Link Search Menu Expand Document Documentation Menu

You're viewing version 2.6 of the OpenSearch documentation. This version is no longer maintained. For the latest version, see the current documentation. For information about OpenSearch version maintenance, see Release Schedule and Maintenance Policy.

Audit logs


Table of contents

Audit logs let you track access to your OpenSearch cluster and are useful for compliance purposes or in the aftermath of a security breach. You can configure the categories to be logged, the detail level of the logged messages, and where to store the logs.

To enable audit logging:

  1. Add the following line to opensearch.yml on each node:

    plugins.security.audit.type: internal_opensearch
    

    This setting stores audit logs on the current cluster. For other storage options, see Audit Log Storage Types.

  2. Restart each node.

After this initial setup, you can use OpenSearch Dashboards to manage your audit log categories and other settings. In OpenSearch Dashboards, select Security and then Audit logs.

An alternative is to specify initial settings for audit logging in the audit.yml and opensearch.yml files (which file depends on the setting—see Audit log settings). Thereafter, you can use Dashboards or the Audit logs API to manage and update settings.

Tracked events

Audit logging records events in two ways: HTTP requests (REST) and the transport layer. The following table provides descriptions of tracked events and whether or not they are logged on the REST or transport layer.

Event Logged on REST Logged on transport Description
FAILED_LOGIN Yes Yes The credentials of a request could not be validated, most likely because the user does not exist or the password is incorrect.
AUTHENTICATED Yes Yes A user successfully authenticated.
MISSING_PRIVILEGES No Yes The user does not have the required permissions to make the request.
GRANTED_PRIVILEGES No Yes A user made a successful request to OpenSearch.
SSL_EXCEPTION Yes Yes An attempt was made to access OpenSearch without a valid SSL/TLS certificate.
opensearch_SECURITY_INDEX_ATTEMPT No Yes An attempt was made to modify the Security plugin internal user and privileges index without the required permissions or TLS admin certificate.
BAD_HEADERS Yes Yes An attempt was made to spoof a request to OpenSearch with the Security plugin internal headers.

Audit log settings

The following default log settings work well for most use cases. However, you can change settings to save storage space or adapt the information to your exact needs.

Settings in audit.yml

The following settings are stored in the audit.yml file.

Exclude categories

To exclude categories, list them in the following setting:

plugins.security.audit.config.disabled_rest_categories: <disabled categories>
plugins.security.audit.config.disabled_transport_categories: <disabled categories>

For example:

plugins.security.audit.config.disabled_rest_categories: AUTHENTICATED, opensearch_SECURITY_INDEX_ATTEMPT
plugins.security.audit.config.disabled_transport_categories: GRANTED_PRIVILEGES

If you want to log events in all categories, use NONE:

plugins.security.audit.config.disabled_rest_categories: NONE
plugins.security.audit.config.disabled_transport_categories: NONE

Disable REST or the transport layer

By default, the Security plugin logs events on both REST and the transport layer. You can disable either type:

plugins.security.audit.config.enable_rest: false
plugins.security.audit.config.enable_transport: false

Disable request body logging

By default, the Security plugin includes the body of the request (if available) for both REST and the transport layer. If you do not want or need the request body, you can disable it:

plugins.security.audit.config.log_request_body: false

Log index names

By default, the Security plugin logs all indices affected by a request. Because index names can be aliases and contain wildcards/date patterns, the Security plugin logs the index name that the user submitted and the actual index name to which it resolves.

For example, if you use an alias or a wildcard, the audit event might look like:

audit_trace_indices: [
  "human*"
],
audit_trace_resolved_indices: [
  "humanresources"
]

You can disable this feature by setting:

plugins.security.audit.config.resolve_indices: false

This feature is only disabled if plugins.security.audit.config.log_request_body is also set to false.

Configure bulk request handling

Bulk requests can contain many indexing operations. By default, the Security plugin only logs the single bulk request, not each individual operation.

The Security plugin can be configured to log each indexing operation as a separate event:

plugins.security.audit.config.resolve_bulk_requests: true

This change can create an extremely large number of events in the audit logs, so we don’t recommend enabling this setting if you frequently use the _bulk API.

Exclude requests

You can exclude certain requests from being logged by configuring actions for transport requests and/or HTTP request paths (REST):

plugins.security.audit.config.ignore_requests: ["indices:data/read/*", "SearchRequest"]

Exclude users

By default, the Security plugin logs events from all users but excludes the internal OpenSearch Dashboards server user kibanaserver. You can exclude other users:

plugins.security.audit.config.ignore_users:
  - kibanaserver
  - admin

If requests from all users should be logged, use NONE:

plugins.security.audit.config.ignore_users: NONE

Exclude headers

You can exclude sensitive headers from being included in the logs—for example, the Authorization: header:

plugins.security.audit.config.exclude_sensitive_headers: true

Settings in opensearch.yml

The following settings are stored in the opensearch.yml file.

Configure the audit log index name

By default, the Security plugin stores audit events in a daily rolling index named auditlog-YYYY.MM.dd:

plugins.security.audit.config.index: myauditlogindex

Use a date pattern in the index name to configure daily, weekly, or monthly rolling indices:

plugins.security.audit.config.index: "'auditlog-'YYYY.MM.dd"

For a reference on the date pattern format, see the Joda DateTimeFormat documentation.

(Advanced) Tune the thread pool

The Search plugin logs events asynchronously, which minimizes the performance impact on your cluster. The plugin uses a fixed thread pool to log events:

plugins.security.audit.config.threadpool.size: <integer>

The default setting is 10. Setting this value to 0 disables the thread pool, which means the plugin logs events synchronously. To set the maximum queue length per thread:

plugins.security.audit.config.threadpool.max_queue_len: 100000
350 characters left

Have a question? .

Want to contribute? or .