Controlling the User Cache

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User credentials are cached in memory on each node to avoid connecting to a remote authentication service or hitting the disk for every incoming request. You can configure characteristics of the user cache with the cache.ttl, cache.max_users, and cache.hash_algo realm settings.

PKI realms do not use the user cache.

The cached user credentials are hashed in memory. By default, X-Pack security uses a salted sha-256 hash algorithm. You can use a different hashing algorithm by setting the cache_hash_algo setting to any of the following:

Table 6. Cache hash algorithms

Algorithm

Description

ssha256

Uses a salted sha-256 algorithm (default).

md5

Uses MD5 algorithm.

sha1

Uses SHA1 algorithm.

bcrypt

Uses bcrypt algorithm with salt generated in 1024 rounds.

bcrypt4

Uses bcrypt algorithm with salt generated in 16 rounds.

bcrypt5

Uses bcrypt algorithm with salt generated in 32 rounds.

bcrypt6

Uses bcrypt algorithm with salt generated in 64 rounds.

bcrypt7

Uses bcrypt algorithm with salt generated in 128 rounds.

bcrypt8

Uses bcrypt algorithm with salt generated in 256 rounds.

bcrypt9

Uses bcrypt algorithm with salt generated in 512 rounds.

noop,clear_text

Doesn’t hash the credentials and keeps it in clear text in memory. CAUTION: keeping clear text is considered insecure and can be compromised at the OS level (for example through memory dumps and using ptrace).

Evicting Users from the Cache

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X-Pack security exposes a Clear Cache API you can use to force the eviction of cached users. For example, the following request evicts all users from the ad1 realm:

$ curl -XPOST 'http://localhost:9200/_xpack/security/realm/ad1/_clear_cache'

To clear the cache for multiple realms, specify the realms as a comma-separated list:

$ curl -XPOST 'http://localhost:9200/_xpack/security/realm/ad1,ad2/_clear_cache'

You can also evict specific users:

$ curl -XPOST 'http://localhost:9200/_xpack/security/realm/ad1/_clear_cache?usernames=rdeniro,alpacino'