Elastic GitHub connector reference
editElastic GitHub connector reference
editThe Elastic GitHub connector is a connector for GitHub. This connector is written in Python using the Elastic connector framework.
View the source code for this connector (branch 8.x, compatible with Elastic 8.17).
Elastic managed connector reference
editView Elastic managed connector reference
Availability and prerequisites
editThis connector is available as a managed connector as of Elastic version 8.11.0.
To use this connector natively in Elastic Cloud, satisfy all managed connector requirements.
Create a GitHub connector
editUse the UI
editTo create a new GitHub connector:
- In the Kibana UI, navigate to the Search → Content → Connectors page from the main menu, or use the global search field.
- Follow the instructions to create a new native GitHub connector.
For additional operations, see Connectors UI in Kibana.
Use the API
editYou can use the Elasticsearch Create connector API to create a new native GitHub connector.
For example:
resp = client.connector.put( connector_id="my-{service-name-stub}-connector", index_name="my-elasticsearch-index", name="Content synced from {service-name}", service_type="{service-name-stub}", is_native=True, ) print(resp)
const response = await client.connector.put({ connector_id: "my-{service-name-stub}-connector", index_name: "my-elasticsearch-index", name: "Content synced from {service-name}", service_type: "{service-name-stub}", is_native: true, }); console.log(response);
PUT _connector/my-github-connector { "index_name": "my-elasticsearch-index", "name": "Content synced from GitHub", "service_type": "github", "is_native": true }
You’ll also need to create an API key for the connector to use.
The user needs the cluster privileges manage_api_key
, manage_connector
and write_connector_secrets
to generate API keys programmatically.
To create an API key for the connector:
-
Run the following command, replacing values where indicated. Note the
id
andencoded
return values from the response:resp = client.security.create_api_key( name="my-connector-api-key", role_descriptors={ "my-connector-connector-role": { "cluster": [ "monitor", "manage_connector" ], "indices": [ { "names": [ "my-index_name", ".search-acl-filter-my-index_name", ".elastic-connectors*" ], "privileges": [ "all" ], "allow_restricted_indices": False } ] } }, ) print(resp)
const response = await client.security.createApiKey({ name: "my-connector-api-key", role_descriptors: { "my-connector-connector-role": { cluster: ["monitor", "manage_connector"], indices: [ { names: [ "my-index_name", ".search-acl-filter-my-index_name", ".elastic-connectors*", ], privileges: ["all"], allow_restricted_indices: false, }, ], }, }, }); console.log(response);
POST /_security/api_key { "name": "my-connector-api-key", "role_descriptors": { "my-connector-connector-role": { "cluster": [ "monitor", "manage_connector" ], "indices": [ { "names": [ "my-index_name", ".search-acl-filter-my-index_name", ".elastic-connectors*" ], "privileges": [ "all" ], "allow_restricted_indices": false } ] } } }
-
Use the
encoded
value to store a connector secret, and note theid
return value from this response:resp = client.connector.secret_post( body={ "value": "encoded_api_key" }, ) print(resp)
const response = await client.transport.request({ method: "POST", path: "/_connector/_secret", body: { value: "encoded_api_key", }, }); console.log(response);
POST _connector/_secret { "value": "encoded_api_key" }
-
Use the API key
id
and the connector secretid
to update the connector:resp = client.connector.update_api_key_id( connector_id="my_connector_id>", api_key_id="API key_id", api_key_secret_id="secret_id", ) print(resp)
const response = await client.connector.updateApiKeyId({ connector_id: "my_connector_id>", api_key_id: "API key_id", api_key_secret_id: "secret_id", }); console.log(response);
PUT /_connector/my_connector_id>/_api_key_id { "api_key_id": "API key_id", "api_key_secret_id": "secret_id" }
Refer to the Elasticsearch API documentation for details of all available Connector APIs.
Usage
editTo use this connector as a managed connector, see Elastic managed connectors.
For additional operations, see Connectors UI in Kibana.
GitHub personal access token
editConfigure a GitHub personal access token to fetch data from GitHub.
Follow these steps to generate a GitHub personal access token:
- Go to GitHub Settings → Developer settings → Personal access tokens → Tokens(classic).
-
Select
Generate new token
. -
Add a note and select the following scopes:
-
repo
-
user
-
read:org
-
-
Select
Generate token
and copy the token.
