This PR ensure that same roles are cached only once even when they are from different API keys.
API key role descriptors and limited role descriptors are now saved in Authentication#metadata
as raw bytes instead of deserialised Map<String, Object>.
Hashes of these bytes are used as keys for API key roles. Only when the required role is not found
in the cache, they will be deserialised to build the RoleDescriptors. The deserialisation is directly
from raw bytes to RoleDescriptors without going through the current detour of
"bytes -> Map -> bytes -> RoleDescriptors".
* Detangle JdkJarHellCheck from build tool building
- allows building the tool with same runtime as es
- allows building build tools with newer runtime version and keep ThirdPartyAuditTask
running with minimum runtime to ensure we check against correct jre
- add jdkjarhell test jar setup into fixture
* Replace compile configuration usage with api (#58451)
- Use java-library instead of plugin to allow api configuration usage
- Remove explicit references to runtime configurations in dependency declarations
- Make test runtime classpath input for testing convention
- required as java library will by default not have build jar file
- jar file is now explicit input of the task and gradle will ensure its properly build
* Fix compile usages in 7.x branch
This commit converts the bats tests for the plugin cli into the java
packaging test framework. The new tests only use the example plugin to
test the plugin cli. The tests for each individual plugin's contents
after being installed are handled by a new unit test for the plugin
installer added in #58287.
This commit creates a shared withCustomConfig method that may be used by
any packaging test. The method will copy the config directory and
override the conf path appropriately depending on the distribution type.
* Remove usage of deprecated testCompile configuration
* Replace testCompile usage by testImplementation
* Make testImplementation non transitive by default (as we did for testCompile)
* Update CONTRIBUTING about using testImplementation for test dependencies
* Fail on testCompile configuration usage
When Joni, the regex engine that powers grok emits a warning it
does so by default to System.err. System.err logs are all bucketed
together in the server log at WARN level. When Joni emits a warning,
it can be extremely verbose, logging a message for each execution
again that pattern. For ingest node that means for every document
that is run that through Grok. Fortunately, Joni provides a call
back hook to push these warnings to a custom location.
This commit implements Joni's callback hook to push the Joni warning
to the Elasticsearch server logger (logger.org.elasticsearch.ingest.common.GrokProcessor)
at debug level. Generally these warning indicate a possible issue with
the regular expression and upon creation of the Grok processor will
do a "test run" of the expression and log the result (if any) at WARN
level. This WARN level log should only occur on pipeline creation which
is a much lower frequency then every document.
Additionally, the documentation is updated with instructions for how
to set the logger to debug level.
Until 7.7 we used to ignore `null` values for `bool`queries `minimum_should_match`,
parameters and also for the `must`, `must_not`, `should` and `filter` clauses.
An internal refactoring has changed this so now we get a parsing error. While `null`
should not a common value here, we should restore the old behaviour for bwc for now.
Closes#56812
All of these files were written by us, and not sourced from
anywhere. Therefore, the license head should be granting licenses to
Elasticsearch, rathern than to the ASF. This commit address them by
changing the license to our standard Apache 2.0 license header.
This change aims to fix our setup in CI so that we can run 7.x in
FIPS 140 mode. The major issue that we have in 7.x and did not
have in master is that we can't use the diagnostic trust manager
in FIPS mode in Java 8 with SunJSSE in FIPS approved mode as it
explicitly disallows the wrapping of X509TrustManager.
Previous attempts like #56427 and #52211 focused on disabling the
setting in all of our tests when creating a Settings object or
on setting fips_mode.enabled accordingly (which implicitly disables
the diagnostic trust manager). The attempts weren't future proof
though as nothing would forbid someone to add new tests without
setting the necessary setting and forcing this would be very
inconvenient for any other case ( see
#56427 (comment) for the full argumentation).
This change introduces a runtime check in SSLService that overrides
the configuration value of xpack.security.ssl.diagnose.trust and
disables the diagnostic trust manager when we are running in Java 8
and the SunJSSE provider is set in FIPS mode.
This is another part of the breakup of the massive BuildPlugin. This PR
moves the code for configuring publications to a separate plugin. Most
of the time these publications are jar files, but this also supports the
zip publication we have for integ tests.
