Configure Starburst (Trino) Integration
The plugin comes pre-installed with Starburst Enterprise, so this page provides separate sets of guidelines for configuration:
- Starburst Cluster Configuration: These instructions are specific to Starburst Enterprise clusters.
- Trino Cluster Configuration: These instructions are specific to open-source Trino clusters.
Starburst Cluster Configuration
Requirement
A valid Starburst Enterprise license.
1 - Enable the Integration
- Click the App Settings icon in the left sidebar.
- Click the Integrations tab.
- Click Add Native Integration and select Trino from the Native Integration Type dropdown menu.
- Click Save.
OAuth Authentication
If you are using OAuth or asynchronous authentication to create Starburst (Trino) data sources, configure the
globalAdminUsername
property in the advanced configuration section of the Immuta app settings page.
- Click the App Settings page icon.
- Click Advanced Settings and scroll to Advanced Configuration.
-
Paste the following YAML configuration snippet in the text box, replacing the email address below with your admin username:
trino: globalAdminUsername: "admins@trino.com"
2 - Configure the Immuta System Access Control Plugin in Starburst
Default Configuration Property Values
If you use the default property values in the configuration file described in this section,
- you will give users read and write access to tables that are not registered in Immuta and
- results for
SHOW
queries will not be filtered on table metadata.
These default settings help ensure that a new Starburst integration installation is minimally disruptive for existing Starburst deployments, allowing you to then add Immuta data sources and update configuration to enforce more controls as you see fit.
However, the access-control.config-files
property can be configured to allow Immuta to work with
existing Starburst installations that have already configured an access control provider. For example, if
the Starburst integration is configured to allow users write access to tables that are not protected
by Immuta, you can still lock down write access for specific non-Immuta tables using an additional access
control provider.
-
Create the Immuta access control configuration file in the Starburst configuration directory (
/etc/starburst/immuta-access-control.properties
for Docker installations or<starburst_install_directory>/etc/immuta-access-control.properties
for standalone installations).The table below describes the properties that can be set during configuration.
Property Starburst version Required or optional Description access-control.name
392 and newer Required This property enables the integration. access-control.config-files
392 and newer Optional Starburst allows you to enable multiple system access control providers at the same time. To do so, add providers to this property as comma-separated values. Immuta has tested the Immuta system access control provider alongside the Starburst built-in access control system. This approach allows Immuta to work with existing Starburst installations that have already configured an access control provider. Immuta does not manage all permissions in Starburst and will default to allowing access to anything Immuta does not manage so that the Starburst integration complements existing controls. For example, if the Starburst integration is configured to allow users write access to tables that are not protected by Immuta, you can still lock down write access for specific non-Immuta tables using an additional access control provider. immuta.allowed.immuta.datasource.operations
413 and newer Optional This property defines a comma-separated list of allowed operations for users on Immuta data sources they are subscribed to: READ
,WRITE
, andOWN
. (See the Customize read and write access policies for Starburst (Trino) guide for details about theOWN
operation.) When set toWRITE
, all users granted access to a data source through a subscription policy are allowed read and write operations to data source schemas and tables. By default, this property is set toREAD
, which blocks write operations on data source tables and schemas. If write policies are enabled for your Immuta tenant, this property is set toREAD,WRITE
by default, so users granted write access to a data source through a write access subscription policy are allowed read and write operations to data source schemas and tables.immuta.allowed.non.immuta.datasource.operations
392 and newer Optional This property defines a comma-separated list of allowed operations users will have on tables not registered as Immuta data sources: READ
,WRITE
,CREATE
, andOWN
. (See the Customize read and write access policies for Starburst (Trino) guide for details aboutCREATE
andOWN
operations.) When set toREAD
, users are allowed read operations on tables not registered as Immuta data sources. When set toWRITE
