Tag Archives: Masking in Sql

Dynamic Data Masking in Sql Server 2016

Dynamic data masking is one of the new Security Feature introduced in Sql Server 2016. It provides a mechanism to obfuscate or mask the data from non-privileged users. And the users with sufficient permission will have complete access to the actual or un-masked data.

Traditionally, if we see the application layer takes care of masking the data and displaying it. For example: from database layer we will get a clear SSN number like 123-321-4567, but the application will mask and display it to the user as XXX-XXX-4567. With dynamic data masking from database layer only we can return the query result with masked data if user doesn’t have sufficient permission to view the actual/Unmasked data.

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Dynamic data masking functions/rule can be defined on the table columns for which we need the masked out-put in the query result. It doesn’t change the actual value stored in the column. Masking function is applied on the query result just before returning the data, if user doesn’t have the enough permission to get the un-masked data. But user with db-owner or UNMASK permission will get the un-masked data in the query result for the masked columns. Masked out-put will be of the same data type as the column data type, in that way we can readily use this feature without really needing changes to the application layer.

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Following are the four masking functions which can be defined on table column

  1. Default
  2. Email
  3. Partial
  4. Random

To understand each of these masking function let us create a Customer Table as shown in the following image by the following script:

Example Dynamic Data Masking Table
SCRIPT:

CREATE DATABASE SqlHintsDDMDemo
GO
USE SqlHintsDDMDemo
GO
CREATE TABLE dbo.Employee
(
 EmployeeId INT IDENTITY(1,1), Name NVARCHAR(100), DOJ DATETIME,
 EmailAddress NVARCHAR(100), Phone Varchar(15),	Salary INT
)
GO
INSERT INTO dbo.Employee (Name, DOJ, EmailAddress,Phone, Salary)
Values
 ('Basavaraj', '02/20/2005', 'basav@sqlhints.com',
   '123-4567-789',900000),
 ('Kalpana', '07/01/2015', 'kalpana@sqlhints.co.in',
   '123-4567-789',100000)
GO

Let us now understand one-by-one the dynamic data masking functions. These functions can be applied to columns during table creation or can be added to the existing table columns.

1. Default()

This dynamic data masking functions behavior is based on the data type of the column on which it is applied

  • For string types it shows X for each character and max it displays 4 X’s.
  • For numeric types it shows 0
  • For dates shows 1900-01-01 00:00:00.000

Let us apply the DEFAULT dynamic data masking function on the Name and DOJ columns of the Employee table by executing the following statement

---Add DEFAULT() masking function on the Name column
ALTER Table Employee
ALTER COLUMN NAME ADD MASKED WITH (FUNCTION='DEFAULT()')

---Add DEFAULT() masking function on the Name column
ALTER Table Employee
ALTER COLUMN DOJ ADD MASKED WITH (FUNCTION='DEFAULT()')

Let us create a new user and grant select permission on the Employee table by executing the following query.

--Create user reader
CREATE USER reader WITHOUT LOGIN
--Grant select permission to the user: reader
GRANT SELECT ON Employee TO reader

Let us try to fetch the records from the Employee table by executing the query in the context of this new user

EXECUTE AS USER = 'reader'
SELECT * FROM Employee
REVERT

RESULT:
Default Dynamic Data Masking Function

From the result we can see that Name column values are replaced by XXXX and DOJ column values are replaced by 1900-01-01 00:00:00.000 in the query result.

Grant UNMASK permission to the newly created user reader to allow viewing of the un-masked data by executing the following query.

--Grant Unmask permission to the user: reader
GRANT UNMASK TO reader

Now try re-executing the previously executed query to fetch the records from the Employee table in the context of the user reader

EXECUTE AS USER = 'reader'
SELECT * FROM Employee
REVERT

RESULT:
UnMask Permission Dynamic Data Masking

From the result we can see that now the reader user can see the un-masked or actual data of the masked columns Name and DOJ

Let us remove the UNMASK permission from the user reader by executing the following statement

--Remove Unmask permission from the user: reader
REVOKE UNMASK TO reader

2. Email()

This dynamic data masking function returns first character as it is and rest is replaced by XXX@XXXX.com.

Let us apply the EMAIL dynamic data masking function on the EmailAddress Column of the Employee table by executing the following statement

---Add Email() masking function on the Name column
ALTER Table Employee
ALTER COLUMN EmailAddress 
 ADD MASKED WITH (FUNCTION='Email()')

Let us try to fetch the records from the Employee table by executing the query in the context of the user reader

EXECUTE AS USER = 'reader'
SELECT * FROM Employee
REVERT

RESULT:
Email Dynamic Data Masking Function

From the result we can see that Email column values are replaced by first character as it is followed by XXX@XXXX.com in the query result.

Let us verify whether we can query a masked column value by the actual value. In the below example trying to fetch a employee record whose EmailAddress is kalpana@sqlhints.co.in in the context of the user reader

EXECUTE AS USER = 'reader'
SELECT * FROM Employee 
WHERE EmailAddress = 'kalpana@sqlhints.co.in'
REVERT

RESULT:
Where clause on masked column

3. Partial()

This dynamic data masking function provides a mechanism where we can reveal first and last few specified number of characters with a custom padding string in the middle.

partial (prefix ,padding , suffix)

Where: prefix is the starting number of characters to be revealed and suffix is the last number of characters to be revealed from the column value. Padding is the custom padding string in the middle.

Let us apply the PARTIAL dynamic data masking function on the Phone column of the Employee table by executing the following statement

ALTER Table Employee
ALTER COLUMN Phone 
 ADD MASKED WITH (FUNCTION='Partial(2,"-ZZZ-",2)')

Let us try to fetch the records from the Employee table by executing the query in the context of the user reader

EXECUTE AS USER = 'reader'
SELECT * FROM Employee
REVERT

RESULT:
Partial Dynamic Data Masking Function

From the result we can see that Phone’s first and last 2 characters are revealed in the masked result and in the middle it is padded by the string -ZZZ-.

4. Random()

This dynamic data masking function can be applied on a column of numeric type. It returns a random value between the specified ranges.

Let us apply the RANDOM dynamic data masking function with a random value range from 1 to 9 on the Salary column of the Employee table by executing the following statement

ALTER Table Employee
ALTER COLUMN Salary ADD MASKED WITH (FUNCTION='Random(1,9)')

Let us try to fetch the records from the Employee table by executing the query in the context of the user reader

EXECUTE AS USER = 'reader'
SELECT * FROM Employee
REVERT

RESULT:
Random Dynamic Data Masking Function
Removing MASK definition from the Table Column

Below example shows how we can remove masked definition from the table column. Here in this example we are removing mask definition from the Phone column of the Employee table.

ALTER TABLE Employee 
ALTER COLUMN Phone DROP MASKED

Conclusion:

Dynamic Data masking provides a mechanism to mask or obfuscate the query result at the database level. The data stored in the data base is still in the clear or un-masked format. It is not a physical data encryption feature, an admin user or user with sufficient unmask permission can still see the complete un-masked data. This is a complementary security feature which is best-advised to use in-conjunction with other Sql Server Security features.

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