`PageCacheRecycler` is the class that creates and holds pages of arrays
for various uses. `BigArrays` is just one user of these pages. This
commit moves the constants that define the page sizes for the recycler
to be on the recycler class.
This commit modifies BigArrays to take a circuit breaker name and
the circuit breaking service. The default instance of BigArrays that
is passed around everywhere always uses the request breaker. At the
network level, we want to be using the inflight request breaker. So this
change will allow that.
Additionally, as this change moves away from a single instance of
BigArrays, the class is modified to not be a Releasable anymore.
Releasing big arrays was always dispatching to the PageCacheRecycler,
so this change makes the PageCacheRecycler the class that needs to be
managed and torn-down.
Finally, this commit closes#31435 be making the serialization of
transport messages use the inflight request breaker. With this change,
we no longer push the global BigArrays instnace to the network level.
* This commit is part of our plan to deprecate and ultimately remove the use of _xpack in the REST APIs.
- REST API docs
- HLRC docs and doc tests
- Handle REST actions with deprecation warnings
- Changed endpoints in rest-api-spec and relevant file names
The following updates were made:
- Add a new untyped endpoint `{index}/_explain/{id}`.
- Add deprecation warnings to Rest*Action, plus tests in Rest*ActionTests.
- For each REST yml test, make sure there is one version without types, and another legacy version that retains types (called *_with_types.yml).
- Deprecate relevant methods on the Java HLRC requests/ responses.
- Update documentation (for both the REST API and Java HLRC).
This is related to #27260. In Elasticsearch all of the messages that we
serialize to write to the network are composed of heap bytes. When you
read or write to a nio socket in java, the heap memory you passed down
must be copied to/from direct memory. The JVM internally does some
buffering of the direct memory, however it is essentially unbounded.
This commit introduces a simple mechanism of buffering and copying the
memory in transport-nio. Each network event loop is given a 64kb
DirectByteBuffer. When we go to read we use this buffer and copy the
data after the read. Additionally, when we go to write, we copy the data
to the direct memory before calling write. 64KB is chosen as this is the
default receive buffer size we use for transport-netty4
(NETTY_RECEIVE_PREDICTOR_SIZE).
Since we only have one buffer per thread, we could afford larger.
However, if we the buffer is large and not all of the data is flushed in
a write call, we will do excess copies. This is something we can
explore in the future.
* Add deprecation warnings to `Rest*TermVectorsAction`, plus tests in `Rest*TermVectorsActionTests`.
* Deprecate relevant methods on the Java HLRC requests/ responses.
* Update documentation (for both the REST API and Java HLRC).
* For each REST yml test, create one version without types, and another legacy version that retains types (called *_with_types.yml).
We have a few places where we register license state listeners on
transient components (i.e., resources that can be open and closed during
the lifecycle of the server). In one case (the opt-out query cache) we
were never removing the registered listener, effectively a terrible
memory leak. In another case, we were not un-registered the listener
that we registered, since we were not referencing the same instance of
Runnable. This commit does two things:
- introduces a marker interface LicenseStateListener so that it is
easier to identify these listeners in the codebase and avoid classes
that need to register a license state listener from having to
implement Runnable which carries a different semantic meaning than
we want here
- fixes the two places where we are currently leaking license state
listeners
This commit changes the format of the `hits.total` in the search response to be an object with
a `value` and a `relation`. The `value` indicates the number of hits that match the query and the
`relation` indicates whether the number is accurate (in which case the relation is equals to `eq`)
or a lower bound of the total (in which case it is equals to `gte`).
This change also adds a parameter called `rest_total_hits_as_int` that can be used in the
search APIs to opt out from this change (retrieve the total hits as a number in the rest response).
Note that currently all search responses are accurate (`track_total_hits: true`) or they don't contain
`hits.total` (`track_total_hits: true`). We'll add a way to get a lower bound of the total hits in a
follow up (to allow numbers to be passed to `track_total_hits`).
Relates #33028
Made credentials mandatory for xpack migrate tool.
Closes#29847.
The x-pack user and roles APIs aren't available unless security is enabled, so the tool should always be called with the -u and -p options specified.
This commit adds an empty CcrRepository snapshot/restore repository.
When a new cluster is registered in the remote cluster settings, a new
CcrRepository is registered for that cluster.
This is implemented using a new concept of "internal repositories".
RepositoryPlugin now allows implementations to return factories for
"internal repositories". The "internal repositories" are different from
normal repositories in that they cannot be registered through the
external repository api. Additionally, "internal repositories" are local
to a node and are not stored in the cluster state.
The repository will be unregistered if the remote cluster is removed.
This commit makes `document`, `update`, `explain`, `termvectors` and `mapping`
typeless APIs work on indices that have a type whose name is not `_doc`.
Unfortunately, this needs to be a bit of a hack since I didn't want calls with
random type names to see documents with the type name that the user had chosen
upon type creation.
The `explain` and `termvectors` do not support being called without a type for
now so the test is just using `_doc` as a type for now, we will need to fix
tests later but this shouldn't require further changes server-side since passing
`_doc` as a type name is what typeless APIs do internally anyway.
Relates #35190
Introduces a debug log message when a bind fails and a trace message
when a bind succeeds.
It may seem strange to only debug a bind failure, but failures of this
nature are relatively common in some realm configurations (e.g. LDAP
realm with multiple user templates, or additional realms configured
after an LDAP realm).
This is a follow-up to #35144. That commit made the underlying
connection opening process in TcpTransport asynchronous. However the
method still blocked on the process being complete before returning.
This commit moves the blocking to the ConnectionManager level. This is
another step towards the top-level TransportService api being async.
This commit upgrades netty. This will close#35360. Netty started
throwing an IllegalArgumentException if a CompositeByteBuf is
created with < 2 components. Netty4Utils was updated to reflect this
change.
This is related to #34405 and a follow-up to #34753. It makes a number
of changes to our current keepalive pings.
The ping interval configuration is moved to the ConnectionProfile.
The server channel now responds to pings. This makes the keepalive
pings bidirectional.
On the client-side, the pings can now be optimized away. What this
means is that if the channel has received a message or sent a message
since the last pinging round, the ping is not sent for this round.
Today the default for USE_ZEN2 is false and it is overridden in many places. By
defaulting it to true we can be sure that the only places in which Zen2 does
not work are those in which it is explicitly set to false.
In #30241 Realm settings were changed, but the Kerberos realm settings
were not registered correctly. This change fixes the registration of
those Kerberos settings.
Also adds a new integration test that ensures every internal realm can
be configured in a test cluster.
Also fixes the QA test for kerberos.
Resolves: #35942
Right now using the `GET /_tasks/<taskid>` API and causing a task to opt
in to saving its result after being completed requires permissions on
the `.tasks` index. When we built this we thought that that was fine,
but we've since moved towards not leaking details like "persisting task
results after the task is completed is done by saving them into an index
named `.tasks`." A more modern way of doing this would be to save the
tasks into the index "under the hood" and to have APIs to manage the
saved tasks. This is the first step down that road: it drops the
requirement to have permissions to interact with the `.tasks` index when
fetching task statuses and when persisting statuses beyond the lifetime
of the task.
In particular, this moves the concept of the "origin" of an action into
a more prominent place in the Elasticsearch server. The origin of an
action is ignored by the server, but the security plugin uses the origin
to make requests on behalf of a user in such a way that the user need
not have permissions to perform these actions. It *can* be made to be
fairly precise. More specifically, we can create an internal user just
for the tasks API that just has permission to interact with the `.tasks`
index. This change doesn't do that, instead, it uses the ubiquitus
"xpack" user which has most permissions because it is simpler. Adding
the tasks user is something I'd like to get to in a follow up change.
Instead, the majority of this change is about moving the "origin"
concept from the security portion of x-pack into the server. This should
allow any code to use the origin. To keep the change managable I've also
opted to deprecate rather than remove the "origin" helpers in the
security code. Removing them is almost entirely mechanical and I'd like
to that in a follow up as well.
