本地英文版地址: ../en/security-api-put-role-mapping.html
Create or update role mappings APIedit
Creates and updates role mappings.
Prerequisitesedit
-
To use this API, you must have at least the
manage_security
cluster privilege.
Descriptionedit
Role mappings define which roles are assigned to each user. Each mapping has rules that identify users and a list of roles that are granted to those users.
The role mapping APIs are generally the preferred way to manage role mappings rather than using role mapping files. The create or update role mappings API cannot update role mappings that are defined in role mapping files.
This API does not create roles. Rather, it maps users to existing roles. Roles can be created by using the create or update roles API or roles files.
For more information, see Mapping users and groups to roles.
Role templatesedit
The most common use for role mappings is to create a mapping from a known value
on the user to a fixed role name. For example, all users in the
cn=admin,dc=example,dc=com
LDAP group should be given the superuser
role in
Elasticsearch. The roles
field is used for this purpose.
For more complex needs, it is possible to use Mustache templates to dynamically
determine the names of the roles that should be granted to the user. The
role_templates
field is used for this purpose.
To use role templates successfully, the relevant scripting feature must be enabled. Otherwise, all attempts to create a role mapping with role templates fail. See Allowed script types setting.
All of the user fields that are available in the
role mapping rules
are also available in the role templates. Thus it is possible
to assign a user to a role that reflects their username
, their groups
, or the
name of the realm
to which they authenticated.
By default a template is evaluated to produce a single string that is the name
of the role which should be assigned to the user. If the format
of the template
is set to "json"
then the template is expected to produce a JSON string or an
array of JSON strings for the role names.
Path parametersedit
-
name
- (string) The distinct name that identifies the role mapping. The name is used solely as an identifier to facilitate interaction via the API; it does not affect the behavior of the mapping in any way.
Request bodyedit
The following parameters can be specified in the body of a PUT or POST request and pertain to adding a role mapping:
-
enabled
-
(Required, boolean) Mappings that have
enabled
set tofalse
are ignored when role mapping is performed. -
metadata
-
(object) Additional metadata that helps define which roles are assigned to each
user. Within the
metadata
object, keys beginning with_
are reserved for system usage. -
roles
-
(list of strings) A list of role names that are granted to the users that match
the role mapping rules.
Exactly one of
roles
orrole_templates
must be specified. -
role_templates
-
(list of objects) A list of mustache templates that will be evaluated to
determine the roles names that should granted to the users that match the role
mapping rules.
The format of these objects is defined below.
Exactly one of
roles
orrole_templates
must be specified. -
rules
- (Required, object) The rules that determine which users should be matched by the mapping. A rule is a logical condition that is expressed by using a JSON DSL. See Role mapping resources.
Examplesedit
The following example assigns the "user" role to all users:
POST /_security/role_mapping/mapping1 { "roles": [ "user"], "enabled": true, "rules": { "field" : { "username" : "*" } }, "metadata" : { "version" : 1 } }
Mappings that have |
|
Metadata is optional. |
A successful call returns a JSON structure that shows whether the mapping has been created or updated.
The following example assigns the "user" and "admin" roles to specific users:
POST /_security/role_mapping/mapping2 { "roles": [ "user", "admin" ], "enabled": true, "rules": { "field" : { "username" : [ "esadmin01", "esadmin02" ] } } }
The following example matches users who authenticated against a specific realm:
POST /_security/role_mapping/mapping3 { "roles": [ "ldap-user" ], "enabled": true, "rules": { "field" : { "realm.name" : "ldap1" } } }
The following example matches any user where either the username is esadmin
or the user is in the cn=admin,dc=example,dc=com
group:
POST /_security/role_mapping/mapping4 { "roles": [ "superuser" ], "enabled": true, "rules": { "any": [ { "field": { "username": "esadmin" } }, { "field": { "groups": "cn=admins,dc=example,dc=com" } } ] } }
The example above is useful when the group names in your identity management system (such as Active Directory, or a SAML Identity Provider) do not have a 1-to-1 correspondence with the names of roles in Elasticsearch. The role mapping is the means by which you link a group name with a role name.
However, in rare cases the names of your groups may be an exact match for the names of your Elasticsearch roles. This can be the case when your SAML Identity Provider includes its own "group mapping" feature and can be configured to release Elasticsearch role names in the user’s SAML attributes.
In these cases it is possible to use a template that treats the group names as role names.
Note: This should only be done if you intend to define roles for all of the provided groups. Mapping a user to a large number of unnecessary or undefined roles is inefficient and can have a negative effect on system performance. If you only need to map a subset of the groups, then you should do this using explicit mappings.
POST /_security/role_mapping/mapping5 { "role_templates": [ { "template": { "source": "{{#tojson}}groups{{/tojson}}" }, "format" : "json" } ], "rules": { "field" : { "realm.name" : "saml1" } }, "enabled": true }
The |
|
Because the template produces a JSON array, the format must be
set to |
The following example matches users within a specific LDAP sub-tree:
POST /_security/role_mapping/mapping6 { "roles": [ "example-user" ], "enabled": true, "rules": { "field" : { "dn" : "*,ou=subtree,dc=example,dc=com" } } }
The following example matches users within a particular LDAP sub-tree in a specific realm:
POST /_security/role_mapping/mapping7 { "roles": [ "ldap-example-user" ], "enabled": true, "rules": { "all": [ { "field" : { "dn" : "*,ou=subtree,dc=example,dc=com" } }, { "field" : { "realm.name" : "ldap1" } } ] } }
The rules can be more complex and include wildcard matching. For example, the following mapping matches any user where all of these conditions are met:
-
the Distinguished Name matches the pattern
*,ou=admin,dc=example,dc=com
, or the username ises-admin
, or the username ises-system
-
the user in in the
cn=people,dc=example,dc=com
group -
the user does not have a
terminated_date
POST /_security/role_mapping/mapping8 { "roles": [ "superuser" ], "enabled": true, "rules": { "all": [ { "any": [ { "field": { "dn": "*,ou=admin,dc=example,dc=com" } }, { "field": { "username": [ "es-admin", "es-system" ] } } ] }, { "field": { "groups": "cn=people,dc=example,dc=com" } }, { "except": { "field": { "metadata.terminated_date": null } } } ] } }
A templated role can be used to automatically map every user to their own custom role. The role itself can be defined through the Roles API or using a custom roles provider.
In this example every user who authenticates using the "cloud-saml" realm
will be automatically mapped to two roles - the "saml_user"
role and a
role that is their username prefixed with _user_
.
As an example, the user nwong
would be assigned the saml_user
and
_user_nwong
roles.