Granting privileges for data streams and aliasesedit

Elasticsearch security features allow you to secure operations executed against data streams and aliases.

Data stream privilegesedit

Use index privileges to control access to a data stream. Granting privileges on a data stream grants the same privileges on its backing indices.

For example, my-data-stream consists of two backing indices: .ds-my-data-stream-2099.03.07-000001 and .ds-my-data-stream-2099.03.08-000002.

A user is granted the read privilege to my-data-stream.

{
  "names" : [ "my-data-stream" ],
  "privileges" : [ "read" ]
}

Because the user is automatically granted the same privileges to the stream’s backing indices, the user can retrieve a document directly from .ds-my-data-stream-2099.03.08-000002:

GET .ds-my-data-stream-2099.03.08-000002/_doc/2

Later my-data-stream rolls over. This creates a new backing index: .ds-my-data-stream-2099.03.09-000003. Because the user still has the read privilege for my-data-stream, the user can retrieve documents directly from .ds-my-data-stream-2099.03.09-000003:

GET .ds-my-data-stream-2099.03.09-000003/_doc/2

Alias privilegesedit

Use index privileges to control access to an alias. Privileges on an index or data stream do not grant privileges on its aliases. For information about managing aliases, see Aliases.

Don’t use filtered aliases in place of document level security. Elasticsearch doesn’t always apply alias filters.

For example, the current_year alias points only to the 2015 index. A user is granted the read privilege for the 2015 index.

{
  "names" : [ "2015" ],
  "privileges" : [ "read" ]
}

When the user attempts to retrieve a document from the current_year alias, Elasticsearch rejects the request.

GET current_year/_doc/1

To retrieve documents from current_year, the user must have the read index privilege for the alias.

{
  "names" : [ "current_year" ],
  "privileges" : [ "read" ]
}