Relates to #35573
Clients can use the Kerberos V5 security mechanism and when it
used this to establish security context it failed to do so as
Elasticsearch server only accepted Spengo mechanism.
This commit adds support to accept Kerberos V5 credentials
over spnego.
Closes#34763
- Add the authentication realm and lookup realm name and type in the response for the _authenticate API
- The authentication realm is set as the lookup realm too (instead of setting the lookup realm to null or empty ) when no lookup realm is used.
This commit is related to #32517. It allows an "sni_server_name"
attribute on a DiscoveryNode to be propagated to the server using
the TLS SNI extentsion. Prior to this commit, this functionality
was only support for the netty transport. This commit adds this
functionality to the security nio transport.
This commit adds a test for handling correctly all they possible
`SamlPrepareAuthenticationRequest` parameter combinations that
we might get from Kibana or a custom web application talking to the
SAML APIs.
We can match the correct SAML realm based either on the realm name
or the ACS URL. If both are included in the request then both need to
match the realm configuration.
This generates a synthesized "id" for each incoming request that is
included in the audit logs (file only).
This id can be used to correlate events for the same request (e.g.
authentication success with access granted).
This request.id is specific to the audit logs and is not used for any
other purpose
The request.id is consistent across nodes if a single request requires
execution on multiple nodes (e.g. search acros multiple shards).
When assertions are enabled, a Put User action that have no effect (a
noop update) would trigger an assertion failure and shutdown the node.
This change accepts "noop" as an update result, and adds more
diagnostics to the assertion failure message.
The RestHasPrivilegesAction previously handled its own XContent
generation. This change moves that into HasPrivilegesResponse and
makes the response implement ToXContent.
This allows HasPrivilegesResponseTests to be used to test
compatibility between HLRC and X-Pack internals.
A serialization bug (cluster privs) was also fixed here.
* The port assigned to all loopback interfaces doesn't necessarily have to be the same for ipv4 and ipv6
=> use actual address from profile instead of just port + loopback in test
* Closes#35584
Zen2 is now feature-complete enough to run most ESIntegTestCase tests. The changes in this PR
are as follows:
- ClusterSettingsIT is adapted to not be Zen1 specific anymore (it was using Zen1 settings).
- Some of the integration tests require persistent storage of the cluster state, which is not fully
implemented yet (see #33958). These tests keep running with Zen1 for now but will be switched
over as soon as that is fully implemented.
- Some very few integration tests are not running yet with Zen2 for other reasons, depending on
some of the other open points in #32006.
The DefaultAuthenticationFailureHandler has a deprecated constructor
that was present to prevent a breaking change to custom realm plugin
authors in 6.x. This commit removes the constructor and its uses.
For some time, the PutUser REST API has supported storing a pre-hashed
password for a user. The change adds validation and tests around that
feature so that it can be documented & officially supported.
It also prevents the request from containing both a "password" and a "password_hash".
Many realm tests were written to use separate setting objects for
"global settings" and "realm settings".
Since #30241 there is no distinction between these settings, so these
tests can be cleaned up to use a single Settings object.
This is related to #34483. It introduces a namespaced setting for
compression that allows users to configure compression on a per remote
cluster basis. The transport.tcp.compress remains as a fallback
setting. If transport.tcp.compress is set to true, then all requests
and responses are compressed. If it is set to false, only requests to
clusters based on the cluster.remote.cluster_name.transport.compress
setting are compressed. However, after this change regardless of any
local settings, responses will be compressed if the request that is
received was compressed.
- Introduces a transport API for bootstrapping a Zen2 cluster
- Introduces a transport API for requesting the set of nodes that a
master-eligible node has discovered and for waiting until this comprises the
expected number of nodes.
- Alters ESIntegTestCase to use these APIs when forming a cluster, rather than
injecting the initial configuration directly.
There is no longer a concept of non-global "realm settings". All realm
settings should be loaded from the node's settings using standard
Setting classes.
This change renames the "globalSettings" field and method to simply be
"settings".
The file realm has not supported custom filenames/locations since at
least 5.0, but this test still tried to configure them.
Remove all configuration of file locations, and cleaned up a few other
warnings and deprecations
With this change, `Version` no longer carries information about the qualifier,
we still need a way to show the "display version" that does have both
qualifier and snapshot. This is now stored by the build and red from `META-INF`.
This is related to #29023. Additionally at other points we have
discussed a preference for removing the need to unnecessarily block
threads for opening new node connections. This commit lays the groudwork
for this by opening connections asynchronously at the transport level.
We still block, however, this work will make it possible to eventually
remove all blocking on new connections out of the TransportService
and Transport.
This moves all Realm settings to an Affix definition.
However, because different realm types define different settings
(potentially conflicting settings) this requires that the realm type
become part of the setting key.
Thus, we now need to define realm settings as:
xpack.security.authc.realms:
file.file1:
order: 0
native.native1:
order: 1
- This is a breaking change to realm config
- This is also a breaking change to custom security realms (SecurityExtension)
Stop passing `Settings` to `AbstractComponent`'s ctor. This allows us to
stop passing around `Settings` in a *ton* of places. While this change
touches many files, it touches them all in fairly small, mechanical
ways, doing a few things per file:
1. Drop the `super(settings);` line on everything that extends
`AbstractComponent`.
2. Drop the `settings` argument to the ctor if it is no longer used.
3. If the file doesn't use `logger` then drop `extends
AbstractComponent` from it.
4. Clean up all compilation failure caused by the `settings` removal
and drop any now unused `settings` isntances and method arguments.
I've intentionally *not* removed the `settings` argument from a few
files:
1. TransportAction
2. AbstractLifecycleComponent
3. BaseRestHandler
These files don't *need* `settings` either, but this change is large
enough as is.
Relates to #34488
Drops the `Settings` member from `AbstractComponent`, moving it from the
base class on to the classes that use it. For the most part this is a
mechanical change that doesn't drop `Settings` accesses. The one
exception to this is naming threads where it switches from an invocation
that passes `Settings` and extracts the node name to one that explicitly
passes the node name.
This change doesn't drop the `Settings` argument from
`AbstractComponent`'s ctor because this change is big enough as is.
We'll do that in a follow up change.
The native roles store previously would issue a search if attempting to
retrieve more than a single role. This is fine when we are attempting
to retrieve all of the roles to list them in the api, but could cause
issues when attempting to find roles for a user. The search is not
prioritized over other search requests, so heavy aggregations/searches
or overloaded nodes could cause roles to be cached as missing if the
search is rejected.
When attempting to load specific roles, we know the document id for the
role that we are trying to load, which allows us to use the multi-get
api for loading these roles. This change makes use of the multi-get api
when attempting to load more than one role by name. This api is also
constrained by a threadpool but the tasks in the GET threadpool should
be quicker than searches.
See #33205
SSLTrustRestrictionsTests.testRestrictionsAreReloaded checks that the
SSL trust configuration is automatically updated reapplied if the
underlying "trust_restrictions.yml" file is modified.
Since the default resource watcher frequency is 5seconds, it could
take 10 second to run that test (as it waits for 2 reloaded).
Previously this test set that frequency to a very low value (3ms) so
that the elapsed time for the test would be reduced. However this
caused other problems, including that the resource watcher would
frequently run while the cluster was shutting down and files were
being cleaned up.
This change resets that watch frequency back to its default (5s) and
then manually calls the "notifyNow" method on the resource watcher
whenever the restrictions file is modified, so that the SSL trust
configuration is reloaded at exactly the right time.
Resolves: #34502
In order to remove Streamable from the codebase, Response objects need
to be read using the Writeable.Reader interface which this change
enables. This change enables the use of Writeable.Reader by adding the
`Action#getResponseReader` method. The default implementation simply
uses the existing `newResponse` method and the readFrom method. As
responses are migrated to the Writeable.Reader interface, Action
classes can be updated to throw an UnsupportedOperationException when
`newResponse` is called and override the `getResponseReader` method.
Relates #34389
This is related to #30876. The AbstractSimpleTransportTestCase initiates
many tcp connections. There are normally over 1,000 connections in
TIME_WAIT at the end of the test. This is because every test opens at
least two different transports that connect to each other with 13
channel connection profiles. This commit modifies the default
connection profile used by this test to 6. One connection for each
type, except for REG which gets 2 connections.
