Documentation Home
MySQL 9.0 Reference Manual
Related Documentation Download this Manual
PDF (US Ltr) - 40.0Mb
PDF (A4) - 40.1Mb
Man Pages (TGZ) - 258.8Kb
Man Pages (Zip) - 365.9Kb
Info (Gzip) - 4.0Mb
Info (Zip) - 4.0Mb


MySQL 9.0 Reference Manual  /  ...  /  Using MySQL Enterprise Data Masking and De-Identification Components

8.5.2.2 Using MySQL Enterprise Data Masking and De-Identification Components

Before using MySQL Enterprise Data Masking and De-Identification, install it according to the instructions provided at Section 8.5.2.1, “MySQL Enterprise Data Masking and De-Identification Component Installation”.

To use MySQL Enterprise Data Masking and De-Identification in applications, invoke the functions that are appropriate for the operations you wish to perform. For detailed function descriptions, see Section 8.5.2.4, “MySQL Enterprise Data Masking and De-Identification Component Function Descriptions”. This section demonstrates how to use the functions to carry out some representative tasks. It first presents an overview of the available functions, followed by some examples of how the functions might be used in real-world context:

Masking Data to Remove Identifying Characteristics

MySQL provides general-purpose masking component functions that mask arbitrary strings, and special-purpose masking functions that mask specific types of values.

General-Purpose Masking Component Functions

mask_inner() and mask_outer() are general-purpose functions that mask parts of arbitrary strings based on position within the string. Both functions support an input string that is encoded in any character set:

  • mask_inner() masks the interior of its string argument, leaving the ends unmasked. Other arguments specify the sizes of the unmasked ends.

    mysql> SELECT mask_inner('This is a string', 5, 1);
    +--------------------------------------+
    | mask_inner('This is a string', 5, 1) |
    +--------------------------------------+
    | This XXXXXXXXXXg                     |
    +--------------------------------------+
    mysql> SELECT mask_inner('This is a string', 1, 5);
    +--------------------------------------+
    | mask_inner('This is a string', 1, 5) |
    +--------------------------------------+
    | TXXXXXXXXXXtring                     |
    +--------------------------------------+
    mysql> SELECT mask_inner("かすみがうら市", 3, 1);
    +----------------------------------+
    | mask_inner("かすみがうら市", 3, 1) |
    +----------------------------------+
    | かすみXXX市                       |
    +----------------------------------+
    mysql> SELECT mask_inner("かすみがうら市", 1, 3);
    +----------------------------------+
    | mask_inner("かすみがうら市", 1, 3) |
    +----------------------------------+
    | かXXXうら市                       |
    +----------------------------------+
  • mask_outer() does the reverse, masking the ends of its string argument, leaving the interior unmasked. Other arguments specify the sizes of the masked ends.

    mysql> SELECT mask_outer('This is a string', 5, 1);
    +--------------------------------------+
    | mask_outer('This is a string', 5, 1) |
    +--------------------------------------+
    | XXXXXis a strinX                     |
    +--------------------------------------+
    mysql> SELECT mask_outer('This is a string', 1, 5);
    +--------------------------------------+
    | mask_outer('This is a string', 1, 5) |
    +--------------------------------------+
    | Xhis is a sXXXXX                     |
    +--------------------------------------+

By default, mask_inner() and mask_outer() use 'X' as the masking character, but permit an optional masking-character argument:

mysql> SELECT mask_inner('This is a string', 5, 1, '*');
+-------------------------------------------+
| mask_inner('This is a string', 5, 1, '*') |
+-------------------------------------------+
| This **********g                          |
+-------------------------------------------+
mysql> SELECT mask_inner("かすみがうら市", 2, 2, "#");
+---------------------------------------+
| mask_inner("かすみがうら市", 2, 2, "#") |
+---------------------------------------+
| かす###ら市                            |
+---------------------------------------+
Special-Purpose Masking Component Functions

Other masking functions expect a string argument representing a specific type of value and mask it to remove identifying characteristics.

Note

The examples here supply function arguments using the random value generation functions that return the appropriate type of value. For more information about generation functions, see Generating Random Data with Specific Characteristics.

Payment card Primary Account Number masking.  Masking functions provide strict and relaxed masking of Primary Account numbers.

