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OpenSearch Security for Security Analytics
You can use OpenSearch Security with Security Analytics to assign user permissions and manage the actions that users can and cannot perform. For example, you might want one group of users to be able to create, update, or delete detectors and another group of users to only view detectors. You may want still another group to be able to receive and acknowledge alerts but to be prevented from performing other tasks. The OpenSearch Security framework allows you to control the level of access users have to Security Analytics functionality.
Security Analytics system indexes
Security Analytics indexes are protected as system indexes and treated differently than other indexes in a cluster. System indexes store configurations and other system settings and, for that reason, cannot be modified using the REST API or the OpenSearch Dashboards interface. Only a user with a TLS admin certificate can access system indexes. For more information about working with this type of index, see System indexes.
Basic permissions
As an administrator, you can use OpenSearch Dashboards or the Security REST API to assign specific permissions to users based on the specific APIs they need to access. For a list of supported APIs, see API tools.
OpenSearch Security has three built-in roles that cover most Security Analytics use cases: security_analytics_full_access
, security_analytics_read_access
, and security_analytics_ack_alerts
. For descriptions of these and other roles, see Predefined roles.
If these roles don’t meet your needs, mix and match individual Security Analytics permissions to suit your use case. Each action corresponds to an operation in the REST API. For example, the cluster:admin/opensearch/securityanalytics/detector/delete
permission allows you to delete detectors.
(Advanced) Limit access by backend role
You can use backend roles to configure fine-grained access to individual detectors based on roles. For example, backend roles can be assigned to users working in different departments of an organization so that they can view only those detectors owned by the departments in which they work.
First, make sure your users have the appropriate backend roles. Backend roles usually come from an LDAP server or SAML provider. However, if you use the internal user database, you can use the REST API to add them manually.
Next, enable the following setting:
PUT /_cluster/settings
{
"transient": {
"plugins.security_analytics.filter_by_backend_roles": "true"
}
}
Now when users view Security Analytics resources in OpenSearch Dashboards (or make REST API calls), they only see detectors created by users who share at least one backend role. For example, consider two users: alice
and bob
.
The following example assigns the user alice
the analyst
backend role:
PUT /_plugins/_security/api/internalusers/alice
{
"password": "alice",
"backend_roles": [
"analyst"
],
"attributes": {}
}
The next example assigns the user bob
the human-resources
backend role:
PUT /_plugins/_security/api/internalusers/bob
{
"password": "bob",
"backend_roles": [
"human-resources"
],
"attributes": {}
}
Finally, this last example assigns both alice
and bob
the role that gives them full access to Security Analytics:
PUT /_plugins/_security/api/rolesmapping/security_analytics_full_access
{
"backend_roles": [],
"hosts": [],
"users": [
"alice",
"bob"
]
}
However, because they have different backend roles, alice
and bob
cannot view each other’s detectors or their results.
A note on using fine-grained access control with the plugin
When a trigger generates an alert, the detector configurations, the alert itself, and any notifications that are sent to a channel may include metadata describing the index being queried. By design, the plugin must extract the data and store it as metadata outside of the index. Document-level security (DLS) and field-level security (FLS) access controls are designed to protect the data in the index. But once the data is stored outside the index as metadata, users with access to the detector and monitor configurations, alerts, and their notifications will be able to view this metadata and possibly infer the contents and quality of data in the index, which would otherwise be concealed by DLS and FLS access control.
To reduce the chances of unintended users viewing metadata that could describe an index, we recommend that administrators enable role-based access control and keep these kinds of design elements in mind when assigning permissions to the intended group of users. See Limit access by backend role for more information.