GitHub App
editConfigure a GitHub App to fetch data from GitHub.
Follow these steps to create a GitHub App:
- Go to GitHub Settings → Developer settings → GitHub Apps.
-
Select
New GitHub App
. -
Add a name and Homepage URL, deselect
Active
underWebhook
. -
Under
Permissions
, selectRead-only
forCommit statuses
,Contents
,Issues
,Metadata
andPull requests
underRepository permissions
, selectRead-only
forMembers
underOrganization permissions
. -
Select
Any account
forWhere can this GitHub App be installed?
. -
Click
Create GitHub App
. -
Scroll down to the section
Private keys
, and clickGenerate a private key
. -
Click
Install App
in the upper-left corner, select the organizations/personal accounts you want to install the GitHub App on, clickInstall
. -
You can choose to install it on all repositories or selected repositories, and click
Install
.
Compatibility
editBoth GitHub and GitHub Enterprise are supported.
Configuration
editThe following configuration fields are required:
- Data source
- Toggle between GitHub Cloud or GitHub Server.
- Server URL
- URL of the GitHub Server instance. (GitHub Server only)
- Authentication method
-
The method to authenticate the GitHub instance. Toggle between
Personal access token
andGitHub App
. - Token
-
GitHub personal access token to authenticate the GitHub instance. This field is only available for
Personal access token
authentication method. - Repository Type
-
Toggle between
Organization
andOther
. Note that document level security (DLS) is only available forOrganization
repositories. - Organization Name
-
Name of the organization to fetch data from. This field is only available when
Authentication method
is set toPersonal access token
andRepository Type
is set toOrganization
. - App ID
-
App ID of the GitHub App. This field is only available when
Authentication method
is set toGitHub App
. - App private key
-
Private key generated for the GitHub App. This field is only available when
Authentication method
is set toGitHub App
. - List of repositories
-
Comma-separated list of repositories to fetch data from GitHub instance. If the value is
*
the connector will fetch data from all repositories present in the configured user’s account.Default value is
*
.Examples:
-
elasticsearch
,elastic/kibana
-
*
-
Repository ownership
If the "OWNER/" portion of the "OWNER/REPO" repository argument is omitted, it defaults to the name of the authenticating user.
In the examples provided here:
-
the
elasticsearch
repo synced will be the<OWNER>/elasticsearch
repo -
the
kibana
repo synced will be the Elastic owned repo
The "OWNER/" portion of the "OWNER/REPO" repository argument must be provided when GitHub App
is selected as the Authentication method
.
This field can be bypassed by advanced sync rules.
- Enable SSL
- Enable SSL for the GitHub instance.
- SSL certificate
-
SSL certificate for the GitHub instance. Example:
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE----- MIID+jCCAuKgAwIBAgIGAJJMzlxLMA0GCSqGSIb3DQEBCwUAMHoxCzAJBgNVBAYT ... 7RhLQyWn2u00L7/9Omw= -----END CERTIFICATE-----
- Enable document level security
-
Toggle to enable document level security (DLS).
When enabled, full syncs will fetch access control lists for each document and store them in the
_allow_access_control
field. DLS is only available whenRepository Type
is set toOrganization
.
Documents and syncs
editThe connector syncs the following objects and entities:
- Repositories
- Pull Requests
- Issues
- Files & Folder
Only the following file extensions are ingested:
-
.markdown
-
.md
-
.rst
- Content from files bigger than 10 MB won’t be extracted. (Self-managed connectors can use the self-managed local extraction service to handle larger binary files.)
- Permissions are not synced. All documents indexed to an Elastic deployment will be visible to all users with access to that Elasticsearch Index.
Sync types
editFull syncs are supported by default for all connectors.
This connector also supports incremental syncs.
Sync rules
editBasic sync rules are identical for all connectors and are available by default. For more information read Types of sync rule.
Advanced sync rules
editA full sync is required for advanced sync rules to take effect.
The following section describes advanced sync rules for this connector. Advanced sync rules are defined through a source-specific DSL JSON snippet.
The following sections provide examples of advanced sync rules for this connector.