Another Jackson release is available. There are some CVEs addressed,
none of which impact us, but since we can now bump Jackson easily, let
us move along with the train to avoid the false positives from security
scanners.
This was noticed for a pipeline that was defining hundreds of
grok patterns inline with a single grok processor.
The recursive call used to translate a Grok pattern to a regular
expression can overflow the stack. This commit converts that method
to an iterative method.
Co-authored-by: Przemko Robakowski <probakowski@users.noreply.github.com>
this commit adds aggregation support for the geo_shape field
type on geo*_grid aggregations.
it introduces a Tiler for both tiles and hashes that enables a new type of
ValuesSource to replace the GeoPoint's CellIdSource. This makes it possible
for the existing Aggregator to be re-used, so no new implementations of
the grid aggregators are added.
We were creating PemKeyConfig objects using different private
keys but always using testnode.crt certificate that uses the
RSA public key. The PemKeyConfig was built but we would
then later fail to handle SSL connections during the TLS
handshake eitherway.
This became obvious in FIPS tests where the consistency
checks that FIPS 140 mandates kick in and failed early
becausethe private key was of different type than the
public key
Introduces InstantiatingObjectParser which is similar to the
ConstructingObjectParser, but instantiates the object using its constructor
instead of a builder function.
Closes#52499
PEMUtils would incorrectly fill the encryption password with zeros
(the '\0' character) after decrypting a PKCS#8 key.
Since PEMUtils did not take ownership of this password it should not
zero it out because it does not know whether the caller will use that
password array again. This is actually what PEMKeyConfig does - it
uses the key encryption password as the password for the ephemeral
keystore that it creates in order to build a KeyManager.
Backport of: #55457
I've noticed that a lot of our tests are using deprecated static methods
from the Hamcrest matchers. While this is not a big deal in any
objective sense, it seems like a small good thing to reduce compilation
warnings and be ready for a new release of the matcher library if we
need to upgrade. I've also switched a few other methods in tests that
have drop-in replacements.
Currently forbidden apis accounts for 800+ tasks in the build. These
tasks are aggressively created by the plugin. In forbidden apis 3.0, we
will get task avoidance
(https://github.com/policeman-tools/forbidden-apis/pull/162), but we
need to ourselves use the same task avoidance mechanisms to not trigger
these task creations. This commit does that for our foribdden apis
usages, in preparation for upgrading to 3.0 when it is released.
We implicitly only supported the prime256v1 ( aka secp256r1 )
curve for the EC keys we read as PEM files to be used in any
SSL Context. We would not fail when trying to read a key
pair using a different curve but we would silently assume
that it was using `secp256r1` which would lead to strange
TLS handshake issues if the curve was actually another one.
This commit fixes that behavior in that it
supports parsing EC keys that use any of the named curves
defined in rfc5915 and rfc5480 making no assumptions about
whether the security provider in use supports them (JDK8 and
higher support all the curves defined in rfc5480).
A Java8 compatible version of Map.ofEntries() was added in #54183,
but it really needs a compat version of Map.entry as well in order to
facilitate easy backports from master.
This commit causes negative TimeValues, other than -1 which is sometimes used as
a sentinel value, to be rejected during parsing.
Also introduces a hack to allow ILM to load policies which were written to the
cluster state with a negative min_age, treating those values as 0, which should
match the behavior of prior versions.
This commit removes the configuration time vs execution time distinction
with regards to certain BuildParms properties. Because of the cost of
determining Java versions for configuration JDK locations we deferred
this until execution time. This had two main downsides. First, we had
to implement all this build logic in tasks, which required a bunch of
additional plumbing and complexity. Second, because some information
wasn't known during configuration time, we had to nest any build logic
that depended on this in awkward callbacks.
We now defer to the JavaInstallationRegistry recently added in Gradle.
This utility uses a much more efficient method for probing Java
installations vs our jrunscript implementation. This, combined with some
optimizations to avoid probing the current JVM as well as deferring
some evaluation via Providers when probing installations for BWC builds
we can maintain effectively the same configuration time performance
while removing a bunch of complexity and runtime cost (snapshotting
inputs for the GenerateGlobalBuildInfoTask was very expensive). The end
result should be a much more responsive build execution in almost all
scenarios.
