Authorization exceptions
editAuthorization exceptions
editSymptoms:
- I configured the appropriate roles and the users, but I still get an authorization exception.
- I can authenticate to LDAP, but I still get an authorization exception.
Resolution:
-
Verify that the role names associated with the users match the roles defined in the
roles.yml
file. You can use theelasticsearch-users
tool to list all the users. Any unknown roles are marked with*
.bin/elasticsearch-users list rdeniro : admin alpacino : power_user jacknich : monitoring,unknown_role*
For more information about this command, see the
elasticsearch-users
command. -
If you are authenticating to LDAP, a number of configuration options can cause this error.
group identification
Groups are located by either an LDAP search or by the "memberOf" attribute on the user. Also, If subtree search is turned off, it will search only one level deep. For all the options, see LDAP realm settings. There are many options here and sticking to the defaults will not work for all scenarios.
group to role mapping
Either the
role_mapping.yml
file or the location for this file could be misconfigured. For more information, see Security files.role definition
The role definition might be missing or invalid.
To help track down these possibilities, enable additional logging to troubleshoot further. You can enable debug logging by configuring the following persistent setting:
response = client.cluster.put_settings( body: { persistent: { 'logger.org.elasticsearch.xpack.security.authc' => 'debug' } } ) puts response
PUT /_cluster/settings { "persistent": { "logger.org.elasticsearch.xpack.security.authc": "debug" } }
Alternatively, you can add the following lines to the end of the
log4j2.properties
configuration file in theES_PATH_CONF
:logger.authc.name = org.elasticsearch.xpack.security.authc logger.authc.level = DEBUG
Refer to configuring logging levels for more information.
A successful authentication should produce debug statements that list groups and role mappings.