* NETWORKING: Add SSL Handler before other Handlers
* The only way to run into the issue in #33998 is for `Netty4MessageChannelHandler`
to be in the pipeline while the SslHandler is not. Adding the SslHandler before any
other handlers should ensure correct ordering here even when we handle upstream events
in our own thread pool
* Ensure that channels that were closed concurrently don't trip the assertion
* Closes#33998
* Adding stack_monitoring_agent role
* Fixing checkstyle issues
* Adding tests for new role
* Tighten up privileges around index templates
* s/stack_monitoring_user/remote_monitoring_collector/ + remote_monitoring_user
* Fixing checkstyle violation
* Fix test
* Removing unused field
* Adding missed code
* Fixing data type
* Update Integration Test for new builtin user
This fixes a bug about aliases authorization.
That is, a user might see aliases which he is not authorized to see.
This manifests when the user is not authorized to see any aliases
and the `GetAlias` request is empty which normally is a marking
that all aliases are requested. In this case, no aliases should be
returned, but due to this bug, all aliases will have been returned.
JDK11 introduced some changes with the SSLEngine. A number of error
messages were changed. Additionally, there were some behavior changes
in regard to how the SSLEngine handles closes during the handshake
process. This commit updates our tests and SSLDriver to support these
changes.
The security native stores follow a pattern where
`SecurityIndexManager#prepareIndexIfNeededThenExecute` wraps most calls
made for the security index. The reasoning behind this was to check if
the security index had been upgraded to the latest version in a
consistent manner. However, this has the potential side effect that a
read will trigger the creation of the security index or an updating of
its mappings, which can lead to issues such as failures due to put
mapping requests timing out even though we might have been able to read
from the index and get the data necessary.
This change introduces a new method, `checkIndexVersionThenExecute`,
that provides the consistent checking of the security index to make
sure it has been upgraded. That is the only check that this method
performs prior to running the passed in operation, which removes the
possible triggering of index creation and mapping updates for reads.
Additionally, areas where we do reads now check the availability of the
security index and can short circuit requests. Availability in this
context means that the index exists and all primaries are active.
This is the fixed version of #34246, which was reverted.
Relates #33205
For user/_has_privileges and user/_privileges, handle the case where
there is no user in the security context. This is likely to indicate
that the server is running with a basic license, in which case the
action will be rejected with a non-compliance exception (provided
we don't throw a NPE).
The implementation here is based on the _authenticate API.
Resolves: #34567
The logfile audit log format is no longer formed by prefix fields followed
by key value fields, it is all formed by key value fields only (JSON format).
Consequently, the following settings, which toggled some of the prefix
fields, have been renamed:
audit.logfile .prefix.emit_node_host_address
audit.logfile .prefix.emit_node_host_name
audit.logfile .prefix.emit_node_name
This API is intended as a companion to the _has_privileges API.
It returns the list of privileges that are held by the current user.
This information is difficult to reason about, and consumers should
avoid making direct security decisions based solely on this data.
For example, each of the following index privileges (as well as many
more) would grant a user access to index a new document into the
"metrics-2018-08-30" index, but clients should not try and deduce
that information from this API.
- "all" on "*"
- "all" on "metrics-*"
- "write" on "metrics-2018-*"
- "write" on "metrics-2018-08-30"
Rather, if a client wished to know if a user had "index" access to
_any_ index, it would be possible to use this API to determine whether
the user has any index privileges, and on which index patterns, and
then feed those index patterns into _has_privileges in order to
determine whether the "index" privilege had been granted.
The result JSON is modelled on the Role API, with a few small changes
to reflect how privileges are modelled when multiple roles are merged
together (multiple DLS queries, multiple FLS grants, multiple global
conditions, etc).
This reverts commit 0b4e8db1d3 as some
issues have been identified with the changed handling of a primary
shard of the security index not being available.
The token service has fairly strict validation and there are a range
of reasons why request may be rejected.
The detail is typically returned in the client exception / json body
but the ES admin can only debug that if they have access to detailed
logs from the client.
This commit adds debug & trace logging to the token service so that it
is possible to perform this debugging from the server side if
necessary.
The security native stores follow a pattern where
`SecurityIndexManager#prepareIndexIfNeededThenExecute` wraps most calls
made for the security index. The reasoning behind this was to check if
the security index had been upgraded to the latest version in a
consistent manner. However, this has the potential side effect that a
read will trigger the creation of the security index or an updating of
its mappings, which can lead to issues such as failures due to put
mapping requests timing out even though we might have been able to read
from the index and get the data necessary.
This change introduces a new method, `checkIndexVersionThenExecute`,
that provides the consistent checking of the security index to make
sure it has been upgraded. That is the only check that this method
performs prior to running the passed in operation, which removes the
possible triggering of index creation and mapping updates for reads.
Additionally, areas where we do reads now check the availability of the
security index and can short circuit requests. Availability in this
context means that the index exists and all primaries are active.
Relates #33205
Security caches the result of role lookups and negative lookups are
cached indefinitely. In the case of transient failures this leads to a
bad experience as the roles could truly exist. The CompositeRolesStore
needs to know if a failure occurred in one of the roles stores in order
to make the appropriate decision as it relates to caching. In order to
provide this information to the CompositeRolesStore, the return type of
methods to retrieve roles has changed to a new class,
RoleRetrievalResult. This class provides the ability to pass back an
exception to the roles store. This exception does not mean that a
request should be failed but instead serves as a signal to the roles
store that missing roles should not be cached and neither should the
combined role if there are missing roles.
As part of this, the negative lookup cache was also changed from an
unbounded cache to a cache with a configurable limit.
Relates #33205
PR #34290 made it impossible to use thread-context values to pass
authentication metadata out of a realm. The SAML realm used this
technique to allow the SamlAuthenticateAction to process the parsed
SAML token, and apply them to the access token that was generated.
This new method adds metadata to the AuthenticationResult itself, and
then the authentication service makes this result available on the
thread context.
Closes: #34332
ListenableFuture may run a listener on the same thread that called the
addListener method or it may execute on another thread after the future
has completed. Whenever the ListenableFuture stores the listener for
execution later, it should preserve the thread context which is what
this change does.
Since all calls to `ESLoggerFactory` outside of the logging package were
deprecated, it seemed like it'd simplify things to migrate all of the
deprecated calls and declare `ESLoggerFactory` to be package private.
This does that.
The "lookupUser" method on a realm facilitates the "run-as" and
"authorization_realms" features.
This commit allows a realm to be used for "lookup only", in which
case the "authenticate" method (and associated token methods) are
disabled.
It does this through the introduction of a new
"authentication.enabled" setting, which defaults to true.
Building automatons can be costly. For the most part we cache things
that use automatons so the cost is limited.
However:
- We don't (currently) do that everywhere (e.g. we don't cache role
mappings)
- It is sometimes necessary to clear some of those caches which can
cause significant CPU overhead and processing delays.
This commit introduces a new cache in the Automatons class to avoid
unnecesarily recomputing automatons.
There may be values in the thread context that ought to be preseved
for later use, even if one or more realms perform asynchronous
authentication.
This commit changes the AuthenticationService to wrap the potentially
asynchronous calls in a ContextPreservingActionListener that retains
the original thread context for the authentication.
The Security plugin authorizes actions on indices. Authorization
happens on a per index/alias basis. Therefore a request with a
Multi Index Expression (containing wildcards) has to be
first evaluated in the authorization layer, before the request is
handled. For authorization purposes, wildcards in expressions will
only be expanded to indices/aliases that are visible by the authenticated
user. However, this "constrained" evaluation has to be compatible with
the expression evaluation that a cluster without the Security plugin
would do. Therefore any change in the evaluation logic
in any of these sites has to be mirrored in the other site.
This commit mirrors the changes in core from #33518 that allowed
for Multi Index Expression in the Get Alias API, loosely speaking.