(cherry picked from commit ecdbd37f2e0f0447ed574b306adb64c19adc3ce1)
It's simple to deprecate a field used in an ObjectParser just by adding deprecation
markers to the relevant ParseField objects. The warnings themselves don't currently
have any context - they simply say that a deprecated field has been used, but not
where in the input xcontent it appears. This commit adds the parent object parser
name and XContentLocation to these deprecation messages.
Note that the context is automatically stripped from warning messages when they
are asserted on by integration tests and REST tests, because randomization of
xcontent type during these tests means that the XContentLocation is not constant
This commit makes a number of improvements when importing the
Elasticsearch project into IntelliJ IDEA. Specifically:
- Contributing documentation has been updated to reflect that the
'idea' task should no long be used and Gradle project import is
instead the officially supported way of setting up the project.
- Attempts to run the 'idea' task will result in a failure with a
message directing folks to our CONTRIBUTING.md document.
- The project JDK is explicit set rather that using whatever JAVA_HOME
is.
- Gradle build operation delegation is disabled, and test execution is
configured to 'choose per test'.
- Gradle is configured to inherit the project JDK.
- Some code style conventions are automatically configured.
- File encoding is explicitly set to UTF-8.
- Parallel module compilation is enabled and deprecated feature
warnings are disabled.
- A remote debug run configuration using listen mode is created.
- JUnit runner is configured with required system properties.
- License headers are configured such that Apache 2 is the default
notice added to all source files with exception of source in /x-pack
which will use the Elastic license.
Backport to 7x
Enable geo_shape query to work on geo_point fields for shapes: circle, polygon, multipolygon, rectangle see: #48928
Co-Authored-By: @iverase
Sometimes we want to deprecate and remove a ParseField entirely, without replacement;
for example, the various places where we specify a _type field in 7x. Currently we can
tell users only that a particular field name should not be used, and that another name should
be used in its place. This commit adds the ability to say that a field should not be used at
all.
Re-applies the change from #53523 along with test fixes.
closes#53626closes#53624closes#53622closes#53625
Co-authored-by: Nik Everett <nik9000@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Lee Hinman <dakrone@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Jake Landis <jake.landis@elastic.co>
ObjectParser allows you to declare a set of required fields, such that at least one
of the set must appear in an xcontent object for it to be valid. This commit adds
the similar concept of a set of exclusive fields, such that at most one of the set
must be present. It also enables required fields on ConstructingObjectParser, and
re-implements PercolateQueryBuilder.fromXContent() to use object parsing as
an example of how this works.
This adds a builder and parsed results for the `string_stats`
aggregation directly to the high level rest client. Without this the
HLRC can't access the `string_stats` API without the elastic licensed
`analytics` module.
While I'm in there this adds a few of our usual unit tests and
modernizes the parsing.
ConstructingObjectParser can be used to specify required fields,
but it is still difficult to configure "sets" of fields where only
one of the set is required (requiring hand-rolled logic in each
ConstructingObjectParser, or adding special validation methods
to objects that are called after building the object).
This commit adds a new method on ObjectParser which allows
the parsers to register required sets. E.g. ["foo", "bar"] can be
registered, which means "foo", "bar" or both must be configured
by the user otherwise an exception is thrown.
This pattern crops up in many places in our parsers; a good example are
the aggregation "field" and "script" fields. One or both must be
configured on all aggregations, omitting both should result in an exception.
This was previously handled far downstream resulting in an aggregation
exception, when it should be a parse exception.
While we use `== false` as a more visible form of boolean negation
(instead of `!`), the true case is implied and the true value does not
need to explicitly checked. This commit converts cases that have slipped
into the code checking for `== true`.
* Reload secure settings with password (#43197)
If a password is not set, we assume an empty string to be
compatible with previous behavior.
Only allow the reload to be broadcast to other nodes if TLS is
enabled for the transport layer.
* Add passphrase support to elasticsearch-keystore (#38498)
This change adds support for keystore passphrases to all subcommands
of the elasticsearch-keystore cli tool and adds a subcommand for
changing the passphrase of an existing keystore.
The work to read the passphrase in Elasticsearch when
loading, which will be addressed in a different PR.
Subcommands of elasticsearch-keystore can handle (open and create)
passphrase protected keystores
When reading a keystore, a user is only prompted for a passphrase
only if the keystore is passphrase protected.
