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aws-es-proxy is a small web server application sitting between your HTTP client (browser, curl, etc...) and Amazon Elasticsearch service.

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abutaha/aws-es-proxy

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aws-es-proxy

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aws-es-proxy is a small web server application sitting between your HTTP client (browser, curl, etc...) and Amazon Elasticsearch service. It will sign your requests using latest AWS Signature Version 4 before sending the request to Amazon Elasticsearch. When response is back from Amazon Elasticsearch, this response will be sent back to your HTTP client.

Kibana requests are also signed automatically.

Installation

Download binary executable

aws-es-proxy has single executable binaries for Linux, Mac and Windows.

Download the latest aws-es-proxy release.

Docker

There is an official docker image available for aws-es-proxy. To run the image:

# v0.9 and newer (latest always point to the latest release):

docker run --rm -v ~/.aws:/root/.aws -p 9200:9200 abutaha/aws-es-proxy:v1.0 -endpoint https://dummy-host.ap-southeast-2.es.amazonaws.com -listen 0.0.0.0:9200

v.08:

docker run --rm -it abutaha/aws-es-proxy ./aws-es-proxy -endpoint https://dummy-host.ap-southeast-2.es.amazonaws.com

To expose a port number other than the default 9200, pass an environment variable of PORT_NUM to docker with the port number you wish to expose for your service.

Via homebrew

brew install aws-es-proxy

Build from Source

Dependencies:

  • go1.14+
#requires go1.14
go build github.com/abutaha/aws-es-proxy

Configuring Credentials

Before using aws-es-proxy, ensure that you've configured your AWS IAM user credentials. The best way to configure credentials on a development machine is to use the ~/.aws/credentials file, which might look like:

[default]
aws_access_key_id = AKID1234567890
aws_secret_access_key = MY-SECRET-KEY

Alternatively, you can set the following environment variables:

export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=AKID1234567890
export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=MY-SECRET-KEY

aws-es-proxy also supports IAM roles. To use IAM roles, you need to modify your Amazon Elasticsearch access policy to allow access from that role. Below is an Amazon Elasticsearch access policy example allowing access from any EC2 instance with an IAM role called ec2-aws-elasticsearch.

{
  "Version": "2012-10-17",
  "Statement": [
    {
      "Effect": "Allow",
      "Principal": {
        "AWS": "arn:aws:iam::012345678910:role/ec2-aws-elasticsearch"
      },
      "Action": "es:*",
      "Resource": "arn:aws:es:eu-west-1:012345678910:domain/test-es-domain/*"
    }
  ]
}

Usage example:

You can use either argument -endpoint OR environment variable ENDPOINT to specify AWS ElasticSearch endpoint.

./aws-es-proxy -endpoint https://test-es-somerandomvalue.eu-west-1.es.amazonaws.com
Listening on 127.0.0.1:9200
export ENDPOINT=https://test-es-somerandomvalue.eu-west-1.es.amazonaws.com

./aws-es-proxy  -listen 10.0.0.1:9200 -verbose
Listening on 10.0.0.1:9200

aws-es-proxy listens on 127.0.0.1:9200 if no additional argument is provided. You can change the IP and Port passing the argument -listen

./aws-es-proxy -listen :8080 -endpoint ...
./aws-es-proxy -listen 10.0.0.1:9200 -endpoint ...

By default, aws-es-proxy will not display any message in the console. However, it has the ability to print requests being sent to Amazon Elasticsearch, and the duration it takes to receive the request back. This can be enabled using the option -verbose

./aws-es-proxy -verbose ...
Listening on 127.0.0.1:9200
2016/10/31 19:48:23  -> GET / 200 1.054s
2016/10/31 19:48:30  -> GET /_cat/indices?v 200 0.199s
2016/10/31 19:48:37  -> GET /_cat/shards?v 200 0.196s
2016/10/31 19:48:49  -> GET /_cat/allocation?v 200 0.179s
2016/10/31 19:49:10  -> PUT /my-test-index 200 0.347s

For a full list of available options, use -h:

./aws-es-proxy -h
Usage of ./aws-es-proxy:
  -auth
        Require HTTP Basic Auth
  -debug
        Print debug messages
  -endpoint string
        Amazon ElasticSearch Endpoint (e.g: https://dummy-host.eu-west-1.es.amazonaws.com)
  -listen string
        Local TCP port to listen on (default "127.0.0.1:9200")
  -log-to-file
        Log user requests and ElasticSearch responses to files
  -no-sign-reqs
        Disable AWS Signature v4
  -password string
        HTTP Basic Auth Password
  -pretty
        Prettify verbose and file output
  -realm string
        Authentication Required
  -remote-terminate
        Allow HTTP remote termination
  -timeout int
        Set a request timeout to ES. Specify in seconds, defaults to 15 (default 15)
  -username string
        HTTP Basic Auth Username
  -verbose
        Print user requests
  -version
        Print aws-es-proxy version

Using HTTP Clients

After you run aws-es-proxy, you can now open your Web browser on http://localhost:9200. Everything should be working as you have your own instance of ElasticSearch running on port 9200.

To access Kibana, use http://localhost:9200/_plugin/kibana/app/kibana