When the cluster.routing.allocation.disk.watermark.flood_stage watermark
is breached, DiskThresholdMonitor marks the indices as read-only. This
failed when x-pack security was present as system user does not have the privilege
for update settings action("indices:admin/settings/update").
This commit adds the required privilege for the system user. Also added missing
debug logs when access is denied to help future debugging.
An assert statement is added to catch any missed privileges required for
system user.
Closes#33119
In SessionFactoryLoadBalancingTests#testRoundRobinWithFailures()
we kill ldap servers randomly and immediately bind to that port
connecting to mock server socket. This is done to avoid someone else
listening to this port. As the creation of mock socket and binding to the
port is immediate, sometimes the earlier socket would be in TIME_WAIT state
thereby having problems with either bind or connect.
This commit sets the SO_REUSEADDR explicitly to true and also sets
the linger on time to 0(as we are not writing any data) so as to
allow re-use of the port and close immediately.
Note: I could not find other places where this might be problematic
but looking at test runs and netstat output I do see lot of sockets
in TIME_WAIT. If we find that this needs to be addressed we can
wrap ServerSocketFactory to set these options and use that with in
memory ldap server configuration during tests.
Closes#32190
This commit upgrades the unboundid ldapsdk to version 4.0.8. The
primary driver for upgrading is a fix that prevents this library from
rewrapping Error instances that would normally bubble up to the
UncaughtExceptionHandler and terminate the JVM. Other notable changes
include some fixes related to connection handling in the library's
connection pool implementation.
Closes#33175
The `DnRoleMapper` class is used to map distinguished names of groups
and users to role names. This mapper builds in an internal map that
maps from a `com.unboundid.ldap.sdk.DN` to a `Set<String>`. In cases
where a lot of distinct DNs are mapped to roles, this can consume quite
a bit of memory. The majority of the memory is consumed by the DN
object. For example, a 94 character DN that has 9 relative DNs (RDN)
will retain 4KB of memory, whereas the String itself consumes less than
250 bytes.
In order to reduce memory usage, we can map from a normalized DN string
to a List of roles. The normalized string is actually how the DN class
determines equality with another DN and we can drop the overhead of
needing to keep all of the other objects in memory. Additionally the
use of a List provides memory savings as each HashSet is backed by a
HashMap, which consumes a great deal more memory than an appropriately
sized ArrayList. The uniqueness we get from a Set is maintained by
first building a set when parsing the file and then converting to a
list upon completion.
Closes#34237
Today we reverse the initial order of the nested documents when we
index them in order to ensure that parents documents appear after
their children. This means that a query will always match nested documents
in the reverse order of their offsets in the source document.
Reversing all documents is not needed so this change ensures that parents
documents appear after their children without modifying the initial order
in each nested level. This allows to match children in the order of their
appearance in the source document which is a requirement to efficiently
implement #33587. Old indices created before this change will continue
to reverse the order of nested documents to ensure backwark compatibility.
In prior versions of Java, we expected to see a SSLHandshakeException
when starting a handshake with a server that we do not trust. In JDK11,
the exception has changed to a SSLException, which
SSLHandshakeException extends. This is most likely a side effect of the
TLS 1.3 changes in JDK11. This change updates the test to catch the
SSLException instead of the SSLHandshakeException and enables the test
to work on JDK8 through JDK11.
Closes#29989
In prior versions of Java, we expected to see a SSLHandshakeException
when starting a handshake with a server that we do not trust. In JDK11,
the exception has changed to a SSLException, which
SSLHandshakeException extends. This is most likely a side effect of the
TLS 1.3 changes in JDK11. This change updates the test to catch the
SSLException instead of the SSLHandshakeException and enables the test
to work on JDK8 through JDK11.
Closes#32293
`Settings` is no longer required to get a `Logger` and we went to quite
a bit of effort to pass it to the `Logger` getters. This removes the
`Settings` from all of the logger fetches in security and x-pack:core.
Security previously hardcoded a default scroll keepalive of 10 seconds,
but in some cases this is not enough time as there can be network
issues or overloading of host machines. After this change, security
will now use the default keepalive timeout, which is controllable using
a setting and the default value is 5 minutes.
In order to optimize the use of the role cache, when the roles.yml file
is reloaded we now calculate the names of removed, changed, and added
roles so that they may be passed to any listeners. This allows a
listener to selectively clear cache for only the roles that have been
modified. The CompositeRolesStore has been adapted to do exactly that
so that we limit the need to reload roles from sources such as the
native roles stores or external role providers.
See #33205
This change cleans up "unused variable" warnings. There are several cases were we
most likely want to suppress the warnings (especially in the client documentation test
where the snippets contain many unused variables). In a lot of cases the unused
variables can just be deleted though.
* TESTS: Stabilize Renegotiation Test
* The second `startHandshake` is not synchronous and a read of only
50ms may fail to trigger it entirely (the failure can be reproduced reliably by setting the socket timeout to `1`)
=> fixed by retrying the read until the handshake finishes (a longer timeout would've worked too,
but retrying seemed more stable)
* Closes#33772
This commit introduces an AbstractSimpleSecurityTransportTestCase for
security transports. This classes provides transport tests that are
specific for security transports. Additionally, it fixes the tests referenced in
#33285.
SearchGroupsResolverInMemoryTests was (rarely) fail in a way that
suggests that the server-side delay (100ms) was not enough to trigger
the client-side timeout (5ms).
The server side delay has been increased to try and overcome this.
Resolves: #32913
This change adds the OneStatementPerLineCheck to our checkstyle precommit
checks. This rule restricts the number of statements per line to one. The
resoning behind this is that it is very difficult to read multiple statements on
one line. People seem to mostly use it in short lambdas and switch statements in
our code base, but just going through the changes already uncovered some actual
problems in randomization in test code, so I think its worth it.
Changes the format of log events in the audit logfile.
It also changes the filename suffix from `_access` to `_audit`.
The new entry format is consistent with Elastic Common Schema.
Entries are formatted as JSON with no nested objects and field
names have a dotted syntax. Moreover, log entries themselves
are not spaced by commas and there is exactly one entry per line.
In addition, entry fields are ordered, unlike a typical JSON doc,
such that a human would not strain his eyes over jumbled
fields from one line to the other; the order is defined in the log4j2
properties file.
The implementation utilizes the log4j2's `StringMapMessage`.
This means that the application builds the log event as a map
and the log4j logic (the appender's layout) handle the format
internally. The layout, such as the set of printed fields and their
order, can be changed at runtime without restarting the node.
We have a Kerberos setting to remove realm part from the user
principal name (remove_realm_name). If this is true then
the realm name is removed to form username but in the process,
the realm name is lost. For scenarios like Kerberos cross-realm
authentication, one could make use of the realm name to determine
role mapping for users coming from different realms.
This commit adds user metadata for kerberos_realm and
kerberos_user_principal_name.
We have a test dependency on Apache Mina when using SimpleKdcServer
for testing Kerberos. When checking for LDAP backend connectivity,
the code checks for deadlocks which require additional security
permissions accessClassInPackage.sun.reflect. As this is only for
test and we do not want to add security permissions to production,
this commit moves these tests and related classes to
x-pack evil-tests where they can run with security manager disabled.
The plan is to handle the security manager exception in the upstream issue
DIRMINA-1093
and then once the release is available to run these tests with security
manager enabled.
Closes#32739
This change removes the wrapping of the created field in the put user
response. The created field was added as a top level field in #32332,
while also still being wrapped within the `user` object of the
response. Since the value is available in both formats in 6.x, we can
remove the wrapped version for 7.0.
Today we use a special unicast hosts provider, the `MockUncasedHostsProvider`,
in many integration tests, to deal with the dynamic nature of the allocation of
ports to nodes. However #33241 allows us to use file-based discovery to achieve
the same goal, so the special test-only `MockUncasedHostsProvider` is no longer
required.
This change removes `MockUncasedHostProvider` and replaces it with file-based
discovery in tests based on `EsIntegTestCase`.
