Reindex has grown support for simple whitelist patterns like
`localhost:*` and lost support for `myself`.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@31d9c4dc5c
Eagerly authorizing CompositeIndicesRequests allowed the security plugin to fail fast up until now, but it makes it very hard to reason about each specific item in a multi items request. Either all items fail, or none do. We would rather want to adopt a similar behaviour to es core, where individual items fail without affecting other items that are part of the same request. We can rely on the fact that es core always authorizes both main action and every subaction too, and skip authorization for the main action. By subaction we mean either all sub search requests in msearch, as well as each shard level get in mget or shard level bulk request for bulk.
BulkRequestInterceptor was converted to intercept BulkShardRequests rather than BulkRequest as that is where bulk is authorized after this change.
Split IndicesAndAliasesResolverIntegrationTests into ReadActionsTests and WriteActionsTests as they require different set of permissions, lots of tests added.
Explicitly listing the composite actions makes sure that the actions that can bypass security are known, somebody adding a similar action must to add it to the list, so we know it doesn't happen by mistake. At this point the CompositeIndicesRequest can be used as a marker interface only (it is not really needed but can be used to verify that composite actions use a request that implements such interface).
Given that we don't authorize composite actions based on their indices anymore, but only their sub-requests which implement IndicesRequest, printing out the indices names in the audit log for requests like bulk and msearch is confusing. Removed support for that.
Authorize composite indices actions based on their name only, their indices will be authorized at the sub-request/shard level
Rather than simply granting bulk, mget, msearch etc. and relying on authorization at the sub-request/shard level, we check that the current user can at least execute the action. This justifies the grant line that gets written in the audit log, the action is potentially possible without looking at the indices. Each specific item will fail or succeed later and will yield its own specific audit log entry.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@4570caf019
Supporting allowNoIndices means that the security plugin has a behaviour much more similar to vanilla es when dealing with wildcard expressions that match no indices, or empty clusters. The default for most request is to allow no indices, but security plugin could only disallow no indices all the time up until now.
The technical problem was that when anything gets resolved to an empty set of indices, we couldn't let that go through to es core, as that would become resolved to all indices by es core, which would be a security hole. We have now found a way though to replace an empty set of indices with something that es core will for sure resolve to no indices, so we can let the request through. We simply replace empty indices with '-*'.
Multi apis requests (e.g. _msearch) have yet to be fixed, as all their indices end up in the same bucket while they should each be authorized separately, so that every specific item can fail or be let through.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@0f67a0bfea
For all the requests that support multiple indices and wildcards, hence implementing IndicesRequest.Replaceable, we replace the wildcard expressions with the explicit names of the authorized indices they match. _all or empty indices is treated as a wildcard expression. We can also honour the ignore_unavailable option by going over all the explicit names and filter out the non authorized ones when ignore_unavailable is set to true. If ignore_unavailable is set to false, we leave everything as-is, which will cause an authorization exception to be thrown if only one of those explicit indices is not authorized for the current user.
This is the first step towards resolving elastic/elasticsearch#1250. The remaining issue is that in case we are left with no indices after stripping out the ones that the user is not authorized for, we throw an authorization exception rather than returning an empty response. That will require honouring the allow_no_indices option, which will also change the behaviour when a cluster is empty.
Relates to elastic/elasticsearch#1250
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@e4ca940d05
When adding a watch which has a painless component, the scriptexception
was wrapped into a deprecated exception which means, that the awesome
painless descriptions were lost. This wrapping has been removed.
Closeselastic/elasticsearch#3161
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@1703fe4eb6
This test has been blacklisted and deactivated months ago. This commit reenables this test and moves it at the right place. It also change the test to use the Execute Watch API instead of being sleep based.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@e7a9689375
I think the intent here is to just test that our SSL layers work,
not invoke a long chain of keytool + openssl commands.
This simplifies the build and will work on windows.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@af07d0d4f7
This is all the tests disabled from https://github.com/elastic/x-plugins/issues/724
At least, they will be running in the build in some way. If we can fix gradle to
add plugin metadata from lang-groovy to the test classpath, security manager
can be re-enabled for these as well.
But its also only 8 tests, maybe its easier to fix them?
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@a5c407b80f
This checks that all ES plugins and xplugins are installed. I also
changed the rest check to be a simple plugin count, so it does not fail
when new plugins are added.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@eaab182e43
This is the xplugins side of elastic/elasticsearchelastic/elasticsearch#14986, making use of
the simplification in configuration.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@a24ad7b08a
This adds back the shield qa rest tests module with gradle. There is
also a small fix in ShieldPlugin for a bug that was discovered around
checking for a custom query cache (which was using the node settings
instead of index settings).
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@28c6d58f37
The random index template can set a number of replicas that will prevent the index
from ever being green in a single node cluster...
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@81ecfe0818
- this results in a `marvel-agent-2.0.0.zip` artifact, to better differentiate it from the kibana marvel plugin
- post 2.0 when we move the marvel kibana codebase to x-plugins we'll need to differentiate between these two modules anyway.
Closeselastic/elasticsearch#846
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@6b6a76f7dd
This commit removes Guava as a dependency. Note that Guava will remain
as a test-only dependency (transitively through Elasticsearch through
Jimfs).
Relates elastic/elasticsearchelastic/elasticsearch#13224
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@fe23d5f25f
I fixed a couple more warnings and added suppressions, so that when
elastic/elasticsearchelastic/elasticsearch#13410 lands, x-plugins will not break.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@8a19b2b71b
This change adds a new permission that allows authorized users to execute a request as
another user. The flow is as follows:
1. The user making the request is authenticated
2. The user that is being impersonated is looked up
3. The requesting user is authorized for the privilege to run as the specified user
4. The impersonated user is then authorized for the given request
Additionally, the auditing has been updated to support this capability and indicates when a
user has been granted the ability to run as another user and then also indicates both the user
who is being impersonated and the requesting user when actions are granted/denied.
Closeselastic/elasticsearch#17
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@00e5a6169b
This commit adds a new compare condition called “array_compare”. This
condition enables comparing a single resolved value to an array of
resolved values. The value can be compared for equality, non-equality,
and strict and non-strict ordering; the array compare condition will
evaluate to true if the value compares to true with respect to the
specified operator against all (“all”) or at least one (“some”) of the
values in the array specified by “array_path”. Each value in the array
can be resolved to a value using “path” (e.g., “array_path”:
“cx.payload.aggregations.some_field.buckets” and “path”: “doc_count”
would resolve each value in the buckets array to its “doc_count”).
Closeselastic/elasticsearch#345
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@0d74b4dc11
This adds the extension points necessary to enable a user to write a elasticsearch plugin
that can integrate with Shield and add a custom authentication realm. For the most part,
the work here just exposes the existing interfaces we have been using for Realms and
factories to create realms. An additional interface was added to allow for a custom
authentication failure handler to be used. This was needed to support use cases like SSO
and Kerberos where additional headers may need to be sent to the user or a different
HTTP response code would need to be sent.
Relates to elastic/elasticsearch#24
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@13442e5919
only run watcher rest tests during verify phase
never run the rest tests with shield enabled, because that is now tested in the new qa module
removed the disabled license watcher rest tests, because the disabled license use case is already tested by the LicenseIntegrationTests
enabled the getting started rest test
Closeselastic/elasticsearch#403
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@67f0f7f596
For now this just tries to install license, marvel and watcher, and then checks
that these plugins are listed in the node infos. I can do shield once I figure
out how to set it up for REST tests.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@8549f4bc5a