ff546a1af4
resolves https://github.com/elastic/kibana/issues/91686 The poor email action has not had great success in setting TLS options correctly. Prior to 7.11, it was basically always setting `rejectUnauthorized` to false, so was never validating certificates. Starting in 7.11.0, it started respecting TLS certificates, but there are some simple/test servers in use that use self-signed certificates. The real fix for this will be the resolution of issue https://github.com/elastic/kibana/issues/80120 , but until then, this PR does a special-case check if the `secure` option is off (so the email client connects with a plain socket and then upgrades to TLS via STARTTLS) and both the user and password for the server are not set, then it will use `rejectUnauthorized: false`. Otherwise, it uses the global configured value of this setting. This also changes some other cases, where `secure: true` often did not set any `rejectUnauthorized` property at all, and so did not get verified. Now in all cases, `rejectUnauthorized` will be set, and the value will correspond to the globally configured value, except for the special case checked here, and when a proxy is in use (that logic did not change). So it is possible this would break customers, who were using insecure servers and email action worked, but with this fix the connections will be rejected. They should have been rejected all this time though. The work-around for this problem, if we don't implement a fix like this, is that customers will need to set the global `rejectUnauthorized` to `false`, which means NONE of their TLS connections for any actions will be verified. Which seems extreme. |
||
---|---|---|
.ci | ||
.github | ||
config | ||
dev_docs | ||
docs | ||
examples | ||
licenses | ||
packages | ||
plugins | ||
rfcs | ||
scripts | ||
src | ||
tasks/config | ||
test | ||
typings | ||
utilities | ||
vars | ||
x-pack | ||
.backportrc.json | ||
.bazelignore | ||
.bazeliskversion | ||
.bazelrc | ||
.bazelrc.common | ||
.bazelversion | ||
.browserslistrc | ||
.editorconfig | ||
.eslintignore | ||
.eslintrc.js | ||
.fossa.yml | ||
.gitattributes | ||
.gitignore | ||
.i18nrc.json | ||
.node-version | ||
.npmrc | ||
.nvmrc | ||
.prettierignore | ||
.prettierrc | ||
.stylelintignore | ||
.stylelintrc | ||
.telemetryrc.json | ||
.yarnrc | ||
api-documenter.json | ||
BUILD.bazel | ||
CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md | ||
CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
FAQ.md | ||
github_checks_reporter.json | ||
Gruntfile.js | ||
Jenkinsfile | ||
jest.config.integration.js | ||
jest.config.js | ||
kibana.d.ts | ||
LICENSE.txt | ||
NOTICE.txt | ||
package.json | ||
preinstall_check.js | ||
README.md | ||
renovate.json5 | ||
SECURITY.md | ||
STYLEGUIDE.md | ||
tsconfig.base.json | ||
tsconfig.browser.json | ||
tsconfig.json | ||
tsconfig.refs.json | ||
tsconfig.types.json | ||
TYPESCRIPT.md | ||
WORKSPACE.bazel | ||
yarn.lock |
Kibana
Kibana is your window into the Elastic Stack. Specifically, it's a browser-based analytics and search dashboard for Elasticsearch.
- Getting Started
- Documentation
- Version Compatibility with Elasticsearch
- Questions? Problems? Suggestions?
Getting Started
If you just want to try Kibana out, check out the Elastic Stack Getting Started Page to give it a whirl.
If you're interested in diving a bit deeper and getting a taste of Kibana's capabilities, head over to the Kibana Getting Started Page.
Using a Kibana Release
If you want to use a Kibana release in production, give it a test run, or just play around:
- Download the latest version on the Kibana Download Page.
- Learn more about Kibana's features and capabilities on the Kibana Product Page.
- We also offer a hosted version of Kibana on our Cloud Service.
Building and Running Kibana, and/or Contributing Code
You might want to build Kibana locally to contribute some code, test out the latest features, or try out an open PR:
- CONTRIBUTING.md will help you get Kibana up and running.
- If you would like to contribute code, please follow our STYLEGUIDE.md.
- For all other questions, check out the FAQ.md and wiki.
Documentation
Visit Elastic.co for the full Kibana documentation.
For information about building the documentation, see the README in elastic/docs.
Version Compatibility with Elasticsearch
Ideally, you should be running Elasticsearch and Kibana with matching version numbers. If your Elasticsearch has an older version number or a newer major number than Kibana, then Kibana will fail to run. If Elasticsearch has a newer minor or patch number than Kibana, then the Kibana Server will log a warning.
Note: The version numbers below are only examples, meant to illustrate the relationships between different types of version numbers.
Situation | Example Kibana version | Example ES version | Outcome |
---|---|---|---|
Versions are the same. | 5.1.2 | 5.1.2 | 💚 OK |
ES patch number is newer. | 5.1.2 | 5.1.5 | ⚠️ Logged warning |
ES minor number is newer. | 5.1.2 | 5.5.0 | ⚠️ Logged warning |
ES major number is newer. | 5.1.2 | 6.0.0 | 🚫 Fatal error |
ES patch number is older. | 5.1.2 | 5.1.0 | ⚠️ Logged warning |
ES minor number is older. | 5.1.2 | 5.0.0 | 🚫 Fatal error |
ES major number is older. | 5.1.2 | 4.0.0 | 🚫 Fatal error |
Questions? Problems? Suggestions?
- If you've found a bug or want to request a feature, please create a GitHub Issue. Please check to make sure someone else hasn't already created an issue for the same topic.
- Need help using Kibana? Ask away on our Kibana Discuss Forum and a fellow community member or Elastic engineer will be glad to help you out.