New end of support date for 2024.1
The end of support date for 2024.1 has been updated to July 31, 2024.
Immuta v2024.2.9 was released October 31, 2024.
The /api/v2/data
endpoint was not properly adding a data source to the domain specified by the domainCollectionId
attribute.
OpenID Connect identity providers that had HTTP_PROXY
, HTTPS_PROXY
, or NO_PROXY
environment variables configured failed with connection errors.
Added functionality that allows users to configure TLS server ciphers outside the default ciphers used by the Immuta deployment.
If two integrations existed and one of them was a Databricks Unity Catalog integration configured with proxyOptions
that did not include username or password fields, the Immuta UI failed to render properly.
Vulnerabilities addressed:
CVE-2024-41818
CVE-2024-3651
CVE-2024-45801
CVE-2024-21534
CVE-2024-4067
Immuta v2024.2.8 was released September 27, 2024.
Various SCIM API calls returned a 404 status, even though the updates were successful.
Immuta v2024.2.7 was released September 26, 2024.
Authentication change to accommodate Snowflake moving away from password-only authentication: This release includes updates to our integration setup script to accommodate Snowflake beginning to transition away from password-only authentication for new accounts. When configuring an integration manually for a new Snowflake account, Immuta provides an updated manual setup script that permits password-only authentication by differentiating it as a legacy service with an additional parameter. Existing integrations will continue to function as-is.
Users on Immuta versions 2024.2.6 and older must use the manual setup option to configure the Snowflake integration. To use the automatic setup option to configure the Snowflake integration, users must upgrade to 2024.2.7.
The authorizations
attribute will now be excluded from the GET /bim/group
response if the requesting user does not have the USER_ADMIN
Immuta permission.
Users could not select Immuta as their IAM on the login screen and were only able to see their LDAP IAM in the dropdown menu.
Fixes to remove orphaned handler objects.
When mapping users from Immuta to Databricks in the Databricks Spark integration, Immuta was not honoring case insensitivity of usernames.
Fix to address schema monitoring and column detection errors in Redshift integrations.
Vulnerability addressed: CVE-2024-35255
Immuta v2024.2.6 was released September 11, 2024.
Resolved an issue that prevented users from being able to subscribe to Redshift data sources.
The following attributes will now be excluded from the GET /bim/user
response if the requesting user does not have the USER_ADMIN
Immuta permission:
bimAuthorizations
iamAuthorizations
authorizations
Immuta v2024.2.5 was released September 6, 2024.
Updated encryption of information related to REST catalog passwords in the system bundle.
Existing Snowflake and Redshift integrations did not migrate properly after an upgrade.
Users encountered a JSON parsing error when querying Redshift data sources if policies were applied that contained backslashes in user attributes.
Fixed an issue that caused Google BigQuery data sources to get stuck in an unhealthy state.
Masking policies failed to apply to complex data type columns in Databricks if property names within the struct included special characters.
Vulnerabilities addressed:
CVE-2024-37890
CVE-2024-39338
CWE-29
Only users with the CREATE_DATA_SOURCE
permission are authorized to use the POST api/v2/data
endpoint; users without that permission will be blocked and get a 403 status returned.
Immuta v2024.2.4 was released August 9, 2024.
Databricks Unity Catalog ARRAY, MAP, and STRUCT type columns support masking with NULL.
In some instances, data and subscription policies remained in a pending state and were not applied to data in the remote platform.
Addressed issues that prevented Starburst (Trino) from working properly with the query engine disabled.
Fix to address the New
tag being incorrectly applied to data sources and locking down access to data.
Masking Snowflake OBJECT
type columns with NULL failed.
CVE-2024-6345
addressed
Immuta v2024.2.3 was released July 26, 2024.
Previously, data source tasks were created for all events discovered by schema monitoring. Now, the following events will only have data source tasks created if there is a policy targeting the auto-applied New
tag:
Column added
Column type changed
Data source created
Immuta would allow for the data dictionary to be updated to empty, but this empty state was not supported by backend functions.
External user IDs failed to save if the username contained a psql slash command ("\e", "\t", "\q", etc.).
Data sources in view-based integrations were sometimes locked down and inaccessible to users after being registered in Immuta, even if no policies applied to them.
Immuta v2024.2.2 was released June 25, 2024.
