I'm going to be using gRPC for a device to device connection over a network (my device will be running Linux and collecting patient data from various monitors, gRPC will be used by a Windows client system to grab and display that data).
I obviously want to encrypt the data on the wire, but dealing with certificates is going to be a problem for various reasons. I can easily have the server not ask for the client cert, but so far I've been unable to find a way around the client validating the server's cert.
I've got several reasons I don't want to bother with a server cert:
The data collection device (the gRPC server) is going to be assigned an IP and name via DHCP in most cases. Which means that when that name changes (at install time, or when they move the device to a different part of the hospital), I have to automatically fixup the certs. Other than shipping a self-signed CA cert and key with the device, I don't know how to do that.
There are situations where we're going to want to point client to server via IP, not name. Given that gRPC can't do a cert for an IP (https://github.com/grpc/grpc/issues/2691), this becomes a configuration that we can't support without doing something to give a name to a thing we only have an IP for (hosts file on the Windows client?). Given the realities of operating in a hospital IT environment, NOT supporting use of IPs instead of names is NOT an option.
Is there some simple way to accommodate this situation? I'm far from an expert on any of this, so it's entirely possible I've missed something very basic.
Is there some simple way to set the name that the client uses to check the server to be different than the name it uses to connect to the server? That way I could just set a fixed name, use that all the time and be fine.
Is there some way to get a gRPC client to not check the server certificate? (I already have the server setup to ignore the client cert).
Is there some other way to get gRPC to encrypt the connection?
I could conceivably set things up to have the client open an ssh tunnel to the server and then run an insecure gRPC connection across that tunnel, but obviously adding another layer to opening the connection is a pain in the neck, and I'm not at all sure how comfortable the client team is going to be with that.