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[Docs] audit logfile structured format (#34584)
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Documents the new structured logfile format for auditing
that was introduced by #31931. Most changes herein
are for 6.x . In 7.0 the deprecated format is gone and a
follow-up PR is in order.
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albertzaharovits authored and kcm committed Oct 30, 2018
1 parent a36efe9 commit 9f136d7
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48 changes: 33 additions & 15 deletions docs/reference/settings/audit-settings.asciidoc
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Expand Up @@ -18,10 +18,18 @@ Set to `true` to enable auditing on the node. The default value is `false`.
`xpack.security.audit.outputs`::
Specifies where audit logs are output. For example: `[ index, logfile ]`. The
default value is `logfile`, which puts the auditing events in a dedicated
`<clustername>_access.log` file on the node. You can also specify `index`, which
puts the auditing events in an {es} index that is prefixed with
`.security_audit_log`. The index can reside on the same cluster or a separate
cluster.
file named `<clustername>_audit.log` on each node.
You can also specify `index`, which puts the auditing events in an {es} index
that is prefixed with `.security_audit_log`. The index can reside on the same
cluster or a separate cluster.

For backwards compatibility reasons, if you use the logfile output type, a
`<clustername>_access.log` file is also created. It contains the same
information, but it uses the older (pre-6.5.0) formatting style.
If the backwards compatible format is not required, it should be disabled.
To do that, change its logger level to `off` in the `log4j2.properties` file.
For more information, see <<configuring-logging-levels>>.

+
--
TIP: If the index is unavailable, it is possible for auditing events to
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -57,17 +65,27 @@ audited in plain text when including the request body in audit events.
[[node-audit-settings]]
==== Local Node Info Settings

`xpack.security.audit.logfile.prefix.emit_node_name`::
Specifies whether to include the node's name in the local node info. The
default value is `true`.

`xpack.security.audit.logfile.prefix.emit_node_host_address`::
Specifies whether to include the node's IP address in the local node info. The
default value is `false`.

`xpack.security.audit.logfile.prefix.emit_node_host_name`::
Specifies whether to include the node's host name in the local node info. The
default value is `false`.
`xpack.security.audit.logfile.emit_node_name`::
Specifies whether to include the <<node.name,node name>> as a field in
each audit event.
The default value is `true`.

`xpack.security.audit.logfile.emit_node_host_address`::
Specifies whether to include the node's IP address as a field in each audit event.
The default value is `false`.

`xpack.security.audit.logfile.emit_node_host_name`::
Specifies whether to include the node's host name as a field in each audit event.
The default value is `false`.

`xpack.security.audit.logfile.emit_node_id`::
Specifies whether to include the node id as a field in each audit event.
This is available for the new format only. That is to say, this information
does not exist in the `<clustername>_access.log` file.
Unlike <<node.name,node name>>, whose value might change if the administrator
changes the setting in the config file, the node id will persist across cluster
restarts and the administrator cannot change it.
The default value is `true`.

[[index-audit-settings]]
==== Audit Log Indexing Configuration Settings
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40 changes: 37 additions & 3 deletions x-pack/docs/en/security/auditing/output-logfile.asciidoc
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Expand Up @@ -3,13 +3,41 @@
=== Logfile audit output

The `logfile` audit output is the default output for auditing. It writes data to
the `<clustername>_access.log` file in the logs directory.
the `<clustername>_audit.log` file in the logs directory. To maintain
compatibility with releases prior to 6.5.0, a `<clustername>_access.log` file
is also generated. They differ in the output format but the contents
are similar. For systems that are not ingesting the audit file for search or
analytics it is strongly recommended to only keep the newer format.
Turning off the deprecated output format can be achieved by disabling the logger
in the `log4j2.properties` file (hint: there is a config comment
about it).
For more information, see {ref}/logging.html#configuring-logging-levels[configuring-logging].


[float]
[[audit-log-entry-format]]
=== Log entry format

The format of a log entry is:
The log entries in the `<clustername>_audit.log` file
have the following format:

- Each log entry is a one line JSON document and each one is printed on a separate line.
- The fields of a log entry are ordered. However, if a field does not have a value it
will not be printed. The precise line pattern, together with the complete field
order, are specified in the `log4j2.properties` config file.
- The log entry does not contain nested inner JSON objects, i.e. the doc is flat.
- The field names follow a dotted notation to flatten inner objects.
- A field's value can be a string, a number or an array of strings.
- A field's value, a request body as well, will be escaped as per the JSON RFC 4627.

There is a list of <<audit-event-types, audit event types>> specifying the
set of fields for each sog entry type.

[float]
[[deprecated-audit-log-entry-format]]
=== Deprecated log entry format

The log entries in the `<clustername>_access.log` file have the following format:

[source,txt]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -48,8 +76,14 @@ audited in plain text when including the request body in audit events.
[[logging-file]]
You can also configure how the logfile is written in the `log4j2.properties`
file located in `ES_PATH_CONF`. By default, audit information is appended to the
`<clustername>_access.log` file located in the standard Elasticsearch `logs` directory
`<clustername>_audit.log` file located in the standard Elasticsearch `logs` directory
(typically located at `$ES_HOME/logs`). The file rolls over on a daily basis.
The deprecated logfile audit format (`<clustername>_access.log`) can be disabled
from the same `log4j2.properties` file (hint: look for the comment
instructing to set the log level to `off`). The deprecated format is a duplication
of information that is in place to assure backwards compatibility. If you are
not strict about the audit format it is strongly recommended to only use the
`<clustername>_audit.log` log appender.

[float]
[[audit-log-ignore-policy]]
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11 changes: 7 additions & 4 deletions x-pack/docs/en/security/auditing/overview.asciidoc
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Expand Up @@ -16,11 +16,14 @@ must set `xpack.security.audit.enabled` to `true` in `elasticsearch.yml`.
{Security} provides two ways to persist audit logs:

* The <<audit-log-output, `logfile`>> output, which persists events to
a dedicated `<clustername>_access.log` file on the host's file system.
* The <<audit-index, `index`>> output, which persists events to an Elasticsearch index.
The audit index can reside on the same cluster, or a separate cluster.
a dedicated `<clustername>_audit.log` file on the host's file system.
For backwards compatibility reasons, a file named `<clustername>_access.log`
is also generated.
* The <<audit-index, `index`>> output, which persists events to an Elasticsearch
index. The audit index can reside on the same cluster, or a separate cluster.

By default, only the `logfile` output is used when enabling auditing.
By default, only the `logfile` output is used when enabling auditing,
implicitly outputing to both `<clustername>_audit.log` and `<clustername>_access.log`.
To facilitate browsing and analyzing the events, you can also enable
indexing by setting `xpack.security.audit.outputs` in `elasticsearch.yml`:

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