Indexing document and files based on branch name configured via branch key
[ { "repository": "repo_name", "filter": { "branch": "sync-rules-feature" } } ]
Indexing document based on issue query related to bugs via issue key
[ { "repository": "repo_name", "filter": { "issue": "is:bug" } } ]
Indexing document based on PR query related to open PR’s via PR key
[ { "repository": "repo_name", "filter": { "pr": "is:open" } } ]
Indexing document and files based on queries and branch name
[ { "repository": "repo_name", "filter": { "issue": "is:bug", "pr": "is:open", "branch": "sync-rules-feature" } } ]
All documents pulled by a given rule are indexed regardless of whether the document has already been indexed by a previous rule. This can lead to document duplication, but the indexed documents count will differ in the logs. Check the Elasticsearch index for the actual document count.
Advanced rules for overlapping
[ { "filter": { "pr": "is:pr is:merged label:auto-backport merged:>=2023-07-20" }, "repository": "repo_name" }, { "filter": { "pr": "is:pr is:merged label:auto-backport merged:>=2023-07-15" }, "repository": "repo_name" } ]
If GitHub App
is selected as the authentication method, the "OWNER/" portion of the "OWNER/REPO" repository argument must be provided.
Content Extraction
editSee Content extraction.
Known issues
editThere are currently no known issues for this connector. Refer to Known issues for a list of known issues for all connectors.
Troubleshooting
editSee Troubleshooting.
Security
editSee Security.
Self-managed connector
editView self-managed connector reference
Availability and prerequisites
editThis connector is available as a self-managed self-managed connector.
This self-managed connector is compatible with Elastic versions 8.10.0+.
To use this connector, satisfy all self-managed connector requirements.
Create a GitHub connector
editUse the UI
editTo create a new GitHub connector:
- In the Kibana UI, navigate to the Search → Content → Connectors page from the main menu, or use the global search field.
- Follow the instructions to create a new GitHub self-managed connector.
Use the API
editYou can use the Elasticsearch Create connector API to create a new self-managed GitHub self-managed connector.
For example:
resp = client.connector.put( connector_id="my-{service-name-stub}-connector", index_name="my-elasticsearch-index", name="Content synced from {service-name}", service_type="{service-name-stub}", ) print(resp)
const response = await client.connector.put({ connector_id: "my-{service-name-stub}-connector", index_name: "my-elasticsearch-index", name: "Content synced from {service-name}", service_type: "{service-name-stub}", }); console.log(response);
PUT _connector/my-github-connector { "index_name": "my-elasticsearch-index", "name": "Content synced from GitHub", "service_type": "github" }
You’ll also need to create an API key for the connector to use.
The user needs the cluster privileges manage_api_key
, manage_connector
and write_connector_secrets
to generate API keys programmatically.
To create an API key for the connector:
-
Run the following command, replacing values where indicated. Note the
encoded
return values from the response:resp = client.security.create_api_key( name="connector_name-connector-api-key", role_descriptors={ "connector_name-connector-role": { "cluster": [ "monitor", "manage_connector" ], "indices": [ { "names": [ "index_name", ".search-acl-filter-index_name", ".elastic-connectors*" ], "privileges": [ "all" ], "allow_restricted_indices": False } ] } }, ) print(resp)
const response = await client.security.createApiKey({ name: "connector_name-connector-api-key", role_descriptors: { "connector_name-connector-role": { cluster: ["monitor", "manage_connector"], indices: [ { names: [ "index_name", ".search-acl-filter-index_name", ".elastic-connectors*", ], privileges: ["all"], allow_restricted_indices: false, }, ], }, }, }); console.log(response);
POST /_security/api_key { "name": "connector_name-connector-api-key", "role_descriptors": { "connector_name-connector-role": { "cluster": [ "monitor", "manage_connector" ], "indices": [ { "names": [ "index_name", ".search-acl-filter-index_name", ".elastic-connectors*" ], "privileges": [ "all" ], "allow_restricted_indices": false } ] } } }
-
Update your
config.yml
file with the API keyencoded
value.
Refer to the Elasticsearch API documentation for details of all available Connector APIs.
Usage
editTo use this connector as a self-managed connector, see Self-managed connectors For additional usage operations, see Connectors UI in Kibana.
GitHub personal access token
editConfigure a GitHub personal access token to fetch data from GitHub.
Follow these steps to generate a GitHub access token:
- Go to GitHub Settings → Developer settings → Personal access tokens → Tokens(classic).
