Step-by-Step Guide to Secure Elasticsearch with SSL Certs and Authentication

Purvesh Panchal - Aug 23 - - Dev Community

This detailed article will show you how to secure Elasticsearch on Ubuntu 20.04 using X-Pack and SSL/TLS encryption.

Step 1: Install your desired version of Elasticsearch

wget https://artifacts.elastic.co/downloads/elasticsearch/elasticsearch-8.15.0-amd64.deb
wget https://artifacts.elastic.co/downloads/elasticsearch/elasticsearch-8.15.0-amd64.deb.sha512
shasum -a 512 -c elasticsearch-8.15.0-amd64.deb.sha512 
sudo dpkg -i elasticsearch-8.15.0-amd64.deb
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Step 2: Enable X-Pack security

sudo nano /etc/elasticsearch/elasticsearch.yml
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  • Open the Elasticsearch configuration file for editing.
  • Uncomment the line xpack.security.enabled: true by removing the # at the beginning.
  • Save the changes and exit the text editor.

Step 3: Generate SSL certificates

sudo mkdir /etc/elasticsearch/certs
sudo apt install openssl
sudo openssl req -x509 -out /etc/elasticsearch/certs/elastic1.crt -keyout /etc/elasticsearch/certs/elastic1.key -newkey rsa:2048 -nodes -sha256 -subj "/C=US/ST=State/L=Location/O=Organization/OU=Organizational Unit/CN=localhost"
sudo openssl pkcs12 -export -in /etc/elasticsearch/certs/elastic1.crt -inkey /etc/elasticsearch/certs/elastic1.key -out /etc/elasticsearch/certs/elastic1.p12 -name "elasticsearch-cert"
sudo chown -R elasticsearch:elasticsearch /etc/elasticsearch/certs
sudo chmod 0400 /etc/elasticsearch/certs/*
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  • This step generates a self-signed SSL certificate using OpenSSL and converts it to PKCS#12 format.

Step 4: Configure SSL settings

sudo nano /etc/elasticsearch/elasticsearch.yml
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  • Open the Elasticsearch configuration file for editing.
  • Add the following lines at the end of the file to configure SSL settings:
xpack.security.transport.ssl.enabled: true
xpack.security.transport.ssl.keystore.path: /etc/elasticsearch/certs/elastic1.p12
xpack.security.transport.ssl.truststore.path: /etc/elasticsearch/certs/elastic1.p12
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  • Save the changes and exit the text editor.

Step 5: Restart Elasticsearch

sudo systemctl restart elasticsearch
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  • This step restarts Elasticsearch to apply the configuration changes.

Step 6: Verify SSL/TLS encryption

curl --cacert /etc/elasticsearch/certs/elastic1.p12 https://localhost:9200
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  • This command tests the SSL/TLS connection using curl to verify that the SSL/TLS encryption is working properly.

Step 7: Configure user authentication and roles

sudo /usr/share/elasticsearch/bin/elasticsearch-setup-passwords auto
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  • This step sets the password for the built-in elastic user. Make sure to save the generated password.
  • Configure additional users and roles as needed using the elasticsearch-users command.

Step 8: Update firewall rules

  • If you have a firewall enabled, allow incoming connections to the Elasticsearch port (default: 9200) and SSL/TLS port (default: 9300) to ensure external access.
  • For example, using ufw firewall:
sudo ufw allow 9200/tcp
sudo ufw allow 9300/tcp
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  • Adjust the commands based on your specific firewall configuration.

By following these steps, you should be able to secure Elasticsearch using X-Pack with SSL/TLS encryption on Ubuntu 20.04. Remember to adjust any file paths or configurations according to your specific requirements.

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