WARNING: Version 1.1 of Filebeat has passed its EOL date.
This documentation is no longer being maintained and may be removed. If you are running this version, we strongly advise you to upgrade. For the latest information, see the current release documentation.
Securing Communication
editSecuring Communication
editTo secure the communication between Filebeat and Elasticsearch, you can use HTTPS and basic authentication. Here is a sample configuration:
elasticsearch: username: filebeat password: verysecret protocol: https hosts: ["elasticsearch.example.com:9200"]
The username to use for authenticating to Elasticsearch. |
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The password to use for authenticating to Elasticsearch. |
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This setting enables the HTTPS protocol. |
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The IP and port of the Elasticsearch nodes. |
Elasticsearch doesn’t have built-in basic authentication, but you can achieve it either by using a web proxy or by using the Shield commercial plugin.
Filebeat verifies the validity of the server certificates and only accepts trusted certificates. Creating a correct SSL/TLS infrastructure is outside the scope of this document, but a good guide to follow is the Setting Up a Certificate Authority appendix from the Shield guide.
By default Filebeat uses the list of trusted certificate authorities from the operating system where Filebeat is running. You can configure a Beat to use a specific list of CA certificates instead of the list from the OS. Here is an example:
elasticsearch: username: filebeat password: verysecret protocol: https hosts: ["elasticsearch.example.com:9200"] tls: certificate_authorities: - /etc/pki/my_root_ca.pem - /etc/pki/my_other_ca.pem
For any given connection, the SSL/TLS certificates must have a subject
that matches the value specified for hosts
, or the TLS handshake fails.
For example, if you specify hosts: ["foobar:9200"]
, the certificate MUST
include foobar
in the subject (CN=foobar
) or as a subject alternative name
(SAN). Make sure the hostname resolves to the correct IP address. If no DNS is available, then
you can associate the IP address with your hostname in /etc/hosts
(on Unix) or C:\Windows\System32\drivers\etc\hosts
(on Windows).