-
Select
Generate new token
. -
Add a note and select the following scopes:
-
repo
-
user
-
read:org
-
-
Select
Generate token
and copy the token.
GitHub App
editConfigure a GitHub App to fetch data from GitHub.
Follow these steps to create a GitHub App:
- Go to GitHub Settings → Developer settings → GitHub Apps.
-
Select
New GitHub App
. -
Add a name and Homepage URL, deselect
Active
underWebhook
. -
Under
Permissions
, selectRead-only
forCommit statuses
,Contents
,Issues
,Metadata
andPull requests
underRepository permissions
, selectRead-only
forMembers
underOrganization permissions
. -
Select
Any account
forWhere can this GitHub App be installed?
. -
Click
Create GitHub App
. -
Scroll down to the section
Private keys
, and clickGenerate a private key
. -
Click
Install App
in the upper-left corner, select the organizations/personal accounts you want to install the GitHub App on, clickInstall
. -
You can choose to install it on all repositories or selected repositories, and click
Install
.
Compatibility
editBoth GitHub and GitHub Enterprise are supported.
Configuration
editWhen using the build a connector workflow, initially these fields will use the default configuration set in the connector source code.
These are set in the get_default_configuration
function definition.
These configurable fields will be rendered with their respective labels in the Kibana UI. Once connected, you’ll be able to update these values in Kibana.
The following configuration fields are required:
-
data_source
- GitHub Cloud or GitHub Server.
-
host
- URL of the GitHub Server instance. (GitHub Server only)
-
auth_method
-
The method to authenticate the GitHub instance. Toggle between
Personal access token
andGitHub App
. -
token
-
GitHub personal access token to authenticate the GitHub instance. This field is only available for
Personal access token
authentication method. -
repo_type
-
Toggle between
Organization
andOther
. Note that document level security (DLS) is only available forOrganization
repositories. -
org_name
-
Name of the organization to fetch data from. This field is only available when
Authentication method
is set toPersonal access token
andRepository Type
is set toOrganization
. -
app_id
-
App ID of the GitHub App. This field is only available when
Authentication method
is set toGitHub App
. -
private_key
-
Private key generated for the GitHub App. This field is only available when
Authentication method
is set toGitHub App
. -
repositories
-
Comma-separated list of repositories to fetch data from GitHub instance. If the value is
*
the connector will fetch data from all repositories present in the configured user’s account.Default value is
*
.Examples:
-
elasticsearch
,elastic/kibana
-
*
-
Repository ownership
If the "OWNER/" portion of the "OWNER/REPO" repository argument is omitted, it defaults to the name of the authenticating user.
In the examples provided here:
-
the
elasticsearch
repo synced will be the<OWNER>/elasticsearch
-
the
kibana
repo synced will be the Elastic owned repo
The "OWNER/" portion of the "OWNER/REPO" repository argument must be provided when GitHub App
is selected as the Authentication method
.
This field can be bypassed by advanced sync rules.
-
ssl_enabled
-
Whether SSL verification will be enabled. Default value is
False
. -
ssl_ca
-
Content of SSL certificate. Note: If
ssl_enabled
isFalse
, the value in this field is ignored. Example certificate:-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE----- MIID+jCCAuKgAwIBAgIGAJJMzlxLMA0GCSqGSIb3DQEBCwUAMHoxCzAJBgNVBAYT ... 7RhLQyWn2u00L7/9Omw= -----END CERTIFICATE-----
-
use_document_level_security
-
Toggle to enable document level security (DLS).
When enabled, full syncs will fetch access control lists for each document and store them in the
_allow_access_control
field. DLS is only available whenRepository Type
is set toOrganization
. -
retry_count
-
The number of retry attempts after failed request to GitHub. Default value is
3
. -
use_text_extraction_service
-
Requires a separate deployment of the Elastic Text Extraction Service. Requires that pipeline settings disable text extraction.
Default value is
False
.
Deployment using Docker
editYou can deploy the GitHub connector as a self-managed connector using Docker. Follow these instructions.
Step 1: Download sample configuration file
Download the sample configuration file. You can either download it manually or run the following command:
curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/elastic/connectors/main/config.yml.example --output ~/connectors-config/config.yml
Remember to update the --output
argument value if your directory name is different, or you want to use a different config file name.
