APM agent Key API
editAPM agent Key API
editThe Agent Key API allows you to configure agent keys to authorize requests from APM agents to the APM Server.
The following Agent key APIs are available:
- Create agent key to create an agent key
How to use APM APIs
editExpand for required headers, privileges, and usage details
Interact with APM APIs using cURL or another API tool. All APM APIs are Kibana APIs, not Elasticsearch APIs; because of this, the Kibana dev tools console cannot be used to interact with APM APIs.
For all APM APIs, you must use a request header.
Supported headers are Authorization, kbn-xsrf, and Content-Type.
-
Authorization: ApiKey {credentials} -
Kibana supports token-based authentication with the Elasticsearch API key service. The API key returned by the Elasticsearch create API key API can be used by sending a request with an
Authorizationheader that has a value ofApiKeyfollowed by the{credentials}, where{credentials}is the base64 encoding ofidandapi_keyjoined by a colon.Alternatively, you can create a user and use their username and password to authenticate API access:
-u $USER:$PASSWORD.Whether using
Authorization: ApiKey {credentials}, or-u $USER:$PASSWORD, users interacting with APM APIs must have sufficient privileges. -
kbn-xsrf: true -
By default, you must use
kbn-xsrffor all API calls, except in the following scenarios:-
The API endpoint uses the
GETorHEADoperations -
The path is allowed using the
server.xsrf.allowlistsetting -
XSRF protections are disabled using the
server.xsrf.disableProtectionsetting
-
The API endpoint uses the
-
Content-Type: application/json -
Applicable only when you send a payload in the API request.
Kibana API requests and responses use JSON.
Typically, if you include the
kbn-xsrfheader, you must also include theContent-Typeheader.
Create agent key
editCreate an APM agent API key. Specify API key privileges in the request body at creation time.
Privileges
editThe user creating an APM agent API key must have at least the manage_own_api_key cluster privilege
and the APM application-level privileges that it wishes to grant.
Example role
editThe example below uses the Kibana role management API to create a role named apm_agent_key_user.
Create and assign this role to a user that wishes to create APM agent API keys.
POST /_security/role/apm_agent_key_user
{
"cluster": ["manage_own_api_key"],
"applications": [{
"application": "apm",
"privileges": ["event:write", "config_agent:read"],
"resources": ["*"]
}]
}
Request
editPOST /api/apm/agent_keys
Request body
edit-
name - (required, string) Name of the agent key.
-
privileges -
(required, array) APM agent key privileges. It can take one or more of the following values:
-
event:write. Required for ingesting agent events. -
config_agent:read. Required for agents to read agent configuration remotely.
-
Example
editPOST /api/apm/agent_keys
{
"name": "apm-key",
"privileges": ["event:write", "config_agent:read"]
}
Response body
edit{
"agentKey": {
"id": "3DCLmn0B3ZMhLUa7WBG9",
"name": "apm-key",
"api_key": "PjGloCGOTzaZr8ilUPvkjA",
"encoded": "M0RDTG1uMEIzWk1oTFVhN1dCRzk6UGpHbG9DR09UemFacjhpbFVQdmtqQQ=="
}
}
Once created, you can copy the API key (Base64 encoded) and use it to to authorize requests from APM agents to the APM Server.