  • mask_pan() masks all but the last four digits of the number:

    mysql> SELECT mask_pan(gen_rnd_pan());
    +-------------------------+
    | mask_pan(gen_rnd_pan()) |
    +-------------------------+
    | XXXXXXXXXXXX2461        |
    +-------------------------+
  • mask_pan_relaxed() is similar but does not mask the first six digits that indicate the payment card issuer unmasked:

    mysql> SELECT mask_pan_relaxed(gen_rnd_pan());
    +---------------------------------+
    | mask_pan_relaxed(gen_rnd_pan()) |
    +---------------------------------+
    | 770630XXXXXX0807                |
    +---------------------------------+

International Bank Account Number masking.  mask_iban() masks all but the first two letters (denoting the country) of the number:

mysql> SELECT mask_iban(gen_rnd_iban());
+---------------------------+
| mask_iban(gen_rnd_iban()) |
+---------------------------+
| ZZ** **** **** ****       |
+---------------------------+

Universally Unique Identifier masking.  mask_uuid() masks all meaningful characters:

mysql> SELECT mask_uuid(gen_rnd_uuid());
+--------------------------------------+
| mask_uuid(gen_rnd_uuid())            |
+--------------------------------------+
| ********-****-****-****-************ |
+--------------------------------------+

US Social Security Number masking.  mask_ssn() masks all but the last four digits of the number:

mysql> SELECT mask_ssn(gen_rnd_ssn());
+-------------------------+
| mask_ssn(gen_rnd_ssn()) |
+-------------------------+
| ***-**-1723             |
+-------------------------+

Canada Social Insurance Number masking.  mask_canada_sin() masks meaningful digits of the number:

mysql> SELECT mask_canada_sin(gen_rnd_canada_sin());
+---------------------------------------+
| mask_canada_sin(gen_rnd_canada_sin()) |
+---------------------------------------+
| XXX-XXX-XXX                           |
+---------------------------------------+

United Kingdom National Insurance Number masking.  mask_uk_nin() masks all but the first two digits of the number:

mysql> SELECT mask_uk_nin(gen_rnd_uk_nin());
+-------------------------------+
| mask_uk_nin(gen_rnd_uk_nin()) |
+-------------------------------+
| ZH*******                     |
+-------------------------------+
Generating Random Data with Specific Characteristics

Several component functions generate random values. These values can be used for testing, simulation, and so forth.

gen_range() returns a random integer selected from a given range:

mysql> SELECT gen_range(1, 10);
+------------------+
| gen_range(1, 10) |
+------------------+
|                6 |
+------------------+

gen_rnd_canada_sin() returns a random number chosen from a range not used for legitimate numbers:

mysql> SELECT gen_rnd_canada_sin();
+----------------------+
| gen_rnd_canada_sin() |
+----------------------+

(The gen_rnd_canada_sin() function result is not shown because its return values should be used only for testing purposes, and not for publication. It cannot be guaranteed the number is not assigned to a legitimate Canada SIN.)

gen_rnd_email() returns a random email address with a specified number of digits for the name and surname parts in the specified domain, mynet.com in the following example:

mysql> SELECT gen_rnd_email(6, 8, 'mynet.com');
+------------------------------+
| gen_rnd_email(6, 8, 'mynet') |
+------------------------------+
| ayxnqu.xmkpvvyr@mynet.com    |
+------------------------------+

gen_rnd_iban() returns a number chosen from a range not used for legitimate numbers:

mysql> SELECT gen_rnd_iban('XO', 24);
+-------------------------------+
| gen_rnd_iban('XO', 24)        |
+-------------------------------+
| XO25 SL7A PGQR B9NN 6IVB RFE8 |
+-------------------------------+

gen_rnd_pan() returns a random payment card Primary Account Number:

mysql> SELECT gen_rnd_pan();

(The gen_rnd_pan() function result is not shown because its return values should be used only for testing purposes, and not for publication. It cannot be guaranteed the number is not assigned to a legitimate payment account.)

gen_rnd_ssn() returns a random US Social Security Number with the first and second parts each chosen from a range not used for legitimate numbers:

mysql> SELECT gen_rnd_ssn();
+---------------+
| gen_rnd_ssn() |
+---------------+
| 912-45-1615   |
+---------------+

gen_rnd_uk_nin() returns a number chosen from a range not used for legitimate numbers:

mysql> SELECT gen_rnd_uk_nin();
+------------------+
| gen_rnd_uk_nin() |
+------------------+

(The gen_rnd_uk_nin() function result is not shown because its return values should be used only for testing purposes, and not for publication. It cannot be guaranteed the number is not assigned to a legitimate NIN.)

