- Introducing Elasticsearch Service
- Adding data to Elasticsearch
- Migrating data
- Ingesting data from your application
- Ingest data with Node.js on Elasticsearch Service
- Ingest data with Python on Elasticsearch Service
- Ingest data from Beats to Elasticsearch Service with Logstash as a proxy
- Ingest data from a relational database into Elasticsearch Service
- Ingest logs from a Python application using Filebeat
- Ingest logs from a Node.js web application using Filebeat
- Configure Beats and Logstash with Cloud ID
- Best practices for managing your data
- Configure index management
- Enable cross-cluster search and cross-cluster replication
- Access other deployments of the same Elasticsearch Service organization
- Access deployments of another Elasticsearch Service organization
- Access deployments of an Elastic Cloud Enterprise environment
- Access clusters of a self-managed environment
- Enabling CCS/R between Elasticsearch Service and ECK
- Edit or remove a trusted environment
- Migrate the cross-cluster search deployment template
- Manage data from the command line
- Preparing a deployment for production
- Securing your deployment
- Monitoring your deployment
- Monitor with AutoOps
- Configure Stack monitoring alerts
- Access performance metrics
- Keep track of deployment activity
- Diagnose and resolve issues
- Diagnose unavailable nodes
- Why are my shards unavailable?
- Why is performance degrading over time?
- Is my cluster really highly available?
- How does high memory pressure affect performance?
- Why are my cluster response times suddenly so much worse?
- How do I resolve deployment health warnings?
- How do I resolve node bootlooping?
- Why did my node move to a different host?
- Snapshot and restore
- Managing your organization
- Your account and billing
- Billing Dimensions
- Billing models
- Using Elastic Consumption Units for billing
- Edit user account settings
- Monitor and analyze your account usage
- Check your subscription overview
- Add your billing details
- Choose a subscription level
- Check your billing history
- Update billing and operational contacts
- Stop charges for a deployment
- Billing FAQ
- Elasticsearch Service hardware
- Elasticsearch Service GCP instance configurations
- Elasticsearch Service GCP default provider instance configurations
- Elasticsearch Service AWS instance configurations
- Elasticsearch Service AWS default provider instance configurations
- Elasticsearch Service Azure instance configurations
- Elasticsearch Service Azure default provider instance configurations
- Change hardware for a specific resource
- Elasticsearch Service regions
- About Elasticsearch Service
- RESTful API
- Release notes
- March 25, 2025
- Enhancements and bug fixes - March 2025
- Enhancements and bug fixes - February 2025
- Enhancements and bug fixes - January 2025
- Enhancements and bug fixes - December 2024
- Enhancements and bug fixes - November 2024
- Enhancements and bug fixes - Late October 2024
- Enhancements and bug fixes - Early October 2024
- Enhancements and bug fixes - September 2024
- Enhancements and bug fixes - Late August 2024
- Enhancements and bug fixes - Early August 2024
- Enhancements and bug fixes - July 2024
- Enhancements and bug fixes - Late June 2024
- Enhancements and bug fixes - Early June 2024
- Enhancements and bug fixes - Early May 2024
- Bring your own key, and more
- AWS region EU Central 2 (Zurich) now available
- GCP region Middle East West 1 (Tel Aviv) now available
- Enhancements and bug fixes - March 2024
- Enhancements and bug fixes - January 2024
- Enhancements and bug fixes
- Enhancements and bug fixes
- Enhancements and bug fixes
- Enhancements and bug fixes
- AWS region EU North 1 (Stockholm) now available
- GCP regions Asia Southeast 2 (Indonesia) and Europe West 9 (Paris)
- Enhancements and bug fixes
- Enhancements and bug fixes
- Bug fixes
- Enhancements and bug fixes
- Role-based access control, and more
- Newly released deployment templates for Integrations Server, Master, and Coordinating
- Enhancements and bug fixes
- Enhancements and bug fixes
- Enhancements and bug fixes
- Enhancements and bug fixes
- Enhancements and bug fixes
- Enhancements and bug fixes
- Enhancements and bug fixes
- Enhancements and bug fixes
- Enhancements and bug fixes
- Enhancements and bug fixes
- Cross environment search and replication, and more
- Enhancements and bug fixes
- Enhancements and bug fixes
- Azure region Canada Central (Toronto) now available
- Azure region Brazil South (São Paulo) now available
- Azure region South Africa North (Johannesburg) now available
- Azure region Central India (Pune) now available
- Enhancements and bug fixes
- Azure new virtual machine types available
- Billing Costs Analysis API, and more
- Organization and billing API updates, and more
- Integrations Server, and more
- Trust across organizations, and more
- Organizations, and more
- Elastic Consumption Units, and more
- AWS region Africa (Cape Town) available
- AWS region Europe (Milan) available
- AWS region Middle East (Bahrain) available
- Enhancements and bug fixes
- Enhancements and bug fixes