Comply with column length and precision in a Snowflake masking policy: Snowflake is soon requiring the outputs of masked columns to comply with the length, scale, and precision of what the Snowflake columns require. To comply with this Snowflake behavior change, Immuta truncates the output values in masked columns to match the Snowflake column requirements so that users' queries continue to complete successfully.
Vulnerabilities addressed:
CVE-2024-4068
CVE-2024-4067
Immuta v2024.2.1 was released June 7, 2024.
Trino universal audit model available with Trino 435 using the Immuta Trino plugin 435.1: For customers that are using EMR 7.1 with Trino 435.1, and have audit requirements, the Immuta Trino 435.1 plugin now supports audit in universal audit model. The Immuta Trino 435.1 plugin audit information is on par with Immuta Trino 443 plugin. The Immuta Trino 435.1 plugin is supported on SaaS and 2024.2 and later.
Data owners can now see audit events for the data sources that they own without having the AUDIT Immuta permission: Data owners can see query events for their data sources on the audit page, data overview page, data source pages, and the data source activity tab. They can also inspect Immuta audit events on the audit page and activity tab for the data sources they own. This enhancement gives data owners full visibility of activity in the data sources they own.
UI performance issues
Fixes to address issues that caused Immuta to fail passing the SSL cert supplied by customers using an external metadata database.
IAM integrations that had SCIM enabled did not support backslashes \
in usernames.
Subscription policies that included variables (@host
, @database
, @schema
, @table
) caused UI performance issues.
Immuta was not escaping or encoding special backslash characters (/
, \
) in usernames, which resulted in bad API requests.
Deleting and re-enabling a Redshift integration caused issues for data sources with custom schema/table names and formats.
Databricks Unity Catalog integration configuration failed to save if Oauth token passthrough was used as the authentication method.
Fixes to address an issue that caused Redshift data source subscriptions to fail if users were subscribed to a large number of them.
Immuta v2024.2.0 was released May 10, 2024.
Immuta Detect is a tool that monitors your data environment and provides analytic dashboards in the Immuta UI based on audit information of your data use.
Query monitoring with webhook notifications for Databricks, Snowflake and Starburst (Trino) in public preview: Immuta Detect monitors help you surface non-compliant data combinations and maintain data availability through data platform configuration changes. Monitors can notify you when user activity metrics exceed your intended operating thresholds. Monitors work with query tags, query execution outcomes, and Immuta Discover classification sensitivities when enabled.
Dynamic query classification in private preview: For a query that joins tables, Immuta uses the same classification rules applied to tables and applies those rules to columns of the query. Immuta applies a new set of classification tags to the query columns and calculates sensitivity for the query event in the audit record. These query classification tags are not included on the table's data dictionary.
Universal audit model: Over 90 audit events are captured and can be exported to S3 or ADLS Gen2. See the full list of supported events on the Universal audit model (UAM) page.
Native sensitive data discovery (SDD): Native SDD is available for Snowflake and Databricks in general availability, and Starburst (Trino) and Redshift in private preview. Native SDD automatically discovers and tags your data based on the identifiers it matches but, unlike non-native SDD, it does not persist or move any of your data. It is enabled by default.
SDD tag context: Native SDD leaves legacy SDD tags in place when they are not found upon a subsequent re-scan of a data source. Customers who begin using native SDD can see results with no impact to prior legacy SDD tags. See the Migrate legacy to native SDD page for more details.
Built-in classification frameworks in private preview: Immuta comes preconfigured with a bundle of classification frameworks for use out-of-the-box once endorsed by your organization's admins. These frameworks are designed by Immuta’s Legal Engineering and Research Engineering teams and informed by data privacy regulations and security standards: GDPR, CCPA, GLBA, HIPAA, PCI, and global best practices. They are a starting point for companies to customize to their own classification, security, and risk policies.
Write policies for Starburst (Trino) and Amazon S3 in private preview: In addition to read operations, Immuta's Starburst (Trino) and Amazon S3 integrations now support fine-grained access permissions for write operations.
Project-scoped purpose exceptions for Snowflake and Databricks Unity Catalog integrations in public preview: Row- and column-level policies can now account for purposes and projects for additional security. With this policy configuration, a user will only be able to view the data the policy applied to if they are acting under a certain purpose and that data is within their current project. Purpose exception policies ensure data is only being used for the intended purposes.
