This page describes the Starburst (Trino) integration v2.0 configuration options and features.
See the Starburst (Trino) integration v2.0 page to enable the integration.
A valid Starburst Enterprise license
The Starburst (Trino) integration v2.0 supports the following authentication methods to create data sources in Immuta:
Username and password: You can authenticate with your Starburst (Trino) username and password.
OAuth 2.0: You can authenticate with OAuth 2.0. Immuta's OAuth authentication method uses the Client Credentials Flow; when you register a data source, Immuta reaches out to your OAuth server to generate a JSON web token (JWT) and then passes that token to the Starburst (Trino) cluster.
Configure JWT authentication method in Starburst (Trino)
When using OAuth authentication to create data sources in Immuta, configure your Starburst (Trino) cluster to use JWT authentication, not OpenID Connect or OAuth.
When users query a Starburst (Trino) data source, Immuta sends a username with the view SQL so that policies apply in the right context. Since OAuth authentication does not require a username to be associated with a data source upon data source creation, Immuta does not send a username and Starburst (Trino) queries fail. To avoid this error, you must configure a global admin username.
If you are using OAuth or asynchronous authentication to create Starburst (Trino) data sources, see the Starburst (Trino) configuration guide to set the globalAdminUsername
property in the advanced configuration section of the Immuta app settings page.
The Starburst (Trino) integration cannot ingest tags from Starburst (Trino), but you can connect any of these supported external catalogs to work with your integration.
Impersonation allows users to query data as another Immuta user. To enable user impersonation, see the Integration User Impersonation page.
The Immuta Trino Event Listener allows Immuta to translate events into comprehensive audit logs for users with the Immuta AUDIT
permission to view. For more information about what is included in those audit logs, see the Starburst (Trino) Audit Logs page.
In addition to the information included on the Starburst (Trino) Audit Logs page, the audit logs payload in the Starburst (Trino) integration v2.0 includes immutaPlanningDuration
, which represents the planning overhead in Immuta.
You can configure multiple Starburst (Trino) integrations v2.0 with a single Immuta tenant and use them dynamically. Configure the integration once in Immuta to use it in multiple Starburst or Trino clusters. However, consider the following limitations:
Names of catalogs cannot overlap because Immuta cannot distinguish among them.
Only one cluster type is supported: You can connect either Starburst or Trino clusters. These cluster types are not supported together in a single Immuta tenant.
Immuta policies can be applied to Starburst (Trino)-created logical views.
The descriptions below provide guidance for applying policies to Starburst (Trino)-created logical views in the
However, there are other approaches you can use to apply policies to Starburst (Trino)-created logical views. The examples below are the simplest approaches.
DEFINER
Security ModeFor views created using the DEFINER
security mode,
ensure the user who created the view is configured as an admin user in the Immuta plugin so that policies are never applied to the underlying tables.
create Immuta data sources and apply policies to logical views exposing those tables.
lock down access to the underlying tables in Starburst (Trino) so that all end user access is provided through the views.
INVOKER
Security ModeApplying Policies to Views or Tables
Avoid creating data policies for both a logical view and its underlying tables. Instead, apply policies to the logical view or the underlying tables.
For views created using the INVOKER
security mode, the querying user needs access to the logical view and underlying tables.
If non-Immuta table reads are disabled, provide access to the views and tables through Immuta. To do so, create Immuta data sources for the view and underlying tables, and grant access to the querying user in Immuta. If creating data policies, apply the policies to either the view or underlying tables, not both.
If non-Immuta table reads are enabled, the user already has access to the table and view. Create Immuta data sources and apply policies to the underlying table; this approach will enforce access controls for both the table and view in Starburst (Trino).
Limit your masked joins to columns with matching column types. Starburst truncates the result of the masking expression to conform to the native column type when performing the join, so joining two masked columns with different data types produces invalid results when one of the columns' lengths is less than the length of the masked value.
For example, if the value of a hashed column is 64 characters, joining a hashed varchar(50) and a hashed varchar(255) column will not be joined correctly, since the varchar(50) value is truncated and doesn’t match the varchar(255) value.
Project Workspaces | Tag Ingestion | User Impersonation | Native Query Audit | Multiple Integrations |
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