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Profiles

For each ODBC, Database or Extensible Source Connection RED maintains an in-memory credential set including the username, password, and connection string for each connection. This in-memory credential set is what we term the ‘Profile’ for authentication during the session of RED.

Additionally the Scheduler Configuration credentials are also stored in-memory for the session and included in the Profile when saving it to disk.

The in-memory  profile  is session based and therefore the credentials are specific to the user logged on during that session. The connection string itself is however stored in the metadata so that each RED user still uses the same authentication method as other users while in the RED UI.

Saving Profiles to Disk

Profiles can be saved to disk so that users need not enter usernames and passwords into each of their connections whenever they log in to RED.

To save a Profile including session passwords, right click on the Connections node in the objects tree and select 'Save Profile'

Save Profile

Select a name to save the file as and choose to  Include Session Passwords. To ensure that all credentials are stored then make sure to open each connection and set the session credentials prior to saving the  Profile.

Passwords encrypted at rest

Session passwords are encrypted at rest (on the file in disk) during the save using Windows DPAPI (user-based) encryption. These profile files will therefore only ever be able to be used and decrypted by the Windows user who saved them. 

Include Passwords


Note

Only Profile files stored in the Windows users AppData directory under sub folders 'WhereScape\RED' will be shown on the RED Login screen.


Tip

The users' AppData location can be found by typing %APPDATA% into the address bar of a Windows browser and pressing enter.

Tips for Using OAuth or similar authentication methods

For some authentication methods you may need to use a script (or web browser) to login to a data source and generate an access token to use in your connection string. The access token could then be added in the  Profile  file as the password for a connection. If you have expiring tokens then you will need to create a script to refresh your tokens and restart your scheduler service to pick up the new tokens.

This would involve the following general steps to be implemented in a script:

  1. Log in to a server and get a new token (this should be a non-interactive process for the Scheduler).
  2. Encrypt the token with Windows DPAPI ensuring the script is running as the same Windows User as the scheduler service.
  3. Create a base64 Unicode string from the encrypted token
  4. Modify the Scheduler  Profile  file (which is in .JSON format) replacing the password on the affected connection with the base64 string.
  5. Restart the Scheduler service OR select ‘Poll for Status and Refresh  Profile’ from RED for the Scheduler.

Example PowerShell script to create an encrypted base-64 Unicode string using Windows DPAPI:

DPAPI Encrypt
Add-Type -AssemblyName System.Security

$myPass = "myp@ssw0rd!"

# Convert the pwd string to a byte array.
$bytes = [System.Text.Encoding]::Unicode.GetBytes($myPass)

# Encrypt the byte array.
$encryptedBytes = [System.Security.Cryptography.ProtectedData]::Protect(
        $bytes, 
        $null, 
        [System.Security.Cryptography.DataProtectionScope]::CurrentUser)

# This is the equivalent form stored in the Profile files for RED
$encryptedProfilePassword=[System.Convert]::ToBase64String($encryptedBytes)

Write-Output $encryptedProfilePassword
If for some reason you need to decrypt the profile file passwords in a script the below method shows how to do this. Note that only the same Windows User that encrypted the password in the first place will be able to decrypt it.

Example PowerShell script to decrypt Windows DPAPI encrypted base64 Unicode string:

DPAPI Decrypt
Add-Type -AssemblyName System.Security

# set this to an encrypted string taken from the Profile file
$encryptedProfilePassword=”<YOUR ENCRYPTED STRING>”

# first convert the extracted RED Profile string FromBase64String to Byte array
$encryptedBytes = [System.Convert]::FromBase64String($encryptedProfilePassword)

Write-Host "Encrypted Bytes" -ForegroundColor Cyan
Write-Host ([string] $encryptedBytes) -ForegroundColor DarkGreen

# Unencrypt the data.
$bytes = [System.Security.Cryptography.ProtectedData]::Unprotect(
        $encryptedBytes, 
        $null, 
        [System.Security.Cryptography.DataProtectionScope]::CurrentUser)

$plainTextPwd = [System.Text.Encoding]::Unicode.GetString($bytes)

Write-Host "Decrypted Data" -ForegroundColor Cyan
Write-Host $plainTextPwd -ForegroundColor Red

Example Profile file

The Profile file is a .JSON file which makes it easy to programmatically update any connection attributes it contains.

The following example has had passwords truncated for display purposes.


