This commit modifies the call sites that allocate a parameterized
message to use a supplier so that allocations are avoided unless the log
level is fine enough to emit the corresponding log message.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@955ab89b8b
This used to be an assertion but we move it to an exception to be able to catch this at all times without requiring assertion enabled
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@fcb5fbe852
When migrating the package and class names from shield to xpack.security, the logging.yml
file was updated incorrectly which resulted in audit entries going to the wrong file. This change
specifies the correct package name so audit logs go to the correct file.
Closeselastic/elasticsearch#3063
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@5c07108392
This change allows extensions to define their own filtered settings. This is used when there
may be sensitive credentials stored in a custom realm that should be filtered out of some
API calls.
Closeselastic/elasticsearch#2847
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@952474daba
With elastic/elasticsearchelastic/elasticsearch#19865 the XContentBuilder has changed to support both inclusive and exclusive filters and now uses Set<String> instead of arrays of Strings. This change updates the various places in x-plugins where string arrays were used.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@1f8d4485f4
The actual backwards compatibility support is handled by core's ability to downgrade `keyword` and `text` into `string` for indexes created in 2.x.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@6b615d9a45
Although most of the security functionality was disabled when a basic license was applied,
some of the functionality still could be executed such as using the authenticate API or using
a transport client. The issue here is the UI calls the authenticate API and this gives the impression
that security is really in use when it is not.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@881453fc4c
The realtime request interceptor was added to stop realtime requests from bypassing DLS
or FLS as the request could read a document from the translog. After
elastic/elasticsearchelastic/elasticsearch#20102 we no longer read documents from the translog so we can
allow realtime requests even when DLS or FLS is enabled.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@069b501500
This commit simplifies the code used for resolving the files used for security to always
resolve against the `config` file. Elasticsearch no longer offers a way to disable the security
manager, so the files read by x-pack should not really be configurable and only exist in their
default locations since that is what can be read by the process.
As part of this, the documentation was updated to indicate that these files should always be in
the default location and the settings to change the locations have been removed. Also, a bug
was fixed in a few places where settings were still using `shield.` instead of `xpack.security.`.
Finally, some outdated and unused files were deleted from the repository.
Closeselastic/elasticsearch#305
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@3884f080a0
This change cleans up some of the log messages and levels that could now be considered misleading.
While performing these cleanups, the following was done:
* remove creation of dummy user for gradle run as we have the `elastic` user
* Request interceptors are not bound if field and document level security is disabled
* FLS/DLS interceptors skip execution if document and field level security is disabled by the license state
* The roles store that loaded the role is logged at the TRACE level
* The TransportXPackUsageAction was using the incorrect action name when registering a handler
Closeselastic/elasticsearch#2096Closeselastic/elasticsearch#1861Closeselastic/elasticsearch#2229
See elastic/elasticsearch#1879
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@ac16b21c0c
This change allows users with the superuser role to access the security index. We previously allowed
the XPackUser to access this with the intent that the XPackUser was also the `elastic` user. When the
`elastic` user was split out into the ElasticUser, we did not update the check to allow this user access
to the security index.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@fa556d9845
This commit changes how we get the file and directory name for certificates in the tool. The
tool now prompts the user for the filename. If the provided instance name will result in a
valid filename, this is provided as a default. Otherwise the user must provide a valid
filename.
Closeselastic/elasticsearch#2854
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@3c923d736b
This adds back (again) building a transport client plugin jar for
x-pack, and also adds producing an "api" jar which extension authors can
build against. For now, both these jars are exactly the same, but
eventually they could differ, and be reduced to less than the real
x-pack jar.
see elastic/stackelastic/elasticsearch#7
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@0a989de18b
This reverts building a separate client jar for xpack. It is not
necessary because we already build x-pack as a jar and publish to
elastic maven, since extension authors need that.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@2fab06b42c