This change addresses some issues regarding thread safety around
updates and method calls on the XPackLicenseState object. There exists
a possibility that there could be a concurrent update to the
XPackLicenseState when there is a scheduled check to see if the license
is expired and a cluster state update. In order to address this, the
update method now has a synchronized block where member variables are
updated. Each method that reads these variables is now also
synchronized.
Along with the above change, there was a consistency issue around
security calls to the license state. The majority of security checks
make two calls to the license state, which could result in incorrect
behavior due to the checks being made against different license states.
The majority of this behavior was introduced for 6.3 with the inclusion
of x-pack in the default distribution. In order to resolve the majority
of these cases, the `isSecurityEnabled` method is no longer public and
the logic is also included in individual methods about security such as
`isAuthAllowed`. There were a few cases where this did not remove
multiple calls on the license state, so a new method has been added
which creates a copy of the current license state that will not change.
Callers can use this copy of the license state to make decisions based
on a consistent view of the license state.
In some cases we want to deprecate a setting, and then automatically
upgrade uses of that setting to a replacement setting. This commit adds
infrastructure for this so that we can upgrade settings when recovering
the cluster state, as well as when such settings are dynamically applied
on cluster update settings requests. This commit only focuses on cluster
settings, index settings can build on this infrastructure in a
follow-up.
This commit ensures that we bootstrap a new history_uuid when force
allocating a stale primary. A stale primary should never be the source
of an operation-based recovery to another shard which exists before the
forced-allocation.
Closes#26712
Today when checking settings dependencies, we do not check if fallback
settings are present. This means, for example, that if
cluster.remote.*.seeds falls back to search.remote.*.seeds, and
cluster.remote.*.skip_unavailable and search.remote.*.skip_unavailable
depend on cluster.remote.*.seeds, and we have set search.remote.*.seeds
and search.remote.*.skip_unavailable, then validation will fail because
it is expected that cluster.ermote.*.seeds is set here. This commit
addresses this by also checking fallback settings when validating
dependencies. To do this, we adjust the settings exist method to also
check for fallback settings, a case that it was not handling previously.
The main benefit of the upgrade for users is the search optimization for top scored documents when the total hit count is not needed. However this optimization is not activated in this change, there is another issue opened to discuss how it should be integrated smoothly.
Some comments about the change:
* Tests that can produce negative scores have been adapted but we need to forbid them completely: #33309Closes#32899
With features like CCR building on the CCS infrastructure, the settings
prefix search.remote makes less sense as the namespace for these remote
cluster settings than does a more general namespace like
cluster.remote. This commit replaces these settings with cluster.remote
with a fallback to the deprecated settings search.remote.
This commit is related to #32517. It allows an "server_name"
attribute on a DiscoveryNode to be propagated to the server using
the TLS SNI extentsion. This functionality is only implemented for
the netty security transport.
This commit adds a security client to the high level rest client, which
includes an implementation for the put user api. As part of these
changes, a new request and response class have been added that are
specific to the high level rest client. One change here is that the response
was previously wrapped inside a user object. The plan is to remove this
wrapping and this PR adds an unwrapped response outside of the user
object so we can remove the user object later on.
See #29827
Solves all of the xpack line length suppressions and then merges the
remainder of the xpack checkstyle_suppressions.xml file into the core
checkstyle_suppressions.xml file. At this point that just means the
antlr generated files for sql.
It also adds an exclusion to the line length tests for javadocs that
are just a URL. We have one such javadoc and breaking up the line would
make the link difficult to use.
With the introduction of the default distribution, it means that by
default the query cache is wrapped in the security implementation of the
query cache. This cache does not allow caching if the request does not
carry indices permissions. Yet, this will not happen if authorization is
not allowed, which it is not by default. This means that with the
introduction of the default distribution, query caching was disabled by
default! This commit addresses this by checking if authorization is
allowed and if not, delegating to the default indices query
cache. Otherwise, we proceed as before with security. Additionally, we
clear the cache on license state changes.
* Fixes SecurityIntegTestCase so it always adds at least one alias
`SecurityIntegTestCase.createIndicesWithRandomAliases` could randomly
fail because its not gauranteed that the randomness of which aliases to
add to the `IndicesAliasesRequestBuilder` would always select at least
one alias to add. This change fixes the problem by keeping track of
whether we have added an alias to teh request and forcing the last
alias to be added if no other aliases have been added so far.
Closes#30098
Closes #33123e
* Addresses review comments
Authorization Realms allow an authenticating realm to delegate the task
of constructing a User object (with name, roles, etc) to one or more
other realms.
E.g. A client could authenticate using PKI, but then delegate to an LDAP
realm. The LDAP realm performs a "lookup" by principal, and then does
regular role-mapping from the discovered user.
This commit includes:
- authorization_realm support in the pki, ldap, saml & kerberos realms
- docs for authorization_realms
- checks that there are no "authorization chains"
(whereby "realm-a" delegates to "realm-b", but "realm-b" delegates to "realm-c")
Authorization realms is a platinum feature.
This PR removes the deprecated `Custom` class in `IndexMetaData`, in favor
of a `Map<String, DiffableStringMap>` that is used to store custom index
metadata. As part of this, there is now no way to set this metadata in a
template or create index request (since it's only set by plugins, or dedicated
REST endpoints).
The `Map<String, DiffableStringMap>` is intended to be a namespaced `Map<String,
String>` (`DiffableStringMap` implements `Map<String, String>`, so the signature
is more like `Map<String, Map<String, String>>`). This is so we can do things
like:
``` java
Map<String, String> ccrMeta = indexMetaData.getCustom("ccr");
```
And then have complete control over the metadata. This also means any
plugin/feature that uses this has to manage its own BWC, as the map is just
serialized as a map. It also means that if metadata is put in the map that isn't
used (for instance, if a plugin were removed), it causes no failures the way
an unregistered `Setting` would.
The reason I use a custom `DiffableStringMap` here rather than a plain
`Map<String, String>` is so the map can be diffed with previous cluster state
updates for serialization.
Supersedes #32683
Ran for all locales in system to find locales which caused
problems in tests due to incorrect generalized time handling
in simple kdc ldap server.
Closes#33228
- third party audit detects jar hell with JDK so we disable it
- jdk non portable in forbiddenapis detects classes being used from the
JDK ( for fips ) that are not portable, this is intended so we don't
scan for it on fips.
- different exclusion rules for third party audit on fips
Closes#33179
In #29623 we added `Request` object flavored requests to the low level
REST client and in #30315 we deprecated the old `performRequest`s. In a
long series of PRs I've changed all of the old style requests that I
could find with `grep`. In this PR I change all requests that I could
find by *removing* the deprecated methods. Since this is a non-trivial
change I do not include actually removing the deprecated requests. I'll
do that in a follow up. But this should be the last set of usage
removals before the actual deprecated method removal. Yay!
This commit removes the unused User class from the protocol project.
This class was originally moved into protocol in preparation for moving
more request and response classes, but given the change in direction
for the HLRC this is no longer needed. Additionally, this change also
changes the package name for the User object in x-pack/plugin/core to
its original name.
The new implementation is functional equivalent with the old, ant based one.
It parses task standard error to get the missing classes and violations in the same way.
I considered re-using ForbiddenApisCliTask but Gradle makes it hard to build inheritance with tasks that have task actions , since the order of the task actions can't be controlled.
This inheritance isn't dully desired either as the third party audit task is much more opinionated and we don't want to expose some of the configuration.
We could probably extract a common base class without any task actions, but probably more trouble than it's worth.
Closes#31715
This change adds support for the client credentials grant type to the
token api. The client credentials grant allows for a client to
authenticate with the authorization server and obtain a token to access
as itself. Per RFC 6749, a refresh token should not be included with
the access token and as such a refresh token is not issued when the
client credentials grant is used.
The addition of the client credentials grant will allow users
authenticated with mechanisms such as kerberos or PKI to obtain a token
that can be used for subsequent access.
