataflow provides the job ID as context to a Cloud KMS caller. This ID lets you track each instance a specific Cloud KMS key is used for a Dataflow job.

Cloud Audit Logs maintains audit logs for each Google Cloud project, folder, and organization. You have several options for viewing your Cloud KMS audit logs.

Cloud KMS writes Admin Activity audit logs for your Dataflow jobs with CMEK encryption. These logs record operations that modify the configuration or metadata of a resource. You can't disable Admin Activity audit logs.

If explicitly enabled, Cloud KMS writes Data Access audit logs for your Dataflow jobs with CMEK encryption. Data Access audit logs contain API calls that read the configuration or metadata of resources. These logs also contain user-driven API calls that create, modify, or read user-provided resource data. For instructions on enabling some or all of your Data Access audit logs, go to Configuring data access Logs.

Pricing

You can use Cloud KMS encryption keys with Dataflow in all Dataflow regions where Cloud KMS is available.

This integration does not incur additional costs beyond the key operations, which are billed to your Google Cloud project. Each time the Dataflow service account uses your Cloud KMS key, the operation is billed at the rate of Cloud KMS key operations.

For more information, see Cloud KMS pricing details.

Troubleshooting

Use the suggestions in this section to troubleshoot errors.

Cloud KMS cannot be validated

Your workflow might fail with the following error:

Workflow failed. Causes: Cloud KMS key <key-name> cannot be validated.

To fix this issue, verify that you have passed the full key path. It looks like projects/<project-id>/locations/<gcp-region>/keyRings/<key-ring-name>/cryptoKeys/<key-name>. Look for possible typos in the key path.

Cloud KMS key permission denied

Your workflow might fail with the following error:

Workflow failed. Causes: Cloud KMS key Permission 'cloudkms.cryptoKeyVersions.useToEncrypt' denied on resource
'projects/<project-id>/locations/<gcp-region>/keyRings/<key-ring-name>/cryptoKeys/<key-name>' (or it may not exist). cannot be validated.

To fix this issue, verify that the project ID mentioned in the key path is correct. Also, check that you have the permission to use the key.

Cloud KMS key location doesn't match Dataflow job location

Your workflow might fail with the following error:

Workflow failed. Causes: Cloud KMS key projects/<project-id>/locations/<gcp-region>/keyRings/<key-ring-name>/cryptoKeys/<key-name>
can't protect resources for this job. Make sure the region of the KMS key matches the Dataflow region.

To fix this issue, if you're using a regional key, verify that the Cloud KMS key is in the same region as the Dataflow job.