, users are allowed read and write operations on tables not registered as Immuta data sources. If this property is left empty, users will not get access to any tables outside Immuta. By default, this property is set toREAD,WRITE
. If write policies are enabled for your Immuta tenant, this property is set toREAD,WRITE,OWN,CREATE
by default.immuta.apikey
392 and newer Required This should be set to the Immuta API key displayed when enabling the integration on the app settings page. immuta.ca-file
392 and newer Optional This property allows you to specify a path to your CA file. immuta.cache.views.seconds
392 and newer Optional Amount of time in seconds for which a user's specific representation of an Immuta data source will be cached for. Changing this will impact how quickly policy changes are reflected for users actively querying Starburst. By default, cache expires after 30 seconds. immuta.cache.datasource.seconds
392 and newer Optional Amount of time in seconds for which a user's available Immuta data sources will be cached for. Changing this will impact how quickly data sources will be available due to changing projects or subscriptions. By default, cache expires after 30 seconds. immuta.endpoint
392 and newer Required The protocol and fully qualified domain name (FQDN) for the Immuta instance used by Starburst (for example, https://my.immuta.instance.io
). This should be set to the endpoint displayed when enabling the integration on the app settings page.immuta.filter.unallowed.table.metadata
392 and newer Optional When set to false, Immuta won't filter unallowed table metadata, which helps ensure Immuta remains noninvasive and performant. If this property is set to true, running show catalogs
, for example, will reflect what that user has access to instead of returning all catalogs. By default, this property is set to false.immuta.group.admin
420 and newer Required if immuta.user.admin
is not setThis property identifies the Starburst group that is the Immuta administrator. The users in this group will not have Immuta policies applied to them. Therefore, data sources should be created by users in this group so that they have access to everything. Note that you must escape regex special characters (for example, john\\.doe+svcacct@immuta\\.com
).immuta.user.admin
392 and newer Required if immuta.group.admin
is not setThis property identifies the Starburst user who is an Immuta administrator (for example, immuta.user.admin=immuta_system_account
). This user will not have Immuta policies applied to them because this account will run the subqueries. Therefore, data sources should be created by this user so that they have access to everything. Note that you must escape regex special characters (for example,john\\.doe+svcacct@immuta\\.com
).TLS Certificate Generation
If you provided your own TLS certificates during Immuta installation, you must ensure that the hostname in your certificate matches the hostname specified in the Starburst (Trino) configuration.
If you did not provide your own TLS certificates, Immuta generated these certificates for you during installation. See notes about your specific deployment method below for details.
- Kubernetes Deployment: Immuta
generates a local certificate authority (CA) that signs certificates for each service by default. Ensure that the
externalHostname
you specified in the Immuta Enterprise Helm chart matches the Immuta hostname name specified in the Starburst (Trino) configuration.
If the hostnames in your certificate don't match the hostname specified in your Starburst (Trino) integration, you can set
immuta.disable-hostname-verification
totrue
in the Immuta access control config file to get the integration working in the interim.The Starburst (Trino) integration uses the
immuta.ca-file
property to communicate with Immuta. When configuring the plugin in Starburst (outlined below), specify a path to your CA file using theimmuta.ca-file
property in the Immuta access control configuration file. - Kubernetes Deployment: Immuta
generates a local certificate authority (CA) that signs certificates for each service by default. Ensure that the
-
Enable the Immuta access control plugin in Starburst's configuration file (
/etc/starburst/config.properties
for Docker installations or<starburst_install_directory>/etc/config.properties
for standalone installations). For example,access-control.config-files=/etc/starburst/immuta-access-control.properties
Example Immuta System Access Control Configuration
The example configuration snippet below uses the default configuration settings for immuta.allowed.immuta.datasource.operations
and immuta.allowed.non.immuta.datasource.operations
, which allow read access for data registered as Immuta data sources and read and write access on data that is not registered in Immuta. See the Granting Starburst (Trino) privileges section for details about customizing and enforcing read and write access controls in Starburst.
