From version 5.0 onward, Shield is part of X-Pack. For more information, see
Securing the Elastic Stack.
Getting Started (Short Version)
editGetting Started (Short Version)
editThe following tutorial will get you up and running with Shield in 2 minutes.
Assumptions
edit- You have Java™ 7 or above installed.
-
You have downloaded Elasticsearch 1.4.2 (or a newer version of Elasticsearch 1.4.x) and extracted it (from now on, we’ll
refer to the Elasticsearch directory as
ES_HOME
). If you haven’t done so, you can download Elasticsearch 1.4.5 here. - You are not using a package installation (RPM/DEB) or a custom configuration directory. If you are, please see the full getting started guide.
Installation
edit-
cd
toES_HOME
-
Install the license plugin
bin/plugin -i elasticsearch/license/latest
-
Next, install the shield plugin
bin/plugin -i elasticsearch/shield/latest
-
Start Elasticsearch
bin/elasticsearch
-
Add a
es_admin
user with administrative permissionsbin/shield/esusers useradd es_admin -r admin
-
Try it out - without username/password, the request should be rejected:
curl -XGET 'http://localhost:9200/'
-
Now try with username and password
curl -u es_admin -XGET 'http://localhost:9200/'
-
Optionally, verify the Shield version
curl -u es_admin -XGET 'http://localhost:9200/_shield'
Next Steps
edit- For a more in-depth look into the meaning of each step above, please proceed to the full getting started guide.
- For better understanding of the authentication mechanisms we just used, please refer to esusers - internal file based authentication
- To learn about how to create roles and customize the permissions for users, please refer to the authorization section.
- To enable secure SSL/TLS encryption of cluster and client communication, please refer to the securing nodes section.
- If you are new to Shield, we suggest following the guide’s natural path and reading each section in order. To continue, proceed to the next section