When creating a keystore, a user is allowed (default behavior) to create one with an
empty passphrase
Passphrase can be set to be empty when changing/setting it for an
existing keystore
Relates to: #32691
Supersedes: #37472
* Restore behavior for force parameter (#44847)
Turns out that the behavior of `-f` for the add and add-file sub
commands where it would also forcibly create the keystore if it
didn't exist, was by design - although undocumented.
This change restores that behavior auto-creating a keystore that
is not password protected if the force flag is used. The force
OptionSpec is moved to the BaseKeyStoreCommand as we will presumably
want to maintain the same behavior in any other command that takes
a force option.
* Handle pwd protected keystores in all CLI tools (#45289)
This change ensures that `elasticsearch-setup-passwords` and
`elasticsearch-saml-metadata` can handle a password protected
elasticsearch.keystore.
For setup passwords the user would be prompted to add the
elasticsearch keystore password upon running the tool. There is no
option to pass the password as a parameter as we assume the user is
present in order to enter the desired passwords for the built-in
users.
For saml-metadata, we prompt for the keystore password at all times
even though we'd only need to read something from the keystore when
there is a signing or encryption configuration.
* Modify docs for setup passwords and saml metadata cli (#45797)
Adds a sentence in the documentation of `elasticsearch-setup-passwords`
and `elasticsearch-saml-metadata` to describe that users would be
prompted for the keystore's password when running these CLI tools,
when the keystore is password protected.
Co-Authored-By: Lisa Cawley <lcawley@elastic.co>
* Elasticsearch keystore passphrase for startup scripts (#44775)
This commit allows a user to provide a keystore password on Elasticsearch
startup, but only prompts when the keystore exists and is encrypted.
The entrypoint in Java code is standard input. When the Bootstrap class is
checking for secure keystore settings, it checks whether or not the keystore
is encrypted. If so, we read one line from standard input and use this as the
password. For simplicity's sake, we allow a maximum passphrase length of 128
characters. (This is an arbitrary limit and could be increased or eliminated.
It is also enforced in the keystore tools, so that a user can't create a
password that's too long to enter at startup.)
In order to provide a password on standard input, we have to account for four
different ways of starting Elasticsearch: the bash startup script, the Windows
batch startup script, systemd startup, and docker startup. We use wrapper
scripts to reduce systemd and docker to the bash case: in both cases, a
wrapper script can read a passphrase from the filesystem and pass it to the
bash script.
In order to simplify testing the need for a passphrase, I have added a
has-passwd command to the keystore tool. This command can run silently, and
exit with status 0 when the keystore has a password. It exits with status 1 if
the keystore doesn't exist or exists and is unencrypted.
A good deal of the code-change in this commit has to do with refactoring
packaging tests to cleanly use the same tests for both the "archive" and the
"package" cases. This required not only moving tests around, but also adding
some convenience methods for an abstraction layer over distribution-specific
commands.
* Adjust docs for password protected keystore (#45054)
This commit adds relevant parts in the elasticsearch-keystore
sub-commands reference docs and in the reload secure settings API
doc.
* Fix failing Keystore Passphrase test for feature branch (#50154)
One problem with the passphrase-from-file tests, as written, is that
they would leave a SystemD environment variable set when they failed,
and this setting would cause elasticsearch startup to fail for other
tests as well. By using a try-finally, I hope that these tests will fail
more gracefully.
It appears that our Fedora and Ubuntu environments may be configured to
store journald information under /var rather than under /run, so that it
will persist between boots. Our destructive tests that read from the
journal need to account for this in order to avoid trying to limit the
output we check in tests.
* Run keystore management tests on docker distros (#50610)
* Add Docker handling to PackagingTestCase
Keystore tests need to be able to run in the Docker case. We can do this
by using a DockerShell instead of a plain Shell when Docker is running.
* Improve ES startup check for docker
Previously we were checking truncated output for the packaged JDK as
an indication that Elasticsearch had started. With new preliminary
password checks, we might get a false positive from ES keystore
commands, so we have to check specifically that the Elasticsearch
class from the Bootstrap package is what's running.
* Test password-protected keystore with Docker (#50803)
This commit adds two tests for the case where we mount a
password-protected keystore into a Docker container and provide a
password via a Docker environment variable.
