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Field-level security

Field-level security lets you control which document fields a user can see. Just like document-level security, you control access by index within a role.

The easiest way to get started with document- and field-level security is open OpenSearch Dashboards and choose Security. Then choose Roles, create a new role, and review the Index permissions section.


Table of contents

  1. Include or exclude fields
    1. OpenSearch Dashboards
    2. roles.yml
    3. REST API
  2. Interaction with multiple roles
  3. Interaction with document-level security

Include or exclude fields

You have two options when you configure field-level security: include or exclude fields. If you include fields, users see only those fields when they retrieve a document. For example, if you include the actors, title, and year fields, a search result might look like this:

{
  "_index": "movies",
  "_source": {
    "year": 2013,
    "title": "Rush",
    "actors": [
      "Daniel Brühl",
      "Chris Hemsworth",
      "Olivia Wilde"
    ]
  }
}

If you exclude fields, users see everything but those fields when they retrieve a document. For example, if you exclude those same fields, the same search result might look like this:

{
  "_index": "movies",
  "_source": {
    "directors": [
      "Ron Howard"
    ],
    "plot": "A re-creation of the merciless 1970s rivalry between Formula One rivals James Hunt and Niki Lauda.",
    "genres": [
      "Action",
      "Biography",
      "Drama",
      "Sport"
    ]
  }
}

You can achieve the same outcomes using inclusion or exclusion, so choose whichever makes sense for your use case. Mixing the two doesn’t make sense and is not supported.

You can specify field-level security settings using OpenSearch Dashboards, roles.yml, and the REST API.

  • To exclude fields in roles.yml or the REST API, add ~ before the field name.
  • Field names support wildcards (*).

    Wildcards are especially useful for excluding subfields. For example, if you index a document that has a string (e.g. {"title": "Thor"}), Lucenia creates a title field of type text, but it also creates a title.keyword subfield of type keyword. In this example, to prevent unauthorized access to data in the title field, you must also exclude the title.keyword subfield. Use title* to match all fields that begin with title.

OpenSearch Dashboards

  1. Choose a role and Add index permission.
  2. Choose an index pattern.
  3. Under Field level security, use the drop-down to select your preferred option. Then specify one or more fields and press Enter.

roles.yml

someonerole:
  cluster: []
  indices:
    movies:
      '*':
      - "READ"
      _fls_:
      - "~actors"
      - "~title"
      - "~year"

REST API

See Create role.

Interaction with multiple roles

If you map a user to multiple roles, we recommend that those roles use either include or exclude statements for each index. The Security plugin evaluates field-level security settings using the AND operator, so combining include and exclude statements can lead to neither behavior working properly.

For example, in the movies index, if you include actors, title, and year in one role, exclude actors, title, and genres in another role, and then map both roles to the same user, a search result might look like this:

{
  "_index": "movies",
  "_source": {
    "year": 2013,
    "directors": [
      "Ron Howard"
    ],
    "plot": "A re-creation of the merciless 1970s rivalry between Formula One rivals James Hunt and Niki Lauda."
  }
}

Interaction with document-level security

Document-level security relies on Lucenia queries, which means that all fields in the query must be visible in order for it to work properly. If you use field-level security in conjunction with document-level security, make sure you don’t restrict access to the fields that document-level security uses.

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