Profile JSON
{
 "connections": [{
   "connectionName": "Tutorial (OLTP)",
   "connectionString": "dsn=$DSN$;uid=$USER$;pwd=$PASSWORD$;database=WslTutorial_DataSeq;",
   "password": "AQAAANCMnd8BFdERjHoAwE/Cl+sBAAAAK9Z1yRvrzEOIvwCfKZ96UAAAAAACAAAAAAAQZgAA",
   "userId": "red1"
  }, {
   "connectionName": "SQL_Target",
   "connectionString": "dsn=$DSN$;uid=$USER$;pwd=$PASSWORD$;database=sql15_9010_pg;",
   "password": "AQAAANCMnd8BFdERjHoAwE/Cl+sBAAAAK9Z1yRvrzEOIvwCfKZ96UAAAAAACAAAAAAAQZgAA",
   "userId": "red1"
  }, {
   "connectionName": "PostgreSQL_Target",
   "connectionString": "dsn=$DSN$;uid=$USER$;pwd=$PASSWORD$;database=pg15_9010;",
   "password": "AQAAANCMnd8BFdERjHoAwE/Cl+sBAAAAK9Z1yRvrzEOIvwCfKZ96UAAAAAACAAAAAAAQZgAA",
   "userId": "reduser_user"
  }, {
   "connectionName": "WslTutorial_DataSeq",
   "connectionString": "dsn=$DSN$;uid=$USER$;pwd=$PASSWORD$;",
   "password": "AQAAANCMnd8BFdERjHoAwE/Cl+sBAAAAK9Z1yRvrzEOIvwCfKZ96UAAAAAACAAAAAAAQZgAA",
   "userId": "red1"
  }
 ],
 "redConnectionMethod": "Advanced Connect",
 "redConnectionString": "dsn=$DSN$;uid=$USER$;pwd=$PASSWORD$;database=sql15_9010_pg;",
 "redDatabase": "sql15_9010_pg",
 "redDsn": "sql15",
 "redDsnArchitecture": "64",
 "redServer": "",
 "redServerPort": "",
 "redUserId": "red1",
 "redUserPwd": "AQAAANCMnd8BFdERjHoAwE/Cl+sBAAAAK9Z1yRvrzEOIvwCfKZ96UAAAAAACAAAAAAAQZgAA"
}



Using Profiles


The following Environment Variables are created at run-time for Scripts associated to ODBC, Database and Extensible Source Connections:
Where User, Password and Connection Strings are set from the current RED session credentials in the in-memory Profile.
WSL_<META|TGT|SRC>_CONSTRING contains the complete connection string with tokens $DSN$, $USER$, $PASSWORD$ replaced.
 


Metadata

Target

Source

WSL_META_DSN

WSL_TGT_DSN

WSL_SRC_DSN

WSL_META_DSN_ARCH

WSL_TGT_DSN_ARCH

WSL_SRC_DSN_ARCH

WSL_META_SERVER

WSL_TGT_SERVER

WSL_SRC_SERVER

WSL_META_DBID

WSL_TGT_DBID

WSL_SRC_DBID

WSL_META_USER

WSL_TGT_USER

WSL_SRC_USER

WSL_META_PWD

WSL_TGT_PWD

WSL_SRC_PWD

WSL_META_CONSTRING

WSL_TGT_CONSTRING

WSL_SRC_CONSTRING


Using Advanced Connect with Command Line Tools


Dedicated Command Line Interface (RedCli.exe)


For RedCli commands that only perform RED Metadata operations use:
--meta-con-string "<connection string>"
For 'RedCli Deployment' commands a full Profile file will be required since both Metadata and Target connections will need to be established
--red-profile "<full path to Profile file>"


Note

When using --red-profile the other --meta- arguments become optional since they can be retrieved from the Profile.


RED Client Command Line (med.exe)


For med.exe batch commands the connection string can be provided using:
--meta-con-string "<connection string>"
Batch documentation creation example:


med.exe --create-docs --output-dir "C:\temp\my_doco" --meta-dsn "sql15" --meta-dsn-arch "64" 
--meta-user-name "red1" --meta-password "mypass" --meta-con-string 
"dsn=$DSN$;uid=$USER$;pwd=$PASSWORD$;database=sql15;"


Note

When using --meta-con-string argument both --meta-dsn and --meta-dsn-arch are still required but the other --meta- arguments become optional depending on your specific connection string requirements.


Enabling Advanced Connect on Extensible Source Connections


To enable Advanced Connect on an Extensible Source Connection you need to edit the UI Configuration for the connection. The new fields are shown below which enables the session credentials and connection string fields, enabling either of these fields will flag the connection as Advanced Connect. See the section Creating the Example Extensible Source Connection Set for more information.


Note

The Session Credentials fields can be enabled without enabling the Connection String field for Extensible Source Connections. This is due to Extensible Source Connections are designed to be flexible and sometimes the Connection String is not needed or is already covered by another configured field. When enabling the Connection String field you must also have Session Credentials enabled too.


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