We also fix a logging bug where we were logging the identifier for an
array of strings rather than the contents of that array.
* Add documentation for keystore startup prompting (#50821)
When a keystore is password-protected, Elasticsearch will prompt at
startup. This commit adds documentation for this prompt for the archive,
systemd, and Docker cases.
Co-authored-by: Lisa Cawley <lcawley@elastic.co>
* Warn when unable to upgrade keystore on debian (#51011)
For Red Hat RPM upgrades, we warn if we can't upgrade the keystore. This
commit brings the same logic to the code for Debian packages. See the
posttrans file for gets executed for RPMs.
* Restore handling of string input
Adds tests that were mistakenly removed. One of these tests proved
we were not handling the the stdin (-x) option correctly when no
input was added. This commit restores the original approach of
reading stdin one char at a time until there is no more (-1, \r, \n)
instead of using readline() that might return null
* Apply spotless reformatting
* Use '--since' flag to get recent journal messages
When we get Elasticsearch logs from journald, we want to fetch only log
messages from the last run. There are two reasons for this. First, if
there are many logs, we might get a string that's too large for our
utility methods. Second, when we're looking for a specific message or
error, we almost certainly want to look only at messages from the last
execution.
Previously, we've been trying to do this by clearing out the physical
files under the journald process. But there seems to be some contention
over these directories: if journald writes a log file in between when
our deletion command deletes the file and when it deletes the log
directory, the deletion will fail.
It seems to me that we might be able to use journald's "--since" flag to
retrieve only log messages from the last run, and that this might be
less likely to fail due to race conditions in file deletion.
Unfortunately, it looks as if the "--since" flag has a granularity of
one-second. I've added a two-second sleep to make sure that there's a
sufficient gap between the test that will read from journald and the
test before it.
* Use new journald wrapper pattern
* Update version added in secure settings request
Co-authored-by: Lisa Cawley <lcawley@elastic.co>
Co-authored-by: Ioannis Kakavas <ikakavas@protonmail.com>
This change changes the way to run our test suites in
JVMs configured in FIPS 140 approved mode. It does so by:
- Configuring any given runtime Java in FIPS mode with the bundled
policy and security properties files, setting the system
properties java.security.properties and java.security.policy
with the == operator that overrides the default JVM properties
and policy.
- When runtime java is 11 and higher, using BouncyCastle FIPS
Cryptographic provider and BCJSSE in FIPS mode. These are
used as testRuntime dependencies for unit
tests and internal clusters, and copied (relevant jars)
explicitly to the lib directory for testclusters used in REST tests
- When runtime java is 8, using BouncyCastle FIPS
Cryptographic provider and SunJSSE in FIPS mode.
Running the tests in FIPS 140 approved mode doesn't require an
additional configuration either in CI workers or locally and is
controlled by specifying -Dtests.fips.enabled=true
When you declare an ObjectParser with top level named objects like we do
with `significant_terms` we didn't support "did you mean". This fixes
that.
Relates #50938
Check it out:
```
$ curl -u elastic:password -HContent-Type:application/json -XPOST localhost:9200/test/_update/foo?pretty -d'{
"dac": {}
}'
{
"error" : {
"root_cause" : [
{
"type" : "x_content_parse_exception",
"reason" : "[2:3] [UpdateRequest] unknown field [dac] did you mean [doc]?"
}
],
"type" : "x_content_parse_exception",
"reason" : "[2:3] [UpdateRequest] unknown field [dac] did you mean [doc]?"
},
"status" : 400
}
```
The tricky thing about implementing this is that x-content doesn't
depend on Lucene. So this works by creating an extension point for the
error message using SPI. Elasticsearch's server module provides the
"spell checking" implementation.
s
In order to ensure that logstash and Elasticsearch are able to understand
the same patterns, this commit adapts to changes in logstash, adds a few
patterns and changes a few.
We *very* commonly have object with ctors like:
```
public Foo(String name)
```
And then declare a bunch of setters on the object. Every aggregation
works like this, for example. This change teaches `ObjectParser` how to
build these aggregations all on its own, without any help. This'll make
it much cleaner to parse aggs, and, probably, a bunch of other things.
It'll let us remove lots of wrapping. I've used this new power for the
`avg` aggregation just to prove that it works outside of a unit test.