Security limitations
Plugins
Elasticsearch’s plugin infrastructure is extremely flexible in terms of what can be extended. While it opens up Elasticsearch to a wide variety of (often custom) additional functionality, when it comes to security, this high extensibility level comes at a cost. We have no control over the third-party plugins’ code (open source or not) and therefore we cannot guarantee their compliance with Elastic Stack security features. For this reason, third-party plugins are not officially supported on clusters with security features enabled.
Changes in wildcard behavior
Elasticsearch clusters with the security features enabled apply the /_all
wildcard, and all other wildcards, to the data streams, indices, and index aliases that the current user has privileges for, not all data streams, indices, and index aliases on the cluster.
Multi document APIs
Multi get and multi term vectors API throw IndexNotFoundException when trying to access non existing indices that the user is not authorized for. By doing that they leak information regarding the fact that the data stream or index doesn’t exist, while the user is not authorized to know anything about those data streams or indices.
Filtered index aliases
Aliases containing filters are not a secure way to restrict access to individual documents, due to the limitations described in Index and field names can be leaked when using aliases. The Elastic Stack security features provide a secure way to restrict access to documents through the document-level security feature.
Field and document level security limitations
When a user’s role enables document or field level security for a data stream or index:
The user cannot perform write operations:
- The update API isn’t supported.
- Update requests included in bulk requests aren’t supported.
The request cache is disabled for search requests.
When a user’s role enables document level security for a data stream or index:
- Document level security isn’t applied for APIs that aren’t document based. An example is the field stats API.
- Document level security doesn’t affect global index statistics that relevancy scoring uses. So this means that scores are computed without taking the role query into account. Note that documents not matching with the role query are never returned.
- The
has_child
andhas_parent
queries aren’t supported as query in the role definition. Thehas_child
andhas_parent
queries can be used in the search API with document level security enabled. Any query that makes remote calls to fetch data to query by isn’t supported. The following queries aren’t supported:
- The
terms
query with terms lookup isn’t supported. - The
geo_shape
query with indexed shapes isn’t supported. - The
percolate
query isn’t supported.
- The
If suggesters are specified and document level security is enabled then the specified suggesters are ignored.
- A search request cannot be profiled if document level security is enabled.
Index and field names can be leaked when using aliases
Calling certain Elasticsearch APIs on an alias can potentially leak information about indices that the user isn’t authorized to access. For example, when you get the mappings for an alias with the _mapping
API, the response includes the index name and mappings for each index that the alias applies to.
Until this limitation is addressed, avoid index and field names that contain confidential or sensitive information.
LDAP realm
The LDAP Realm does not currently support the discovery of nested LDAP Groups. For example, if a user is a member of group_1
and group_1
is a member of group_2
, only group_1
will be discovered. However, the Active Directory Realm does support transitive group membership.