Set up basic security for the Elastic Stack plus secured HTTPS traffic

edit

Set up basic security for the Elastic Stack plus secured HTTPS traffic

edit

In a production environment, some Elasticsearch features such as tokens and API keys will be disabled unless you enable TLS on the HTTP layer. This additional layer of security ensures that all communications to and from your cluster are secured.

When you run the elasticsearch-certutil tool in http mode, the tool asks several questions about how you want to generate certificates. While there are numerous options, the following choices result in certificates that should work for most environments.

Prerequisites

edit

Complete all steps in Set up basic security for the Elastic Stack.

Encrypt HTTP client communications for Elasticsearch

edit
  1. Stop Elasticsearch and Kibana if they are running.
  2. From the directory where you installed Elasticsearch, run the Elasticsearch HTTP certificate tool to generate a Certificate Signing Request (CSR).

    ./bin/elasticsearch-certutil http

    This command generates a .zip file that contains certificates and keys to use with Elasticsearch and Kibana. Each folder contains a README.txt explaining how to use these files.

    1. When asked if you want to generate a CSR, enter n.
    2. When asked if you want to use an existing CA, enter y.
    3. Enter the path to your CA. This is the absolute path to the elastic-stack-ca.p12 file that you generated for your cluster.
    4. Enter the password for your CA.
    5. Enter an expiration value for your certificate. You can enter the validity period in years, months, or days. For example, enter 90D for 90 days.
    6. When asked if you want to generate one certificate per node, enter y.

      Each certificate will have its own private key, and will be issued for a specific hostname or IP address.

    7. When prompted, enter the name of the first node in your cluster. Use the same node name that you used when generating node certificates.
    8. Enter all hostnames used to connect to your first node. These hostnames will be added as DNS names in the Subject Alternative Name (SAN) field in your certificate.

      List every hostname and variant used to connect to your cluster over HTTPS.

    9. Enter the IP addresses that clients can use to connect to your node.
    10. Repeat these steps for each additional node in your cluster.
  3. After generating a certificate for each of your nodes, enter a password for your private key when prompted.
  4. Unzip the generated elasticsearch-ssl-http.zip file. This compressed file contains one directory for both Elasticsearch and Kibana.

    /elasticsearch
    |_ README.txt
    |_ http.p12
    |_ sample-elasticsearch.yml
    /kibana
    |_ README.txt
    |_ elasticsearch-ca.pem
    |_ sample-kibana.yml
  5. Copy the relevant http.p12 certificate to the ES_PATH_CONF directory on each node.
  6. On each node, edit the elasticsearch.yml file to enable HTTPS security and specify the location of the http.p12 security certificate.

    xpack.security.http.ssl.enabled: true
    xpack.security.http.ssl.keystore.path: http.p12
  7. Add the password for your private key to the secure settings in Elasticsearch.

    ./bin/elasticsearch-keystore add xpack.security.http.ssl.keystore.secure_password
  8. Start Elasticsearch.

Next: Encrypt HTTP client communications for Kibana

Encrypt HTTP client communications for Kibana

edit

Browsers send traffic to Kibana and Kibana sends traffic to Elasticsearch. These communication channels are configured separately to use TLS. You encrypt traffic between your browser and Kibana, and then encrypt traffic between Kibana and Elasticsearch.

Encrypt traffic between Kibana and Elasticsearch

edit

When you ran the elasticsearch-certutil tool with the http option, it created a /kibana directory containing an elasticsearch-ca.pem file. You use this file to configure Kibana to trust the Elasticsearch CA for the HTTP layer.

  1. Copy the elasticsearch-ca.pem file to the Kibana configuration directory, as defined by the KBN_PATH_CONF path.
  2. Open kibana.yml and add the following line to specify the location of the security certificate for the HTTP layer.

    elasticsearch.ssl.certificateAuthorities: KBN_PATH_CONF/elasticsearch-ca.pem
  3. Add the following line to specify the HTTPS URL for your Elasticsearch cluster.

    elasticsearch.hosts: https://<your_elasticsearch_host>.com:9200
  4. Restart Kibana.