gen_rnd_us_phone() returns a random US phone number in the 555 area code not used for legitimate numbers:

mysql> SELECT gen_rnd_us_phone();
+--------------------+
| gen_rnd_us_phone() |
+--------------------+
| 1-555-747-5627     |
+--------------------+

gen_rnd_uuid() returns a number chosen from a range not used for legitimate identifiers:

mysql> SELECT gen_rnd_uuid();
+--------------------------------------+
| gen_rnd_uuid()                       |
+--------------------------------------+
| 68946384-6880-3150-6889-928076732539 |
+--------------------------------------+
Generating Random Data Using Dictionaries

MySQL Enterprise Data Masking and De-Identification enables dictionaries to be used as sources of random values called terms. To use a dictionary, it must first be added to the masking_dictionaries system table and given a name. The dictionaries are read from the table and loaded to the cache during initialization of the components (on server startup). Terms then can then be added, removed, and selected from dictionaries and used as random values or as replacements for other values.

Note

Always edit dictionaries using dictionary administration functions rather than modifying the table directly. If you manipulate the table manually, the dictionary cache becomes inconsistent with the table.

A valid masking_dictionaries table has these characteristics:

  • An administrator created the masking_dictionaries system table in the mysql schema as follows:

    CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS
    masking_dictionaries(
        Dictionary VARCHAR(256) NOT NULL,
        Term VARCHAR(256) NOT NULL,
        UNIQUE INDEX dictionary_term_idx (Dictionary, Term),
        INDEX dictionary_idx (Dictionary)
    ) ENGINE = InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4;
  • MASKING_DICTIONARY_ADMIN privilege is required to add and remove terms, or to remove an entire dictionary.

  • The table may contain multiple dictionaries and their terms.

  • Any user account can view the dictionaries. Given enough queries, all of the terms in dictionaries are retrievable. Avoid adding sensitive data to the dictionary table.

Suppose that a dictionary named DE_cities includes these city names in Germany:

Berlin
Munich
Bremen

Use masking_dictionary_term_add() to assign a dictionary name and one term:

mysql> SELECT masking_dictionary_term_add('DE_Cities', 'Berlin');
+----------------------------------------------------+
| masking_dictionary_term_add('DE_Cities', 'Berlin') |
+----------------------------------------------------+
|                                                  1 |
+----------------------------------------------------+
mysql> SELECT masking_dictionary_term_add('DE_Cities', 'Munich');
+----------------------------------------------------+
| masking_dictionary_term_add('DE_Cities', 'Munich') |
+----------------------------------------------------+
|                                                  1 |
+----------------------------------------------------+
mysql> SELECT masking_dictionary_term_add('DE_Cities', 'Bremen');
+----------------------------------------------------+
| masking_dictionary_term_add('DE_Cities', 'Bremen') |
+----------------------------------------------------+
|                                                  1 |
+----------------------------------------------------+

Also suppose that a dictionary named US_Cities contains these city names in the United States:

Houston
Phoenix
Detroit
mysql> SELECT masking_dictionary_term_add('US_Cities', 'Houston');
+-----------------------------------------------------+
| masking_dictionary_term_add('US_Cities', 'Houston') |
+-----------------------------------------------------+
|                                                   1 |
+-----------------------------------------------------+
mysql> SELECT masking_dictionary_term_add('US_Cities', 'Phoenix');
+-----------------------------------------------------+
| masking_dictionary_term_add('US_Cities', 'Phoenix') |
+-----------------------------------------------------+
|                                                   1 |
+-----------------------------------------------------+
mysql> SELECT masking_dictionary_term_add('US_Cities', 'Detroit');
+-----------------------------------------------------+  
| masking_dictionary_term_add('US_Cities', 'Detroit') |
+-----------------------------------------------------+
|                                                   1 |
+-----------------------------------------------------+

To select a random term from a dictionary, use gen_dictionary():

mysql> SELECT gen_dictionary('DE_Cities');
+-----------------------------+
| gen_dictionary('DE_Cities') |
+-----------------------------+
| Berlin                      |
+-----------------------------+
mysql> SELECT gen_dictionary('US_Cities');
+-----------------------------+
| gen_dictionary('US_Cities') |
+-----------------------------+
| Phoenix                     |
+-----------------------------+