* Adding new MonitoredSystem for APM server
* Teaching Monitoring template utils about APM server monitoring indices
* Documenting new monitoring index for APM server
* Adding monitoring index template for APM server
* Copy pasta typo
* Removing metrics.libbeat.config section from mapping
* Adding built-in user and role for APM server user
* Actually define the role :)
* Adding missing import
* Removing index template and system ID for apm server
* Shortening line lengths
* Updating expected number of built-in users in integration test
* Removing "system" from role and user names
* Rearranging users to make tests pass
Refactors the logic of authentication and lookup caching in
`CachingUsernamePasswordRealm`. Nothing changed about
the single-inflight-request or positive caching.
This adds support for connecting to a remote cluster through
a tcp proxy. A remote cluster can configured with an additional
`search.remote.$clustername.proxy` setting. This proxy will be used
to connect to remote nodes for every node connection established.
We still try to sniff the remote clsuter and connect to nodes directly
through the proxy which has to support some kind of routing to these nodes.
Yet, this routing mechanism requires the handshake request to include some
kind of information where to route to which is not yet implemented. The effort
to use the hostname and an optional node attribute for routing is tracked
in #32517Closes#31840
Changes to split tests for keytab file test cases instead of
randomized testing for testing branches in the code in the
same test.
On windows platform, for keytab file permission test, we
required additional security permissions for the test
framework. As this was the only test that required those
permissions, skipping that test on windows platform.
The same scenario gets tested in *nix environments.
Closes#32768
This reworks how we configure the `shadow` plugin in the build. The major
change is that we no longer bundle dependencies in the `compile` configuration,
instead we bundle dependencies in the new `bundle` configuration. This feels
more right because it is a little more "opt in" rather than "opt out" and the
name of the `bundle` configuration is a little more obvious.
As an neat side effect of this, the `runtimeElements` configuration used when
one project depends on another now contains exactly the dependencies needed
to run the project so you no longer need to reference projects that use the
shadow plugin like this:
```
testCompile project(path: ':client:rest-high-level', configuration: 'shadow')
```
You can instead use the much more normal:
```
testCompile "org.elasticsearch.client:elasticsearch-rest-high-level-client:${version}"
```
When the application privileges feature was backported to 6.x/6.4 the
BWC version checks on the backport were updated to 6.4.0, but master
was not updated.
This commit updates all relevant version checks, and adds tests.
This is a followup to #31886. After that commit the
TransportConnectionListener had to be propogated to both the
Transport and the ConnectionManager. This commit moves that listener
to completely live in the ConnectionManager. The request and response
related methods are moved to a TransportMessageListener. That listener
continues to live in the Transport class.
* Lazy resolve DNS (i.e. `String` to `DiscoveryNode`) to not run into indefinitely caching lookup issues (provided the JVM dns cache is configured correctly as explained in https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/6.3/networkaddress-cache-ttl.html)
* Changed `InetAddress` type to `String` for that higher up the stack
* Passed down `Supplier<DiscoveryNode>` instead of outright `DiscoveryNode` from `RemoteClusterAware#buildRemoteClustersSeeds` on to lazy resolve DNS when the `DiscoveryNode` is actually used (could've also passed down the value of `clusterName = REMOTE_CLUSTERS_SEEDS.getNamespace(concreteSetting)` together with the `List<String>` of hosts, but this route seemed to introduce less duplication and resulted in a significantly smaller changeset).
* Closes#28858
This commit removes the put privilege API in favor of having a single API to
create and update privileges. If we see the need to have an API like this in
the future we can always add it back.
This change cleans up some methods in the CharArrays class from x-pack, which
includes the unification of char[] to utf8 and utf8 to char[] conversions that
intentionally do not use strings. There was previously an implementation in
x-pack and in the reloading of secure settings. The method from the reloading
of secure settings was adopted as it handled more scenarios related to the
backing byte and char buffers that were used to perform the conversions. The
cleaned up class is moved into libs/core to allow it to be used by requests
that will be migrated to the high level rest client.
Relates #32332
This removes custom Response classes that extend `AcknowledgedResponse` and do nothing, these classes are not needed and we can directly use the non-abstract super-class instead.
While this appears to be a large PR, no code has actually changed, only class names have been changed and entire classes removed.
This change removes the PasswordHashingBootstrapCheck and replaces it
with validation on the setting itself. This ensures we always get a
valid value from the setting when it is used.
This change moves the validation for values of usernames and passwords
from the request to the transport action. This is done to prevent
the need to move more classes into protocol once we add this API to the
high level rest client. Additionally, this resolves an issue where
validation depends on settings and we always pass empty settings
instead of the actual settings.
Relates #32332
All Unit tests in this module are muted in FIPS 140 JVMs and
as such the CI run fails. This commit disables test task for the
module in a FIPS JVM and reverts adding a dummy test in
4cbcc1.
This commit adds missing debug log statements for exceptions
that occur during ticket validation. I thought these
get logged somewhere else in authentication chain
but even after enabling trace logs I could not see them
logged. As the Kerberos exception messages are cryptic
adding full stack trace would help debugging faster.
This commit modifies the test to handle file permission
tests in windows/dos environments. The test requires access
to UserPrincipal and so have modified the plugin-security policy
to access user information.
Closes#32637
* Change SecurityNioHttpServerTransportTests to use PEM key and
certificate files instead of a JKS keystore so that this tests
can also run in a FIPS 140 JVM
* Do not attempt to run cases with ssl.verification_mode NONE in
SessionFactoryTests so that the tests can run in a FIPS 140 JVM
The User class has been moved to the protocol project for upcoming work
to add more security APIs to the high level rest client. As part of
this change, the toString method no longer uses a custom output method
from MetadataUtils and instead just relies on Java's toString
implementation.
This commit adds licensing enforcement for FIPS mode through the use of
a bootstrap check, a node join validator, and a check in the license
service. The work done here is based on the current implementation of
the TLS enforcement with a production license.
The bootstrap check is always enforced since we need to enforce the
licensing and this is the best option to do so at the present time.
First, some background: we have 15 different methods to get a logger in
Elasticsearch but they can be broken down into three broad categories
based on what information is provided when building the logger.
Just a class like:
```
private static final Logger logger = ESLoggerFactory.getLogger(ActionModule.class);
```
or:
```
protected final Logger logger = Loggers.getLogger(getClass());
```
The class and settings:
```
this.logger = Loggers.getLogger(getClass(), settings);
```
Or more information like:
```
Loggers.getLogger("index.store.deletes", settings, shardId)
```
The goal of the "class and settings" variant is to attach the node name
to the logger. Because we don't always have the settings available, we
often use the "just a class" variant and get loggers without node names
attached. There isn't any real consistency here. Some loggers get the
node name because it is convenient and some do not.
This change makes the node name available to all loggers all the time.
Almost. There are some caveats are testing that I'll get to. But in
*production* code the node name is node available to all loggers. This
means we can stop using the "class and settings" variants to fetch
loggers which was the real goal here, but a pleasant side effect is that
the ndoe name is now consitent on every log line and optional by editing
the logging pattern. This is all powered by setting the node name
statically on a logging formatter very early in initialization.
Now to tests: tests can't set the node name statically because
subclasses of `ESIntegTestCase` run many nodes in the same jvm, even in
the same class loader. Also, lots of tests don't run with a real node so
they don't *have* a node name at all. To support multiple nodes in the
same JVM tests suss out the node name from the thread name which works
surprisingly well and easy to test in a nice way. For those threads
that are not part of an `ESIntegTestCase` node we stick whatever useful
information we can get form the thread name in the place of the node
name. This allows us to keep the logger format consistent.
This commit adds an assumption to two test methods in
SSLTrustRestrictionsTests that we are not on JDK 11 as the tests
currently fail there.
Relates #29989
This commit removes Kerberos bootstrap checks as they were more
validation checks and better done in Kerberos realm constructor
than as bootstrap checks. This also moves the check
for one Kerberos realm per node to where we initialize realms.
This commit adds few validations which were missing earlier
like missing read permissions on keytab file or if it is directory
to throw exception with error message.
In #29623 we added `Request` object flavored requests to the low level
REST client and in #30315 we deprecated the old `performRequest`s. This
changes all calls in the `x-pack/plugin/security` project to use the new
versions.