Support protecting more than 10,000 objects with Unity Catalog row- and column- level policies: Users can now mask more than 10,000 columns or tables with row filters, removing the previous limitation in the Unity Catalog integration. This enhancement provides greater flexibility and scalability for data masking operations, allowing users to effectively secure sensitive data across larger datasets.
OAuth M2M support for Databricks Unity Catalog: Immuta supports establishing connections to Databricks using OAuth Machine-to-Machine (M2M) authentication. This feature enhances security and simplifies the process of integrating Databricks with Immuta, leveraging the robust capabilities of OAuth M2M authentication.
Faster query performance with Snowflake memoizable functions in public preview: When a policy is applied to a column, Immuta now uses Snowflake memoizable functions to cache the result of common lookups in the policy encapsulated in the called function. Subsequently, when users query a column with the applied policy, Immuta leverages the cached result, which significantly enhances query performance. Contact your customer success manager for more details.
Disable external usernames with invalid Databricks identities: Databricks user identities for Immuta users will now be automatically marked as invalid when the user is not found during policy application. This will prevent them from being affected by Databricks policy until manually marked as valid again in their Immuta user profile. This change drastically improves syncing performance of subscription policies for Databricks Unity Catalog integrations when Immuta users are not present in the Databricks environment.
Disable k-anonymization by default and allow users to opt-in: When a k-anonymization policy is applied to a data source, the columns targeted by the policy are queried under a fingerprinting process that generates rules that enforce the k-anonymity. The results of this query, which may contain data that is subject to regulatory constraints such as GDPR or HIPAA, are stored in Immuta's metadata database.
To ensure this process does not violate your organization's data localization regulations, you need to first activate this masking policy type before you can use it in your Immuta tenant. To enable k-anonymization, adjust the setting on the Immuta app settings page. If you have existing k-anonymization policies, those policies will not be affected by this change.
Collibra PII assignments: When pulling personally identifiable information (PII) from Collibra, Immuta now includes and differentiates true
and false
value assignments as Personally Identifiable Information.true
and Personally Identifiable Information.false
to more accurately reflect how PII is set in Collibra.
Integrations API: The Integrations API will be enabled by default when users upgrade to 2024.2. With this feature, the Integrations UI is in a new section of the product. Also, when creating native Snowflake integrations, tag extraction will no longer be an option. Users can set up tag extraction and manage existing Snowflake external catalogs via the External Catalog section of the Immuta app settings page.
Running table statistics only if required (instead of by default): Table statistics consist of row counts, identification of high cardinality columns, and a sample data fingerprint. Immuta needs to collect this information in order to support the following data access policy types:
Column masking with randomized response
Column masking with format preserving masking
Column masking with k-anonymization
Column masking with rounding
Row minimization
Prior to this change, table statistics would be collected for every newly onboarded object by default, except if the object had a Skip_Stats
tag applied. Post this change, table statistics are now only collected on a data object once they are required (i.e., if one of the above-mentioned policy types is applied). Even then, the Skip_Stats
tag continues to be respected. This change results in performance improvements, as the number of standard operations during data object onboarding is significantly reduced.
Alation custom fields integration: In addition to Alation standard tags, Immuta’s Alation integration now also supports pulling information from Alation custom fields as tags into Immuta.
Improved user experience for managing users, data sources, and policies in public preview: This deployment includes significant user experience updates focused on enhancing Immuta's key entities: users, data sources, and policies.
The People section has a more intuitive experience with notable changes. Users and groups have been split into two separate tabs. The first tab provides an overview of a user or group, while the second tab contains detailed settings, such as permissions, attributes, and associated groups.
Another enhancement in the People section is the new Attributes page, which centralizes all information about an attribute, including the users or groups it applies to.
The Data Sources section has been completely redesigned to offer a more efficient search and filter experience. Users can preview details of a data source through expandable rows on the list and access bulk actions for data sources more easily.
The Policy section includes an updated list with improved search and filter capabilities. Additionally, a policy detail page allows users to view comprehensive policy information, take action, edit policies, and see a list of targeted data sources.
“Pending” policy state: A new Pending
policy state indicates when background jobs are running to update permissions after a policy is created or changed. Once the Pending
state changes to Active
, all policy changes have been enforced on affected data sources.