To select a random term from multiple dictionaries, randomly select one of the dictionaries, then select a term from it:

mysql> SELECT gen_dictionary(ELT(gen_range(1,2), 'DE_Cities', 'US_Cities'));
+---------------------------------------------------------------+
| gen_dictionary(ELT(gen_range(1,2), 'DE_Cities', 'US_Cities')) |
+---------------------------------------------------------------+
| Detroit                                                       |
+---------------------------------------------------------------+
mysql> SELECT gen_dictionary(ELT(gen_range(1,2), 'DE_Cities', 'US_Cities'));
+---------------------------------------------------------------+
| gen_dictionary(ELT(gen_range(1,2), 'DE_Cities', 'US_Cities')) |
+---------------------------------------------------------------+
| Bremen                                                        |
+---------------------------------------------------------------+

The gen_blocklist() function enables a term from one dictionary to be replaced by a term from another dictionary, which effects masking by substitution. Its arguments are the term to replace, the dictionary in which the term appears, and the dictionary from which to choose a replacement. For example, to substitute a US city for a German city, or vice versa, use gen_blocklist() like this:

mysql> SELECT gen_blocklist('Munich', 'DE_Cities', 'US_Cities');
+---------------------------------------------------+
| gen_blocklist('Munich', 'DE_Cities', 'US_Cities') |
+---------------------------------------------------+
| Houston                                           |
+---------------------------------------------------+
mysql> SELECT gen_blocklist('El Paso', 'US_Cities', 'DE_Cities');
+----------------------------------------------------+
| gen_blocklist('El Paso', 'US_Cities', 'DE_Cities') |
+----------------------------------------------------+
| Bremen                                             |
+----------------------------------------------------+

If the term to replace is not in the first dictionary, gen_blocklist() returns it unchanged:

mysql> SELECT gen_blocklist('Moscow', 'DE_Cities', 'US_Cities');
+---------------------------------------------------+
| gen_blocklist('Moscow', 'DE_Cities', 'US_Cities') |
+---------------------------------------------------+
| Moscow                                            |
+---------------------------------------------------+
Using Masked Data for Customer Identification

At customer-service call centers, one common identity verification technique is to ask customers to provide their last four Social Security Number (SSN) digits. For example, a customer might say her name is Joanna Bond and that her last four SSN digits are 0007.

Suppose that a customer table containing customer records has these columns:

  • id: Customer ID number.

  • first_name: Customer first name.

  • last_name: Customer last name.

  • ssn: Customer Social Security Number.

For example, the table might be defined as follows:

CREATE TABLE customer
(
  id         BIGINT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
  first_name VARCHAR(40),
  last_name  VARCHAR(40),
  ssn        VARCHAR(11)
);

The application used by customer-service representatives to check the customer SSN might execute a query like this:

mysql> SELECT id, ssn
mysql> FROM customer
mysql> WHERE first_name = 'Joanna' AND last_name = 'Bond';
+-----+-------------+
| id  | ssn         |
+-----+-------------+
| 786 | 906-39-0007 |
+-----+-------------+

However, that exposes the SSN to the customer-service representative, who has no need to see anything but the last four digits. Instead, the application can use this query to display only the masked SSN:

mysql> SELECT id, mask_ssn(CONVERT(ssn USING binary)) AS masked_ssn
mysql> FROM customer
mysql> WHERE first_name = 'Joanna' AND last_name = 'Bond';
+-----+-------------+
| id  | masked_ssn  |
+-----+-------------+
| 786 | ***-**-0007 |
+-----+-------------+

Now the representative sees only what is necessary, and customer privacy is preserved.

Why was the CONVERT() function used for the argument to mask_ssn()? Because mask_ssn() requires an argument of length 11. Thus, even though ssn is defined as VARCHAR(11), if the ssn column has a multibyte character set, it may appear to be longer than 11 bytes when passed to a loadable function, and returns NULL while logging the error. Converting the value to a binary string ensures that the function sees an argument of length 11.

A similar technique may be needed for other data masking functions when string arguments do not have a single-byte character set.

Creating Views that Display Masked Data

If masked data from a table is used for multiple queries, it may be convenient to define a view that produces masked data. That way, applications can select from the view without performing masking in individual queries.

For example, a masking view on the customer table from the previous section can be defined like this:

CREATE VIEW masked_customer AS
SELECT id, first_name, last_name,
mask_ssn(CONVERT(ssn USING binary)) AS masked_ssn
FROM customer;

Then the query to look up a customer becomes simpler but still returns masked data:

mysql> SELECT id, masked_ssn
mysql> FROM masked_customer
mysql> WHERE first_name = 'Joanna' AND last_name = 'Bond';
+-----+-------------+
| id  | masked_ssn  |
+-----+-------------+
| 786 | ***-**-0007 |
+-----+-------------+