Step 2: Update the configuration file for your self-managed connector
Update the configuration file with the following settings to match your environment:
-
elasticsearch.host
-
elasticsearch.api_key
-
connectors
If you’re running the connector service against a Dockerized version of Elasticsearch and Kibana, your config file will look like this:
# When connecting to your cloud deployment you should edit the host value elasticsearch.host: http://host.docker.internal:9200 elasticsearch.api_key: <ELASTICSEARCH_API_KEY> connectors: - connector_id: <CONNECTOR_ID_FROM_KIBANA> service_type: github api_key: <CONNECTOR_API_KEY_FROM_KIBANA> # Optional. If not provided, the connector will use the elasticsearch.api_key instead
Using the elasticsearch.api_key
is the recommended authentication method. However, you can also use elasticsearch.username
and elasticsearch.password
to authenticate with your Elasticsearch instance.
Note: You can change other default configurations by simply uncommenting specific settings in the configuration file and modifying their values.
Step 3: Run the Docker image
Run the Docker image with the Connector Service using the following command:
docker run \ -v ~/connectors-config:/config \ --network "elastic" \ --tty \ --rm \ docker.elastic.co/enterprise-search/elastic-connectors:8.17.0.0 \ /app/bin/elastic-ingest \ -c /config/config.yml
Refer to DOCKER.md
in the elastic/connectors
repo for more details.
Find all available Docker images in the official registry.
We also have a quickstart self-managed option using Docker Compose, so you can spin up all required services at once: Elasticsearch, Kibana, and the connectors service.
Refer to this README in the elastic/connectors
repo for more information.
Documents and syncs
editThe connector syncs the following objects and entities:
- Repositories
- Pull Requests
- Issues
- Files & Folder
Only the following file extensions are ingested:
-
.markdown
-
.md
-
.rst
- Content of files bigger than 10 MB won’t be extracted.
- Permissions are not synced. All documents indexed to an Elastic deployment will be visible to all users with access to that Elasticsearch Index.
Sync types
editFull syncs are supported by default for all connectors.
This connector also supports incremental syncs.
Sync rules
editBasic sync rules are identical for all connectors and are available by default. For more information read Types of sync rule.
Advanced sync rules
editA full sync is required for advanced sync rules to take effect.
The following section describes advanced sync rules for this connector. Advanced sync rules are defined through a source-specific DSL JSON snippet.
The following sections provide examples of advanced sync rules for this connector.
Indexing document and files based on branch name configured via branch key
[ { "repository": "repo_name", "filter": { "branch": "sync-rules-feature" } } ]
Indexing document based on issue query related to bugs via issue key
[ { "repository": "repo_name", "filter": { "issue": "is:bug" } } ]
Indexing document based on PR query related to open PR’s via PR key
[ { "repository": "repo_name", "filter": { "pr": "is:open" } } ]
Indexing document and files based on queries and branch name
[ { "repository": "repo_name", "filter": { "issue": "is:bug", "pr": "is:open", "branch": "sync-rules-feature" } } ]
All documents pulled by a given rule are indexed regardless of whether the document has already been indexed by a previous rule. This can lead to document duplication, but the indexed documents count will differ in the logs. Check the Elasticsearch index for the actual document count.
Advanced rules for overlapping
[ { "filter": { "pr": "is:pr is:merged label:auto-backport merged:>=2023-07-20" }, "repository": "repo_name" }, { "filter": { "pr": "is:pr is:merged label:auto-backport merged:>=2023-07-15" }, "repository": "repo_name" } ]
If GitHub App
is selected as the authentication method, the "OWNER/" portion of the "OWNER/REPO" repository argument must be provided.
Content Extraction
editSee Content extraction.
Self-managed connector operations
editEnd-to-end testing
editThe connector framework enables operators to run functional tests against a real data source. Refer to Connector testing for more details.
To perform E2E testing for the GitHub connector, run the following command:
$ make ftest NAME=github
For faster tests, add the DATA_SIZE=small
flag:
make ftest NAME=github DATA_SIZE=small
Known issues
editThere are currently no known issues for this connector. Refer to Known issues for a list of known issues for all connectors.
Troubleshooting
editSee Troubleshooting.
Security
editSee Security.