Next: Encrypt traffic between your browser and Kibana

Encrypt traffic between your browser and Kibana

edit

You create a server certificate and private key for Kibana. Kibana uses this server certificate and corresponding private key when receiving connections from web browsers.

When you obtain a server certificate, you must set its subject alternative name (SAN) correctly to ensure that browsers will trust it. You can set one or more SANs to the Kibana server’s fully-qualified domain name (FQDN), hostname, or IP address. When choosing the SAN, pick whichever attribute you’ll use to connect to Kibana in your browser, which is likely the FQDN.

The following instructions create a Certificate Signing Request (CSR) for Kibana. A CSR contains information that a CA uses to generate and sign a security certificate. The certificate can be trusted (signed by a public, trusted CA) or untrusted (signed by an internal CA). A self-signed or internally-signed certificate is acceptable for development environments and building a proof of concept, but should not be used in a production environment.

Before going to production, use a trusted CA such as Let’s Encrypt or your organization’s internal CA to sign the certificate. Using a signed certificate establishes browser trust for connections to Kibana for internal access or on the public internet.

  1. Generate a server certificate and private key for Kibana.

    ./bin/elasticsearch-certutil csr -name kibana-server -dns example.com,www.example.com

    The CSR has a common name (CN) of kibana-server, a SAN of example.com, and another SAN of www.example.com.

    This command generates a csr-bundle.zip file by default with the following contents:

    /kibana-server
    |_ kibana-server.csr
    |_ kibana-server.key
  2. Unzip the csr-bundle.zip file to obtain the kibana-server.csr unsigned security certificate and the kibana-server.key unencrypted private key.
  3. Send the kibana-server.csr certificate signing request to your internal CA or trusted CA for signing to obtain a signed certificate. The signed file can be in different formats, such as a .crt file like kibana-server.crt.
  4. Open kibana.yml and add the following lines to configure Kibana to access the server certificate and unencrypted private key.

    server.ssl.certificate: KBN_PATH_CONF/kibana-server.crt
    server.ssl.key: KBN_PATH_CONF/kibana-server.key

    KBN_PATH_CONF contains the path for the Kibana configuration files. If you installed Kibana using archive distributions (zip or tar.gz), the path defaults to KBN_HOME/config. If you used package distributions (Debian or RPM), the path defaults to /etc/kibana.

  5. Add the following line to kibana.yml to enable TLS for inbound connections.

    server.ssl.enabled: true
  6. Start Kibana.

After making these changes, you must always access Kibana via HTTPS. For example, https://<your_kibana_host>.com.

Next: Configure Beats security

Configure Beats security

edit

The Beats are open source data shippers that you install as agents on your servers to send operational data to Elasticsearch. Each Beat is a separately installable product. The following steps cover configuring security for Metricbeat. Follow these steps for each additonal Beat you want to configure security for.

Prerequisites

edit

Install Metricbeat using your preferred method.

You cannot connect to the Elastic Stack or set up assets for Metricbeat before completing the following steps.

Create roles for Metricbeat

edit

Typically, you need to create the following separate roles:

  • setup role for setting up index templates and other dependencies
  • monitoring role for sending monitoring information
  • writer role for publishing events collected by Metricbeat
  • reader role for Kibana users who need to view and create visualizations that access Metricbeat data

These instructions assume that you are using the default name for Metricbeat indices. If the indicated index names are not listed, or you are using a custom name, enter it manually when defining roles and modify the privileges to match your index naming pattern.

To create users and roles from Stack Management in Kibana, select Roles or Users from the side navigation.

Next: Create a setup role

Create a setup role and user
edit

Administrators who set up Metricbeat typically need to load mappings, dashboards, and other objects used to index data into Elasticsearch and visualize it in Kibana.