# Enable the Immuta System Access Control (v2) implementation.
access-control.name=immuta
# The Immuta endpoint that was displayed when enabling the Starburst integration in Immuta.
immuta.endpoint=http://service.immuta.com:3000
# The Immuta API key that was displayed when enabling the Starburst integration in Immuta.
immuta.apikey=45jdljfkoe82b13eccfb9c
# The administrator user regex. Starburst usernames matching this regex will not be subject to
# Immuta policies. This regex should match the user name provided at Immuta data source
# registration.
immuta.user.admin=immuta_system_account
# Optional argument (default is shown).
# A CSV list of operations allowed on schemas/tables registered as Immuta data sources.
immuta.allowed.immuta.datasource.operations=READ
# Optional argument (default is shown).
# A CSV list of operations allowed on schemas/tables not registered as Immuta data sources.
# Set to empty to allow no operations on non-Immuta data sources.
immuta.allowed.non.immuta.datasource.operations=READ,WRITE
# Optional argument (default is shown).
# Controls table metadata filtering for inaccessible tables.
# - When this property is enabled and non-Immuta reads are also enabled, a user performing
# 'show catalogs/schemas/tables' will not see metadata for a table that is registered as
# an Immuta data source but the user does not have access to through Immuta.
# - When this property is enabled and non-Immuta reads and writes are disabled, a user
# performing 'show catalogs/schemas/tables' will only see metadata for tables that the
# user has access to through Immuta.
# - When this property is disabled, a user performing 'show catalogs/schemas/tables' can see
# all metadata.
immuta.filter.unallowed.table.metadata=false
3 - Add Starburst Users to Immuta
- Configure your external IAM to add users to Immuta.
- Map their Starburst usernames when configuring your IAM
(or map usernames manually) to Immuta.
- All Starburst users must map to Immuta users or match the
immuta.user.admin
regex configured on the cluster, and their Starburst username must be mapped to Immuta so they can query policy-enforced data. - A user impersonating a different user in Starburst requires the IMPERSONATE_USER permission in Immuta.
Both users must be mapped to an Immuta user, or the querying user must match the configured
immuta.user.admin
regex.
- All Starburst users must map to Immuta users or match the
Trino Cluster Configuration
1 - Enable the Integration
- Click the App Settings icon in the left sidebar.
- Click the Integrations tab.
- Click Add Native Integration and select Trino from the dropdown menu.
- Click Save.
OAuth Authentication
If you are using OAuth or asynchronous authentication to create Starburst (Trino) data sources, configure the
globalAdminUsername
property in the advanced configuration section of the Immuta app settings page.
- Click the App Settings page icon.
- Click Advanced Settings and scroll to Advanced Configuration.
-
Paste the following YAML configuration snippet in the text box, replacing the email address below with your admin username:
trino: globalAdminUsername: "admins@trino.com"
2 - Configure the Immuta System Access Control Plugin in Trino
A user with access to Immuta's Archives site is required to conduct the download in this step from https://archives.immuta.com. If you are prompted to log in and need basic authentication credentials, reach out to your Immuta support professional.
Default Configuration Property Values
If you use the default property values in the configuration file described in this section,
- you will give users read and write access to tables that are not registered in Immuta and
- results for
SHOW
queries will not be filtered on table metadata.
These default settings help ensure that a new Starburst integration installation is minimally disruptive for existing Trino deployments, allowing you to then add Immuta data sources and update configuration to enforce more controls as you see fit.
However, the access-control.config-files
property can be configured to allow Immuta to work with
existing Trino installations that have already configured an access control provider. For example, if
the Starburst (Trino) integration is configured to allow users write access to tables that are not
protected by Immuta, you can still lock down write access for specific non-Immuta tables using an additional
access control provider.
-
The Immuta Trino plugin version is updated alongside Trino so that a matching version of the plugin is published for corresponding Trino releases. For example, the Immuta plugin version supporting Trino version 403 is simply version
403
. Download the plugin from version from Immuta's Archives site that corresponds with the Trino version you use. -
Enable Immuta on your cluster. Select the tab below that corresponds to your installation method for instructions:
Docker installations (Trino 413 and older)
-
Follow Trino's documentation to install the plugin archive on all nodes in your cluster.
-
Create the Immuta access control configuration file in the Trino configuration directory:
/etc/trino/immuta-access-control.properties
.
Docker installations (Trino 414 and newer)
For Trino versions 414 and newer, you can use the
immuta-trino
Docker image (which includes the Trino plugin jars) from registry.immuta.com instead of thetrinodb/trino
Docker image.-
Pull the image and start the container. The example below specifies the Immuta Trino plugin version 414 with the
414
tag, but any supported Trino version newer than 414 can be used:docker run registry.immuta.com/immuta/immuta-trino:414
-
Create the Immuta access control configuration file in the Trino configuration directory:
/etc/trino/immuta-access-control.properties
.
