--- layout: default title: System Indices parent: Configuration grand_parent: Security nav_order: 15 --- # System indices By default, OpenSearch has a protected system index, `.opensearch_security`, which you create using [securityadmin.sh](../security-admin/). Even if your user account has read permissions for all indices, you can't directly access the data in this system index. You can add additional system indices in in `opensearch.yml`. In addition to automatically creating `.opensearch_security`, the demo configuration adds several indices for the various OpenSearch plugins that integrate with the security plugin: ```yml opendistro_security.system_indices.enabled: true opendistro_security.system_indices.indices: [".opendistro-alerting-config", ".opendistro-alerting-alert*", ".opendistro-anomaly-results*", ".opendistro-anomaly-detector*", ".opendistro-anomaly-checkpoints", ".opendistro-anomaly-detection-state", ".opendistro-reports-*", ".opendistro-notifications-*", ".opendistro-notebooks", ".opendistro-asynchronous-search-response*"] ``` To access these indices, you must authenticate with an [admin certificate](../tls/#configure-admin-certificates): ```bash curl -k --cert ./kirk.pem --key ./kirk-key.pem -XGET 'https://localhost:9200/.opensearch_security/_search' ``` The alternative is to remove indices from the `opensearch_security.system_indices.indices` list on each node and restart OpenSearch.