Setting up Metricbeat is an admin-level task that requires extra privileges. As a best practice, grant the setup role to administrators only, and use a more restrictive role for event publishing.

  1. Create the setup role:

    1. Enter metricbeat_setup as the role name.
    2. Choose the monitor and manage_ilm cluster privileges.
    3. On the metricbeat-\* indices, choose the manage and write privileges.

      If the metricbeat-\* indices aren’t listed, enter that pattern into the list of indices.

  2. Create the setup user:

    1. Enter metricbeat_setup as the user name.
    2. Enter the username, password, and other user details.
    3. Assign the following roles to the metricbeat_setup user:

      Role Purpose

      metricbeat_setup

      Set up Metricbeat.

      kibana_admin

      Load dependencies, such as example dashboards, if available, into Kibana

      ingest_admin

      Set up index templates and, if available, ingest pipelines

      beats_admin

      Enroll and manage configurations in Beats central management

Next: Create a monitoring role

Create a monitoring role and user
edit

To send monitoring data securely, create a monitoring user and grant it the necessary privileges.

You can use the built-in beats_system user, if it’s available in your environment. Because the built-in users are not available in Elastic Cloud, these instructions create a user that is explicitly used for monitoring Metricbeat.

  1. Create the monitoring role:

    1. Enter metricbeat_monitoring as the role name.
    2. Choose the monitor cluster privilege.
    3. On the .monitoring-beats-\* indices, choose the create_index and create_doc privileges.
  2. Create the monitoring user:

    1. Enter metricbeat_monitoring as the user name.
    2. Enter the username, password, and other user details.
    3. Assign the following roles to the metricbeat_monitoring user:

      Role Purpose

      metricbeat_monitoring

      Monitor Metricbeat.

      kibana_admin

      Use Kibana

      monitoring_user

      Use Stack Monitoring in Kibana to monitor Metricbeat

Next: Create a writer role

Create a writer role and user
edit

Users who publish events to Elasticsearch need to create and write to Metricbeat indices. To minimize the privileges required by the writer role, use the setup role to pre-load dependencies. This section assumes that you’ve created the setup role.

  1. Create the writer role:

    1. Enter metricbeat_writer as the role name.
    2. Choose the monitor and read_ilm cluster privileges.
    3. On the metricbeat-\* indices, choose the create_doc, create_index, and view_index_metadata privileges.
  2. Create the writer user:

    1. Enter metricbeat_writer as the user name.
    2. Enter the username, password, and other user details.
    3. Assign the following roles to the metricbeat_writer user:

      Role Purpose

      metricbeat_writer

      Monitor Metricbeat

      remote_monitoring_collector

      Collect monitoring metrics from Metricbeat

      remote_monitoring_agent

      Send monitoring data to the monitoring cluster

Next: Create a reader role

Create a reader role and user
edit

Kibana users typically need to view dashboards and visualizations that contain Metricbeat data. These users might also need to create and edit dashboards and visualizations. Create the reader role to assign proper privileges to these users.

  1. Create the reader role:

    1. Enter metricbeat_reader as the role name.
    2. On the metricbeat-\* indices, choose the read privilege.
    3. Under Kibana, click Add Kibana privilege.

      • Under Spaces, choose Default.
      • Choose Read or All for Discover, Visualize, Dashboard, and Metrics.
  2. Create the reader user:

    1. Enter metricbeat_reader as the user name.
    2. Enter the username, password, and other user details.
    3. Assign the following roles to the metricbeat_reader user:

      Role Purpose

      metricbeat_reader

      Read Metricbeat data.

      monitoring_user

      Allow users to monitor the health of Metricbeat itself. Only assign this role to users who manage Metricbeat

      beats_admin

      Create and manage configurations in Beats central management. Only assign this role to users who need to use Beats central management.