This commit reverts to the pre-6.3 way of merging automata as the
change in 6.3 significantly impacts the performance for roles with a
large number of concrete indices. In addition, the maximum number of
states for security automata has been increased to 100,000 in order
to allow users to use roles that caused problems pre-6.3 and 6.3 fixed.
As an escape hatch, the maximum number of states is configurable with
a setting so that users with complex patterns in roles can increase
the states with the knowledge that there is more memory usage.
* Introduce fips_mode setting and associated checks
Introduce xpack.security.fips_mode.enabled setting ( default false)
When it is set to true, a number of Bootstrap checks are performed:
- Check that Secure Settings are of the latest version (3)
- Check that no JKS keystores are configured
- Check that compliant algorithms ( PBKDF2 family ) are used for
password hashing
This commit introduces "Application Privileges" to the X-Pack security
model.
Application Privileges are managed within Elasticsearch, and can be
tested with the _has_privileges API, but do not grant access to any
actions or resources within Elasticsearch. Their purpose is to allow
applications outside of Elasticsearch to represent and store their own
privileges model within Elasticsearch roles.
Access to manage application privileges is handled in a new way that
grants permission to specific application names only. This lays the
foundation for more OLS on cluster privileges, which is implemented by
allowing a cluster permission to inspect not just the action being
executed, but also the request to which the action is applied.
To support this, a "conditional cluster privilege" is introduced, which
is like the existing cluster privilege, except that it has a Predicate
over the request as well as over the action name.
Specifically, this adds
- GET/PUT/DELETE actions for defining application level privileges
- application privileges in role definitions
- application privileges in the has_privileges API
- changes to the cluster permission class to support checking of request
objects
- a new "global" element on role definition to provide cluster object
level security (only for manage application privileges)
- changes to `kibana_user`, `kibana_dashboard_only_user` and
`kibana_system` roles to use and manage application privileges
Closes#29820Closes#31559
This bundles the x-pack:protocol project into the x-pack:plugin:core
project because we'd like folks to consider it an implementation detail
of our build rather than a separate artifact to be managed and depended
on. It is now bundled into both x-pack:plugin:core and
client:rest-high-level. To make this work I had to fix a few things.
Firstly, I had to make PluginBuildPlugin work with the shadow plugin.
In that case we have to bundle only the `shadow` dependencies and the
shadow jar.
Secondly, every reference to x-pack:plugin:core has to use the `shadow`
configuration. Without that the reference is missing all of the
un-shadowed dependencies. I tried to make it so that applying the shadow
plugin automatically redefines the `default` configuration to mirror the
`shadow` configuration which would allow us to use bare project references
to the x-pack:plugin:core project but I couldn't make it work. It'd *look*
like it works but then fail for transitive dependencies anyway. I think
it is still a good thing to do but I don't have the willpower to do it
now.
Finally, I had to fix an issue where Eclipse and IntelliJ didn't properly
reference shadowed transitive dependencies. Neither IDE supports shadowing
natively so they have to reference the shadowed projects. We fix this by
detecting `shadow` dependencies when in "Intellij mode" or "Eclipse mode"
and adding `runtime` dependencies to the same target. This convinces
IntelliJ and Eclipse to play nice.
This commit adds support for Kerberos authentication with a platinum
license. Kerberos authentication support relies on SPNEGO, which is
triggered by challenging clients with a 401 response with the
`WWW-Authenticate: Negotiate` header. A SPNEGO client will then provide
a Kerberos ticket in the `Authorization` header. The tickets are
validated using Java's built-in GSS support. The JVM uses a vm wide
configuration for Kerberos, so there can be only one Kerberos realm.
This is enforced by a bootstrap check that also enforces the existence
of the keytab file.
In many cases a fallback authentication mechanism is needed when SPNEGO
authentication is not available. In order to support this, the
DefaultAuthenticationFailureHandler now takes a list of failure response
headers. For example, one realm can provide a
`WWW-Authenticate: Negotiate` header as its default and another could
provide `WWW-Authenticate: Basic` to indicate to the client that basic
authentication can be used in place of SPNEGO.
In order to test Kerberos, unit tests are run against an in-memory KDC
that is backed by an in-memory ldap server. A QA project has also been
added to test against an actual KDC, which is provided by the krb5kdc
fixture.
Closes#30243
* Remove BouncyCastle dependency from runtime
This commit introduces a new gradle project that contains
the classes that have a dependency on BouncyCastle. For
the default distribution, It builds a jar from those and
in puts it in a subdirectory of lib
(/tools/security-cli) along with the BouncyCastle jars.
This directory is then passed in the
ES_ADDITIONAL_CLASSPATH_DIRECTORIES of the CLI tools
that use these classes.
BouncyCastle is removed as a runtime dependency (remains
as a compileOnly one) from x-pack core and x-pack security.
Resolving wildcards in aliases expression is challenging as we may end
up with no aliases to replace the original expression with, but if we
replace with an empty array that means _all which is quite the opposite.
Now that we support and serialize the original requested aliases,
whenever aliases are replaced we will be able to know what was
initially requested. `MetaData#findAliases` can then be updated to not
return anything in case it gets empty aliases, but the original aliases
were not empty. That means that empty aliases are interpreted as _all
only if they were originally requested that way.
Relates to #31516
Prior to 6.3 a trial license default to security enabled. Since 6.3
they default to security disabled. If a cluster is upgraded from <6.3
to >6.3, then we detect this and mimic the old behaviour with respect
to security.
This is related to #32122. A number of things changed related to adding
TLS 1.3 support in JDK11. Some exception messages and other SSLEngine
behavior changed. This commit fixes assertions on exception messages.
Additionally it identifies two bugs related to how the SSLDriver behaves
in regards to JDK11 changes. Finally, it mutes a tests until correct
behavior can be identified. There is another open issue for that muted
test (#32144).
* Add basic support for field aliases in index mappings. (#31287)
* Allow for aliases when fetching stored fields. (#31411)
* Add tests around accessing field aliases in scripts. (#31417)
* Add documentation around field aliases. (#31538)
* Add validation for field alias mappings. (#31518)
* Return both concrete fields and aliases in DocumentFieldMappers#getMapper. (#31671)
* Make sure that field-level security is enforced when using field aliases. (#31807)
* Add more comprehensive tests for field aliases in queries + aggregations. (#31565)
* Remove the deprecated method DocumentFieldMappers#getFieldMapper. (#32148)
Ensure our tests can run in a FIPS JVM
JKS keystores cannot be used in a FIPS JVM as attempting to use one
in order to init a KeyManagerFactory or a TrustManagerFactory is not
allowed.( JKS keystore algorithms for private key encryption are not
FIPS 140 approved)
This commit replaces JKS keystores in our tests with the
corresponding PEM encoded key and certificates both for key and trust
configurations.
Whenever it's not possible to refactor the test, i.e. when we are
testing that we can load a JKS keystore, etc. we attempt to
mute the test when we are running in FIPS 140 JVM. Testing for the
JVM is naive and is based on the name of the security provider as
we would control the testing infrastrtucture and so this would be
reliable enough.
Other cases of tests being muted are the ones that involve custom
TrustStoreManagers or KeyStoreManagers, null TLS Ciphers and the
SAMLAuthneticator class as we cannot sign XML documents in the
way we were doing. SAMLAuthenticator tests in a FIPS JVM can be
reenabled with precomputed and signed SAML messages at a later stage.
IT will be covered in a subsequent PR
Ensure that the same algorithm is used for settings and
change password requests for consistency, even if we
do not expext to reach the code where the algorithm is
checked for now.
Completes a7eaa409e8
The build was broken due to some issues with the merging of #32018. A
method that was public went private before the PR was merged. That did
not cause a merge conflict (so the PR was merged successfully). But it
did cause the build to fail.
This is related to #27260. It adds the SecurityNioHttpServerTransport
to the security plugin. It randomly uses the nio http transport in
security integration tests.
Historically we have loaded SSL objects (such as SSLContext,
SSLIOSessionStrategy) by passing in the SSL settings, constructing a
new SSL configuration from those settings and then looking for a
cached object that matches those settings.
