The Elasticsearch security features work with standard HTTP basic authentication headers to authenticate users. Since Elasticsearch is stateless, this header must be sent with every request:
Alternatively, you can use token-based authentication services.
Client examples
This example uses curl without basic auth to create an index:
curl -XPUT 'localhost:9200/idx'
{
"error": "AuthenticationException[Missing authentication token]",
"status": 401
}
Since no user is associated with the request above, an authentication error is
returned. Now we’ll use curl with basic auth to create an index as the
rdeniro user:
curl --user rdeniro:taxidriver -XPUT 'localhost:9200/idx'
{
"acknowledged": true
}
Secondary authorization
Some APIs support secondary authorization headers for situations where you want tasks to run with a different set of credentials. For example, you can send the following header in addition to the basic authentication header:
The es-secondary-authorization header has the same syntax as the
Authorization header. It therefore also supports the use of
token-based authentication services. For
example:
Client libraries over HTTP
For more information about using security features with the language specific clients, refer to: