[[mapping-roles]] === Mapping Users and Groups to Roles If you authenticate users with an `esusers` realm, you can assign roles when you <> and use the <> command to add or remove roles. For other types of realms, you configure role mappings for users and groups in a YAML file and copy it to each node in the cluster. Tools like Puppet or Chef can help with this. By default, role mappings are stored in `CONF_DIR/shield/users/role_mapping.yml`, where `CONF_DIR` is `ES_HOME/config` (zip/tar installations) or `/etc/elasticsearch` (package installations). To specify a different location, you configure the `role_mapping` settings in `elasticsearch.yml`. The `role_mapping` settings enable you to use a different set of mappings for each realm type: `shield.authc.ldap.files.role_mapping` :: The location of the role mappings for LDAP realms. `shield.authc.active_directory.files.role_mapping` :: The location of the role mappings for Active Directory realms. `shield.authc.pki.files.role_mapping` :: The location of the role mappings for PKI realms. IMPORTANT: For Shield to read the mapping file, it must be stored in the Elasticsearch `CONF_DIR`. Within the role mapping file, Shield roles are keys and groups and users are values. The mappings can have a many-to-many relationship. When you map roles to groups, the roles of a user in that group are the combination of the roles assigned to that group and the roles assigned to that user. [[ad-role-mapping]] The available roles are defined in the <>. To specify users and groups in the role mappings, you use their _Distinguished Names_ (DNs). A DN is a string that uniquely identifies the user or group, for example `"cn=John Doe,cn=contractors,dc=example,dc=com"`. [[ldap-role-mapping]] LDAP and Active Directory realms support mapping both users and groups to roles. For example: [source, yaml] ------------------------------------------------------------ monitoring: <1> - "cn=admins,dc=example,dc=com" <2> user: - "cn=John Doe,cn=contractors,dc=example,dc=com" <3> - "cn=users,dc=example,dc=com" - "cn=admins,dc=example,dc=com" ------------------------------------------------------------ <1> The name of a Shield role defined in the <>. <2> The distinguished name of an LDAP or Active Directory group. <3> The distinguished name of an LDAP or Active Directory user. added[1.1.0] [[pki-role-mapping]] PKI realms only support mapping users to roles, as there is no notion of a group in PKI. For example: [source, yaml] ------------------------------------------------------------ monitoring: - "cn=Admin,ou=example,o=com" user: - "cn=John Doe,ou=example,o=com" ------------------------------------------------------------