Removes the `@timestamp` field mapping from several data stream index
template snippets.
With #59317, the `@timestamp` field defaults to a `date` field data type
for data streams.
This PR adds minimum support for prefix search of API Key name. It only touches API key name and leave all other query parameters, e.g. realm name, username unchanged.
This makes the data_stream timestamp field specification optional when
defining a composable template.
When there isn't one specified it will default to `@timestamp`.
(cherry picked from commit 5609353c5d164e15a636c22019c9c17fa98aac30)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
This commit changes our behavior in 2 ways:
- When mapping claims to user properties ( principal, email, groups,
name), we only handle string and array of string type. Previously
we would fail to recognize an array of other types and that would
cause failures when trying to cast to String.
- When adding unmapped claims to the user metadata, we only handle
string, number, boolean and arrays of these. Previously, we would
fail to recognize an array of other types and that would cause
failures when attempting to process role mappings.
For user properties that are inherently single valued, like
principal(username) we continue to support arrays of strings where
we select the first one in case this is being depended on by users
but we plan on removing this leniency in the next major release.
Co-authored-by: Ioannis Kakavas <ioannis@elastic.co>
Add caching support for application privileges to reduce number of round-trips to security index when building application privilege descriptors.
Privilege retrieving in NativePrivilegeStore is changed to always fetching all privilege documents for a given application. The caching is applied to all places including "get privilege", "has privileges" APIs and CompositeRolesStore (for authentication).
Adds an example snippet for creating a `_doc` payload field with the
Watcher `index` action.
Co-authored-by: Luiz Guilherme Pais dos Santos <luiz.santos@elastic.co>
If CI is running tests at exactly 0 or 5 minutes past the hour
the ack-watch docs tests may fail with a 409 error if the ack
test happens to run at the exact time that the schedule watch
is running.
This commit changes the public documentation (and the test) for
the ack to a feb 29th at noon schedule. Test doc or tests do
not really care about the schedule date and this is chosen
since it is a valid date, but one that is extremely unlikely
to cause issues.
* [DOCS] Promote cron expressions info from Watcher to a separate topic.
* Fix table error
* Fixed xref
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: James Rodewig <james.rodewig@elastic.co>
* Incorporated review feedback
Co-authored-by: James Rodewig <james.rodewig@elastic.co>
Co-authored-by: James Rodewig <james.rodewig@elastic.co>
* Swaps outdated index patterns for the default `logstash` index alias.
Adds some related information about Logstash ILM defaults to the callout.
* Swaps `*.raw` fields for `*.keyword` fields. The Logstash template
uses `keyword` fields by default since 6.x.
* Swaps instances of `ctx.payload.hits.total.value` with
`ctx.payload.hits.total`
Fixes#56164. A minor update in the documentation, API key name is required when creating API key. If the API key name is not provided then the request will fail.
This commit fixes our behavior regarding the responses we
return in various cases for the use of token related APIs.
More concretely:
- In the Get Token API with the `refresh` grant, when an invalid
(already deleted, malformed, unknown) refresh token is used in the
body of the request, we respond with `400` HTTP status code
and an `error_description` header with the message "could not
refresh the requested token".
Previously we would return erroneously return a `401` with "token
malformed" message.
- In the Invalidate Token API, when using an invalid (already
deleted, malformed, unknown) access or refresh token, we respond
with `404` and a body that shows that no tokens were invalidated:
```
{
"invalidated_tokens":0,
"previously_invalidated_tokens":0,
"error_count":0
}
```
The previous behavior would be to erroneously return
a `400` or `401` ( depending on the case ).
- In the Invalidate Token API, when the tokens index doesn't
exist or is closed, we return `400` because we assume this is
a user issue either because they tried to invalidate a token
when there is no tokens index yet ( i.e. no tokens have
been created yet or the tokens index has been deleted ) or the
index is closed.
- In the Invalidate Token API, when the tokens index is
unavailable, we return a `503` status code because
we want to signal to the caller of the API that the token they
tried to invalidate was not invalidated and we can't be sure
if it is still valid or not, and that they should try the request
again.
Resolves: #53323
* [DOCS] Removed obsolete warning about no way to securely store passwords.
* Update x-pack/docs/en/watcher/actions/email.asciidoc
Co-Authored-By: James Rodewig <james.rodewig@elastic.co>
Role names are now compiled from role templates before role mapping is saved.
This serves as validation for role templates to prevent malformed and invalid scripts
to be persisted, which could later break authentication.
Resolves: #48773
The existing wording in the file realm docs proved confusing
for users as it seemed to indicate that it should _only_ be
used as a fallback/recovery realm and that it is not a
first class realm.
This change attempts to clarify this and point out that recovery
is _a_ use case for the file realm but not the only intended one.
This is useful in cases where the caller of the API needs to know
the name of the realm that consumed the SAML Response and
authenticated the user and this is not self evident (i.e. because
there are many saml realms defined in ES).
Currently, the way to learn the realm name would be to make a
subsequent request to the `_authenticate` API.
The main purpose of this commit is to add a single autoscaling REST
endpoint skeleton, for the purpose of starting to build out the build
and testing infrastructure that will surround it. For example, rather
than commiting a fully-functioning autoscaling API, we introduce here
the skeleton so that we can start wiring up the build and testing
infrastructure, establish security roles/permissions, an so on. This
way, in a forthcoming PR that introduces actual functionality, that PR
will be smaller and have less distractions around that sort of
infrastructure.
This commit creates a new index privilege named `maintenance`.
The privilege grants the following actions: `refresh`, `flush` (also synced-`flush`),
and `force-merge`. Previously the actions were only under the `manage` privilege
which in some situations was too permissive.
Co-authored-by: Amir H Movahed <arhd83@gmail.com>
With elastic/elasticsearch#35848, users can now retrieve total hits as an integer when the `rest_total_hits_as_int` query parameter is `true`. This is the default value.
This updates several snippet examples in the Watcher docs that used a workaround to get a total hits integer.
This change adds a new `kibana_admin` role, and deprecates
the old `kibana_user` and`kibana_dashboard_only_user`roles.
The deprecation is implemented via a new reserved metadata
attribute, which can be consumed from the API and also triggers
deprecation logging when used (by a user authenticating to
Elasticsearch).
Some docs have been updated to avoid references to these
deprecated roles.
Backport of: #46456
Co-authored-by: Larry Gregory <lgregorydev@gmail.com>