Standalone installations
-
Follow Trino's documentation to install the plugin archive on all nodes in your cluster.
-
Create the Immuta access control configuration file in the Trino configuration directory:
<trino_install_directory>/etc/immuta-access-control.properties
.
-
-
Configure the properties described in the table below.
Property Trino version Required or optional Description access-control.name
392 and newer Required This property enables the integration. access-control.config-files
392 and newer Optional Trino allows you to enable multiple system access control providers at the same time. To do so, add providers to this property as comma-separated values. This approach allows Immuta to work with existing Trino installations that have already configured an access control provider. Immuta does not manage all permissions in Trino and will default to allowing access to anything Immuta does not manage so that the Starburst (Trino) integration complements existing controls. For example, if the Starburst (Trino) integration is configured to allow users write access to tables that are not protected by Immuta, you can still lock down write access for specific non-Immuta tables using an additional access control provider. immuta.allowed.immuta.datasource.operations
413 and newer Optional This property defines a comma-separated list of allowed operations for users on Immuta data sources they are subscribed to: READ
,WRITE
, andOWN
. (See the Customize read and write access policies for Starburst (Trino) guide for details about theOWN
operation.) When set toWRITE
, all users granted access to a data source through a subscription policy are allowed read and write operations to data source schemas and tables. By default, this property is set toREAD
, which blocks write operations on data source tables and schemas. If write policies are enabled for your Immuta tenant, this property is set toREAD,WRITE
by default, so users granted write access to a data source through a write access subscription policy are allowed read and write operations to data source schemas and tables.immuta.allowed.non.immuta.datasource.operations
392 and newer Optional This property defines a comma-separated list of allowed operations users will have on tables not registered as Immuta data sources: READ
,WRITE
,CREATE
, andOWN
. (See the Customize read and write access policies for Starburst (Trino) guide for details aboutCREATE
andOWN
operations.) When set toREAD
, users are allowed read operations on tables not registered as Immuta data sources. When set toWRITE
, users are allowed read and write operations on tables not registered as Immuta data sources. If this property is left empty, users will not get access to any tables outside Immuta. By default, this property is set toREAD,WRITE
. If write policies are enabled for your Immuta tenant, this property is set toREAD,WRITE,OWN,CREATE
by default.immuta.apikey
392 and newer Required This should be set to the Immuta API key displayed when enabling the integration on the app settings page. immuta.ca-file
392 and newer Optional This property allows you to specify a path to your CA file. immuta.cache.views.seconds
392 and newer Optional Amount of time in seconds for which a user's specific representation of an Immuta data source will be cached for. Changing this will impact how quickly policy changes are reflected for users actively querying Trino. By default, cache expires after 30 seconds. immuta.cache.datasource.seconds
392 and newer Optional Amount of time in seconds for which a user's available Immuta data sources will be cached for. Changing this will impact how quickly data sources will be available due to changing projects or subscriptions. By default, cache expires after 30 seconds. immuta.endpoint
392 and newer Required The protocol and fully qualified domain name (FQDN) for the Immuta instance used by Trino (for example, https://my.immuta.instance.io
). This should be set to the endpoint displayed when enabling the integration on the app settings page.immuta.filter.unallowed.table.metadata
392 and newer Optional When set to false, Immuta won't filter unallowed table metadata, which helps ensure Immuta remains noninvasive and performant. If this property is set to true, running show catalogs
, for example, will reflect what that user has access to instead of returning all catalogs. By default, this property is set to false.immuta.group.admin
420 and newer Required if immuta.user.admin
is not setThis property identifies the Trino group that is the Immuta administrator. The users in this group will not have Immuta policies applied to them. Therefore, data sources should be created by users in this group so that they have access to everything. Note that you must escape regex special characters (for example, john\\.doe+svcacct@immuta\\.com
).immuta.user.admin
392 and newer Required if immuta.group.admin
is not setThis property identifies the Trino user who is an Immuta administrator (for example, immuta.user.admin=immuta_system_account
). This user will not have Immuta policies applied to them because this account will run the subqueries. Therefore, data sources should be created by this user so that they have access to everything. Note that you must escape regex special characters (for example,john\\.doe+svcacct@immuta\\.com
).TLS Certificate Generation
If you provided your own TLS certificates during Immuta installation, you must ensure that the hostname in your certificate matches the hostname specified in the Starburst (Trino) configuration.