Next: Configure Metricbeat to use TLS

Configure Metricbeat to use TLS
edit

Before starting Metricbeat, you configure the connections to Elasticsearch and Kibana. You can configure authentication to send data to your secured cluster using basic authentication, API key authentication, or Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) certificates.

The following instructions use the credentials for the metricbeat_writer and metricbeat_setup users that you created. If you need a greater level of security, we recommend using PKI certificates.

After configuring connections to Elasticsearch and Kibana, you’ll enable the elasticsearch-xpack module and configure that module to use HTTPS.

In production environments, we strongly recommend using a separate cluster (referred to as the monitoring cluster) to store your data. Using a separate monitoring cluster prevents production cluster outages from impacting your ability to access your monitoring data. It also prevents monitoring activities from impacting the performance of your production cluster.

  1. From the directory where you installed Elasticsearch, navigate to the /kibana directory that you created when encrypting HTTP client communications for Elasticsearch.
  2. Copy the elasticsearch-ca.pem certificate to the directory where you installed Metricbeat.
  3. Open the metricbeat.yml configuration file and configure the connection to Elasticsearch.

    Under output.elasticsearch, specify the following fields:

    output.elasticsearch:
     hosts: ["<your_elasticsearch_host>:9200"]
     protocol: "https"
     username: "metricbeat_writer"
     password: "<password>"
     ssl:
       certificate_authorities: ["elasticsearch-ca.pem"]
       verification_mode: "certificate"
    hosts
    Specifies the host where your Elasticsearch cluster is running.
    protocol
    Indicates the protocol to use when connecting to Elasticsearch. This value must be https.
    username
    Name of the user with privileges required to publish events to Elasticsearch. The metricbeat_writer user that you created has these privileges.
    password
    Password for the indicated username.
    certificate_authorities
    Indicates the path to the local .pem file that contains your CA’s certificate.
  4. Configure the connection to Kibana.

    Under setup.kibana, specify the following fields:

    setup.kibana
     host: "https://<your_elasticsearch_host>:5601"
     ssl.enabled: true
     username: "metricbeat_setup"
     password: "p@ssw0rd"
    hosts
    The URLs of the Elasticsearch instances to use for all your queries. Ensure that you include https in the URL.
    username
    Name of the user with privileges required to set up dashboards in Kibana. The metricbeat_setup user that you created has these privileges.
    password
    Password for the indicated username.
  5. Enable the elasticsearch-xpack module.

    ./metricbeat modules enable elasticsearch-xpack
  6. Modify the elasticsearch-xpack module to use HTTPS. This module collects metrics about Elasticsearch.

    Open /modules.d/elasticsearch-xpack.yml and specify the following fields:

    - module: elasticsearch
     xpack.enabled: true
     period: 10s
     hosts: ["https://<your_elasticsearch_host>:9200"]
     username: "remote_monitoring_user"
     password: "<password>"
     ssl:     
       enabled: true
       certificate_authorities: ["elasticsearch-ca.pem"]
       verification_mode: "certificate"

    Configuring SSL is required when monitoring a node with encrypted traffic. See Configure SSL for Metricbeat.

    hosts
    Specifies the host where your Elasticsearch cluster is running. Ensure that you include https in the URL.
    username
    Name of the user with privileges to collect metric data. The built-in monitoring_user user has these privileges. Alternatively, you can create a user and assign it the monitoring_user role.
    password
    Password for the indicated username.
    certificate_authorities
    Indicates the path to the local .pem file that contains your CA’s certificate.
  7. If you want to use the predefined assets for parsing, indexing, and visualizing your data, run the following command to load these assets:

    ./metricbeat setup -e
  8. Start Elasticsearch, and then start Metricbeat.

    ./metricbeat -e

    -e is optional and sends output to standard error instead of the configured log output.

  9. Log in to Kibana, open the main menu, and click Stack Monitoring.

    You’ll see cluster alerts that require your attention and a summary of the available monitoring metrics for Elasticsearch. Click any of the header links on the available cards to view additional information.