- GCP Private Link, and more
- Enhancements and bug fixes
- GCP region Asia Northeast 3 (Seoul) available
- Enhancements and bug fixes
- Enhancements and bug fixes
- Native Azure integration, and more
- Frozen data tier and more
- Enhancements and bug fixes
- Azure region Southcentral US (Texas) available
- Azure region East US (Virginia) available
- Custom endpoint aliases, and more
- Autoscaling, and more
- Cross-region and cross-provider support, warm and cold data tiers, and more
- Better feature usage tracking, new cost and usage analysis page, and more
- New features, enhancements, and bug fixes
- AWS region Asia Pacific (Hong Kong)
- Enterprise subscription self service, log in with Microsoft, bug fixes, and more
- SSO for Enterprise Search, support for more settings
- Azure region Australia East (New South Wales)
- New logging features, better GCP marketplace self service
- Azure region US Central (Iowa)
- AWS region Asia Pacific (Mumbai)
- Elastic solutions and Microsoft Azure Marketplace integration
- AWS region Pacific (Seoul)
- AWS region EU West 3 (Paris)
- Traffic management and improved network security
- AWS region Canada (Central)
- Enterprise Search
- New security setting, in-place configuration changes, new hardware support, and signup with Google
- Azure region France Central (Paris)
- Regions AWS US East 2 (Ohio) and Azure North Europe (Ireland)
- Our Elasticsearch Service API is generally available
- GCP regions Asia East 1 (Taiwan), Europe North 1 (Finland), and Europe West 4 (Netherlands)
- Azure region UK South (London)
- GCP region US East 1 (South Carolina)
- GCP regions Asia Southeast 1 (Singapore) and South America East 1 (Sao Paulo)
- Snapshot lifecycle management, index lifecycle management migration, and more
- Azure region Japan East (Tokyo)
- App Search
- GCP region Asia Pacific South 1 (Mumbai)
- GCP region North America Northeast 1 (Montreal)
- New Elastic Cloud home page and other improvements
- Azure regions US West 2 (Washington) and Southeast Asia (Singapore)
- GCP regions US East 4 (N. Virginia) and Europe West 2 (London)
- Better plugin and bundle support, improved pricing calculator, bug fixes, and more
- GCP region Asia Pacific Southeast 1 (Sydney)
- Elasticsearch Service on Microsoft Azure
- Cross-cluster search, OIDC and Kerberos authentication
- AWS region EU (London)
- GCP region Asia Pacific Northeast 1 (Tokyo)
- Usability improvements and Kibana bug fix
- GCS support and private subscription
- Elastic Stack 6.8 and 7.1
- ILM and hot-warm architecture
- Elasticsearch keystore and more
- Trial capacity and more
- APM Servers and more
- Snapshot retention period and more
- Improvements and snapshot intervals
- SAML and multi-factor authentication
- Next generation of Elasticsearch Service
- Branding update
- Minor Console updates
- New Cloud Console and bug fixes
- What’s new with the Elastic Stack
Change hardware profiles
editChange hardware profiles
editDeployment hardware profiles deploy the Elastic Stack on virtual hardware. Each hardware profile has a different blend of storage, RAM, and vCPU.
Elastic Cloud regularly introduces new hardware profiles to provide:
- More optimal hardware for applications in the Elastic Stack.
- Cost efficiencies when new hardware from Cloud providers becomes available.
The Elastic Cloud console indicates when a new version of a hardware profile is available in the overview page for your deployment, under the Hardware profile section.
Change the hardware profile using the Elastic Cloud console
editUpgrade to the newest version of your current hardware profile
editNote that if there’s no indication that a newer version is available, that means that your deployment is already running on the latest version of that hardware profile.
-
On the deployment overview page, next to your current hardware profile where there is indication of a newer available version, select Edit.
-
Preview the changes for the new hardware profile version.
The configuration screen summarizes hardware changes for each component of your deployment.
- Select Update to apply the change.
Change to a different hardware profile
editWhen the current hardware profile of your deployment isn’t the most optimal one available for your usage, you can change it as follows:
- On the deployment overview page, next to your current hardware profile, select Edit.
-
Select the hardware profile you wish to change to. The configuration screen summarizes hardware changes for each component of your deployment.
- Select Update to apply the change.
If your deployment is configured for high availability, the hardware profile change does not impact your ability to read and write from the deployment as the change is rolled out instance by instance. Refer to Plan for production to learn about high availability (HA) and how to configure your deployment as HA.
Change the hardware profile using the API
editPrerequisites:
-
A valid Elastic Cloud API key (
$EC_API_KEY
) -
The deployment ID of the deployment you wish to modify (
{deployment_id}
)
Replace those values with your actual API key and deployment ID in the following instructions.