If you did not provide your own TLS certificates, Immuta generated these certificates for you during installation. See notes about your specific deployment method below for details.
- Kubernetes Deployment: Immuta
generates a local certificate authority (CA) that signs certificates for each service by default. Ensure that the
externalHostname
you specified in the Immuta Helm Chart matches the Immuta hostname name specified in the Starburst (Trino) configuration.
If the hostnames in your certificate don't match the hostname specified in your Starburst (Trino) integration, you can set
immuta.disable-hostname-verification
totrue
in the Immuta access control config file to get the integration working in the interim.The Starburst (Trino) integration uses the
immuta.ca-file
property to communicate with Immuta. When configuring the plugin in Starburst (outlined below), specify a path to your CA file using theimmuta.ca-file
property in the Immuta access control configuration file. - Kubernetes Deployment: Immuta
generates a local certificate authority (CA) that signs certificates for each service by default. Ensure that the
-
Enable the Immuta access control plugin in Trino's configuration file (
/etc/trino/config.properties
for Docker installations or<trino_install_directory>/etc/config.properties
for standalone installations). For example,access-control.config-files=/etc/trino/immuta-access-control.properties
Example Immuta System Access Control Configuration
The example configuration snippet below uses the default configuration settings for immuta.allowed.immuta.datasource.operations
and immuta.allowed.non.immuta.datasource.operations
, which allow read access for data registered as Immuta data sources and read and write access on data that is not registered in Immuta. See the Granting Starburst (Trino) privileges section for details about customizing and enforcing read and write access controls in Starburst.
# Enable the Immuta System Access Control (v2) implementation.
access-control.name=immuta
# The Immuta endpoint that was displayed when enabling the Starburst integration in Immuta.
immuta.endpoint=http://service.immuta.com:3000
# The Immuta API key that was displayed when enabling the Starburst integration in Immuta.
immuta.apikey=45jdljfkoe82b13eccfb9c
# The administrator user regex. Starburst usernames matching this regex will not be subject to
# Immuta policies. This regex should match the user name provided at Immuta data source
# registration.
immuta.user.admin=immuta_system_account
# Optional argument (default is shown).
# A CSV list of operations allowed on schemas/tables registered as Immuta data sources.
immuta.allowed.immuta.datasource.operations=READ
# Optional argument (default is shown).
# A CSV list of operations allowed on schemas/tables not registered as Immuta data sources.
# Set to empty to allow no operations on non-Immuta data sources.
immuta.allowed.non.immuta.datasource.operations=READ,WRITE
# Optional argument (default is shown).
# Controls table metadata filtering for inaccessible tables.
# - When this property is enabled and non-Immuta reads are also enabled, a user performing
# 'show catalogs/schemas/tables' will not see metadata for a table that is registered as
# an Immuta data source but the user does not have access to through Immuta.
# - When this property is enabled and non-Immuta reads and writes are disabled, a user
# performing 'show catalogs/schemas/tables' will only see metadata for tables that the
# user has access to through Immuta.
# - When this property is disabled, a user performing 'show catalogs/schemas/tables' can see
# all metadata.
immuta.filter.unallowed.table.metadata=false
3 - Add Trino Users to Immuta
- Configure your external IAM to add users to Immuta.
- Map their Trino usernames when configuring your IAM
(or map usernames manually) to Immuta.
- All Trino users must map to Immuta users or match the
immuta.user.admin
regex configured on the cluster, and their Trino username must be mapped to Immuta so they can query policy-enforced data. - A user impersonating a different user in Trino requires the IMPERSONATE_USER permission in Immuta.
Both users must be mapped to an Immuta user, or the querying user must match the configured
immuta.user.admin
regex.
- All Trino users must map to Immuta users or match the