Color coding for data source health: The health status for each data source on the data source list page now uses color coding to provide a visual for users so they can quickly determine whether they should take action related to the health of data sources. Additionally, unhealthy data sources are ranked at the top of the list on the data source page to ensure that when users log in to Immuta they are aware that unhealthy data sources exist in the system. Prior to this change, users had to click through all data source pages or had to explicitly set up a filter to achieve the same behavior.
Updates to button labels: Two buttons have been renamed to align their labels more closely with their functionality.
The "Sync Native Policies" button has been renamed to "Sync Data Policies" to better reflect its function.
The "Refresh Native Views/Policies" button has been renamed to "Refresh Native Views/Data Policies" for improved accuracy.
The new user profile page separates information better and makes it easier to understand.
Keyboard shortcuts are now available for some common functions. Keep an eye out for in-app guidance that helps with how to use them.
The account menu is wider for better readability and now has an option to toggle between light and dark mode. By default, Immuta still uses your browser settings.
Browser tabs tell you which page you’re on, instead of all being labeled “Immuta Console.” A new, adaptive favicon allows you to still tell that it’s Immuta at-a-glance, whether you’re in light or dark mode.
Fix to address a UI issue that led customers to believe that disabled users were not getting their access revoked. The UI has been updated and disabled users are now being filtered out from the data source members tab.
Deprecated items remain in the product with minimal support until their end of life date.
Change to POST /tag/{modelType}/{modelId}
endpoint: The POST /tag/{modelType}/{modelId}
endpoint (which adds tags to models that can be tagged, such as data sources and projects) can only apply tags that exist to these models. This update presents one breaking change: A 404
status will now be returned with the tag(s) that were not valid instead of a 200
status, and no tags will be processed if any invalid tags are found.
Change to POST /tag/column/{datasource_id}_{column_name}
endpoint: The POST /tag/column/{datasource_id}_{column_name}
endpoint (which adds tags to columns on data sources) can only tag existing columns on data sources. It does this by checking the dictionary associated with the data source to see if the desired column exists on the data source. This deployment introduces two breaking changes:
Column does not exist 404
: When the column does not exist on the data source, a 404
status is now returned instead of a 200
.
Dictionary does not exist 404
: When an associated dictionary does not exist on the specified data source (that you have access to add tags to), a 404
status is now returned instead of a 403
.
Change to POST /project
: Users will receive a 422
status error instead of a 400
status error when trying to create a new project name that would result in a database conflict on the project's unique name.
Change to POST /api/v2/data
response: creating
will not be returned in the response when using this endpoint the first time; the response will just include bulkId
and connectionString
. However, when updating a data source using POST /api/v2/data
, the response will include creating: []
(with no data source names inside the array).
You must be on Immuta version 2022.5 or newer to migrate directly to 2024.2.
Integrations API: If you did not have integrations API turned on prior to 2024.2.0, when the tenants are restarted after upgrading, the system will perform a short migration of the native integrations from the global configuration to the new native integrations bometadata tables in support of integrations API.
Feature | Deprecation notice | End of life (EOL) |
---|---|---|
Feature | Deprecation notice | End of life (EOL) |
---|---|---|
Derived data sources (and CREATE_DATA_SOURCE_IN_PROJECT permission)
2024.2
2024.4
Managing the default subscription policy
2024.2
2024.4
Legacy sensitive data discovery (SDD)
2023.3
2024.4
Amazon EMR Spark & Hive proxy connector
2023.2
2024.2
Azure Data Lake Storage proxy connector
2023.3
2024.2
Azure SQL Proxy Connector
2023.3
2024.2
Data source expiration dates
2023.2
2024.2
dbt integration
2024.1
2024.2
Databricks Spark with Unity Catalog support
2024.1
2024.2
Non-Unity Databricks SQL view-based integration
2023.3
2024.2
Discussions tab
2023.3
2024.2
HIPAA expert determination and templated policies (HIPAA and CCPA)
2023.3
2024.2
Interpolated WHERE clause
2023.2
2024.2
Legacy Amazon S3 proxy
2023.3
2024.2
Legacy Starburst (Trino) integration
2023.2
2024.2
MySQL proxy connector
2024.1
2024.2
Query editor (now turned off by default)
2023.3
Starting to remove with 2024.2
Single Node Docker installation
2023.2
2024.2
Legacy Snowflake view-based integration (Snowflake integration without Snowflake Governance features)
2023.2
2024.2
Tableau connector
2023.3
2024.2