-
Get the current API payload for your deployment.
curl \ -H "Authorization: ApiKey $EC_API_KEY" \ "https://api.elastic-cloud.com/api/v1/deployments/{deployment_id}"
-
Using the API payload for your deployment, determine the following:
-
Your current
deployment_template
ID. The template ID corresponds to the hardware profile used for your deployment."resources":{ "elasticsearch":[ { "ref_id":"main-elasticsearch", "id":"$CLUSTER_ID", "region":"gcp-us-central1", "info":{ "cluster_id":"$CLUSTER_ID", "cluster_name":"$CLUSTER_NAME", "deployment_id":"$DEPLOYMENT_ID", "plan_info":{ "current":{ "plan":{ "deployment_template":{ "id":"gcp-cpu-optimized-v5" },
-
The region that your deployment is in:
"resources":{ "elasticsearch":[ { "ref_id":"main-elasticsearch", "id":"$DEPLOYMENT_ID", "region":"gcp-us-central1",
-
-
Check the hardware profiles available for the region that your deployment is in and find the template ID of the deployment hardware profile you’d like to use.
If you wish to update your hardware profile to the latest version available for that same profile, locate the template ID corresponding to the
deployment_template
you retrieved at step 2, but without the version information. For example, if your deployment’s current hardware profile isgcp-cpu-optimized-v5
, usegcp-cpu-optimized
as a template ID to update your deployment. -
Get the API payload for your deployment based on the new template ID.
curl -XGET https://api.elastic-cloud.com/api/v1/deployments/{deployment_id}/migrate_template?template_id={new_template_id} \ -H "Authorization: ApiKey $EC_API_KEY" > migrate_deployment.json
-
Use the payload returned to update your deployment to use the hardware profile.
curl -XPUT https://api.elastic-cloud.com/api/v1/deployments/{deployment_id} \ -H "Authorization: ApiKey $EC_API_KEY" \ -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \ -d @migrate_deployment.json
List of hardware profiles
editStorage optimized
editYour Elasticsearch data nodes are optimized for high I/O throughput. Use this profile if you are new to Elasticsearch or don’t need to run a more specialized workload. You can find the exact storage, memory, and vCPU allotment on the hardware details page for each cloud provider.
Ideal use case
Good for most ingestion use cases with 7-10 days of data available for fast access. Also good for light search use cases without heavy indexing or CPU needs.
Storage optimized (dense)
editYour Elasticsearch data nodes are optimized for high I/O throughput. You can find the exact storage, memory, and vCPU allotment on the hardware details page for each cloud provider.
Ideal use case
Ideal for ingestion use cases with more than 10 days of data available for fast access. Also, good for light search use cases with very large data sets.
CPU optimized
editThis profile runs CPU-intensive workloads faster. You can find the exact storage, memory, and vCPU allotment on the hardware details page for each cloud provider.
Ideal use case
Consider this configuration for ingestion use cases with 1-4 days of data available for fast access and for search use cases with indexing and querying workloads. Provides the most CPU resources per unit of RAM.
CPU optimized (ARM)
editThis profile is similar to CPU optimized profile but is powered by AWS Graviton2 instances. You can find the exact storage, memory, and vCPU allotment on the hardware details page for each cloud provider.
Ideal use case
Consider this configuration for ingestion use cases with 1-4 days of data available for fast access and for search use cases with indexing and querying workloads. Provides the most CPU resources per unit of RAM.
Vector search optimized (ARM)
editThis profile is suited for Vector search, Generative AI and Semantic search optimized workloads. You can find the exact storage, memory, and vCPU allotment on the hardware details page for each cloud provider.
Ideal use case
Optimized for applications that leverage Vector Search and/or Generative AI. Also the optimal choice for utilizing ELSER for semantic search applications. Broadly suitable for all semantic search, text embedding, image search, and other Vector Search use cases.
General purpose
editThis profile runs CPU-intensive workloads faster . You can find the exact storage, memory, and vCPU allotment on the hardware details page for each cloud provider.
Ideal use case
Suitable for ingestion use cases with 5-7 days of data available for fast access. Also good for search workloads with less-frequent indexing and medium to high querying loads. Provides a balance of storage, memory, and CPU.
General purpose (ARM)
editThis profile is similar to the General purpose profile but is powered by AWS Graviton2 instances. You can find the exact storage, memory, and vCPU allotment on the hardware details page for each cloud provider.
Ideal use case
Suitable for ingestion use cases with 5-7 days of data available for fast access. Also good for search workloads with less-frequent indexing and medium to high querying loads. Provides a balance of storage, memory, and CPU.
On this page
- Change the hardware profile using the Elastic Cloud console
- Upgrade to the newest version of your current hardware profile
- Change to a different hardware profile
- Change the hardware profile using the API
- List of hardware profiles
- Storage optimized
- Storage optimized (dense)
- CPU optimized
- CPU optimized (ARM)
- Vector search optimized (ARM)
- General purpose
- General purpose (ARM)