The primary issue with this approach is that it requires a fully
configured Settings object to be available any time the SSL context
needs to be loaded. If the Settings include SecureSettings (such as
passwords for keys or keystores) then this is not true, and the cached
SSL object cannot be loaded at runtime.
This commit introduces an alternative approach of naming every cached
ssl configuration, so that it is possible to load the SSL context for
a named configuration (such as "xpack.http.ssl"). This means that the
calling code does not need to have ongoing access to the secure
settings that were used to load the configuration.
This change also allows monitoring exporters to use SSL passwords
from secure settings, however an exporter that uses a secure SSL setting
(e.g. truststore.secure_password) may not have its SSL settings updated
dynamically (this is prevented by a settings validator).
Exporters without secure settings can continue to be defined and updated
dynamically.
This is related to #27260. It adds the SecurityNioTransport to the
security plugin. Additionally, it adds support for ip filtering. And it
randomly uses the nio transport in security integration tests.
Currently Role.Builder keeps a reference to the FieldPermissionsCache that is
passed into its constructors. This seems to be unused except for passing it on
to convertFromIndicesPrivileges() in the second ctor itself, but we don't need
to keep the internal reference in that case, so it can be removed.
Relates to #31876
The steps to read the settings and build URLs happen in a non-obvious
order, which meant that we would build the default URL (from the
domain name, and port) before we'd actually read the port settings.
This would cause the URL to always have a port of `0`.
Relates: bccf988
This is the first x-pack API we're adding to the high level REST client
so there is a lot to talk about here!
= Open source
The *client* for these APIs is open source. We're taking the previously
Elastic licensed files used for the `Request` and `Response` objects and
relicensing them under the Apache 2 license.
The implementation of these features is staying under the Elastic
license. This lines up with how the rest of the Elasticsearch language
clients work.
= Location of the new files
We're moving all of the `Request` and `Response` objects that we're
relicensing to the `x-pack/protocol` directory. We're adding a copy of
the Apache 2 license to the root fo the `x-pack/protocol` directory to
line up with the language in the root `LICENSE.txt` file. All files in
this directory will have the Apache 2 license header as well. We don't
want there to be any confusion. Even though the files are under the
`x-pack` directory, they are Apache 2 licensed.
We chose this particular directory layout because it keeps the X-Pack
stuff together and easier to think about.
= Location of the API in the REST client
We've been following the layout of the rest-api-spec files for other
APIs and we plan to do this for the X-Pack APIs with one exception:
we're dropping the `xpack` from the name of most of the APIs. So
`xpack.graph.explore` will become `graph().explore()` and
`xpack.license.get` will become `license().get()`.
`xpack.info` and `xpack.usage` are special here though because they
don't belong to any proper category. For now I'm just calling
`xpack.info` `xPackInfo()` and intend to call usage `xPackUsage` though
I'm not convinced that this is the final name for them. But it does get
us started.
= Jars, jars everywhere!
This change makes the `xpack:protocol` project a `compile` scoped
dependency of the `x-pack:plugin:core` and `client:rest-high-level`
projects. I intend to keep it a compile scoped dependency of
`x-pack:plugin:core` but I intend to bundle the contents of the protocol
jar into the `client:rest-high-level` jar in a follow up. This change
has grown large enough at this point.
In that followup I'll address javadoc issues as well.
= Breaking-Java
This breaks that transport client by a few classes around. We've
traditionally been ok with doing this to the transport client.
If a get alias api call requests a specific alias pattern then
indices not having any matching aliases should not be included in the response.
This is a second attempt to fix this (first attempt was #28294).
The reason that the first attempt was reverted is because when xpack
security is enabled then index expression (like * or _all) are resolved
prior to when a request is processed in the get aliases transport action,
then `MetaData#findAliases` can't know whether requested all where
requested since it was already expanded in concrete alias names. This
change replaces aliases(...) replaceAliases(...) method on AliasesRequests
class and leave the aliases(...) method on subclasses. So there is a distinction
between when xpack security replaces aliases and a user setting aliases via
the transport or high level http client.
Closes#27763
* Upgrade bouncycastle
Required to fix
`bcprov-jdk15on-1.55.jar; invalid manifest format `
on jdk 11
* Downgrade bouncycastle to avoid invalid manifest
* Add checksum for new jars
* Update tika permissions for jdk 11
* Mute test failing on jdk 11
* Add JDK11 to CI
* Thread#stop(Throwable) was removed
http://mail.openjdk.java.net/pipermail/core-libs-dev/2018-June/053536.html
* Disable failing tests #31456
* Temprorarily disable doc tests
To see if there are other failures on JDK11
* Only blacklist specific doc tests
* Disable only failing tests in ingest attachment plugin
* Mute failing HDFS tests #31498
* Mute failing lang-painless tests #31500
* Fix backwards compatability builds
Fix JAVA version to 10 for ES 6.3
* Add 6.x to bwx -> java10
* Prefix out and err from buildBwcVersion for readability
```
> Task :distribution:bwc:next-bugfix-snapshot:buildBwcVersion
[bwc] :buildSrc:compileJava
[bwc] WARNING: An illegal reflective access operation has occurred
[bwc] WARNING: Illegal reflective access by org.codehaus.groovy.reflection.CachedClass (file:/home/alpar/.gradle/wrapper/dists/gradle-4.5-all/cg9lyzfg3iwv6fa00os9gcgj4/gradle-4.5/lib/groovy-all-2.4.12.jar) to method java.lang.Object.finalize()
[bwc] WARNING: Please consider reporting this to the maintainers of org.codehaus.groovy.reflection.CachedClass
[bwc] WARNING: Use --illegal-access=warn to enable warnings of further illegal reflective access operations
[bwc] WARNING: All illegal access operations will be denied in a future release
[bwc] :buildSrc:compileGroovy
[bwc] :buildSrc:writeVersionProperties
[bwc] :buildSrc:processResources
[bwc] :buildSrc:classes
[bwc] :buildSrc:jar
```
* Also set RUNTIME_JAVA_HOME for bwcBuild
So that we can make sure it's not too new for the build to understand.
* Align bouncycastle dependency
* fix painles array tets
closes#31500
* Update jar checksums
* Keep 8/10 runtime/compile untill consensus builds on 11
* Only skip failing tests if running on Java 11
* Failures are dependent of compile java version not runtime
* Condition doc test exceptions on compiler java version as well
* Disable hdfs tests based on runtime java
* Set runtime java to minimum supported for bwc
* PR review
* Add comment with ticket for forbidden apis
Today TransportService is tightly coupled with Transport since it
requires an instance of TransportService in order to receive responses
and send requests. This is mainly due to the Request and Response handlers
being maintained in TransportService but also because of the lack of a proper
callback interface.
This change moves request handler registry and response handler registration into
Transport and adds all necessary methods to `TransportConnectionListener` in order
to remove the `TransportService` dependency from `Transport`
Transport now accepts one or more `TransportConnectionListener` instances that are
executed sequentially in a blocking fashion.
* Default resolveFromHash to Hasher.NOOP
This changes the default behavior when resolving the hashing
algorithm from unrecognised hash strings, which was introduced in
#31234
A hash string that doesn't start with an algorithm identifier can
either be a malformed/corrupted hash or a plaintext password when
Hasher.NOOP is used(against warnings).
Do not make assumptions about which of the two is true for such
strings and default to Hasher.NOOP. Hash verification will subsequently
fail for malformed hashes.
Finally, do not log the potentially malformed hash as this can very
well be a plaintext password.
Resolves#31697
Reverts 58cf95a06f
testIncorrectPasswordHashingAlgorithm is based on the assumption
that the algorithm selected for the change password request is
different than the one selected for the NativeUsersStore.
pbkdf2_10000 is the same as pbkdf2 since 10000 is the default cost
factor for pbkdf2 and thus should not be used as an option for the
passwordHashingSettings.
Also make sure that the same algorithm is used for settings and
change password requests in other tests for consistency, even if
we expect to not reach the code where the algorithm is checked for
now.
Resolves#31696
Reverts 1c4f480794