Connecting
editConnecting
editThis page contains the information you need to connect and use the Client with Elasticsearch.
On this page
Authentication
editThis document contains code snippets to show you how to connect to various Elasticsearch providers.
Elastic Cloud
editIf you are using Elastic Cloud, the client offers
an easy way to connect to it via the cloud
option. You must pass the Cloud ID
that you can find in the cloud console, then your username and password inside
the auth
option.
When connecting to Elastic Cloud, the client will automatically enable
both request and response compression by default, since it yields significant
throughput improvements. Moreover, the client will also set the tls option
secureProtocol
to TLSv1_2_method
unless specified otherwise. You can still
override this option by configuring them.
Do not enable sniffing when using Elastic Cloud, since the nodes are behind a load balancer, Elastic Cloud will take care of everything for you. Take a look here to know more.
const { Client } = require('@elastic/elasticsearch') const client = new Client({ cloud: { id: '<cloud-id>' }, auth: { username: 'elastic', password: 'changeme' } })
Connecting to a self-managed cluster
editBy default Elasticsearch will start with security features like authentication and TLS enabled. To connect to the Elasticsearch cluster you’ll need to configure the Node.js Elasticsearch client to use HTTPS with the generated CA certificate in order to make requests successfully.
If you’re just getting started with Elasticsearch we recommend reading the documentation on configuring and starting Elasticsearch to ensure your cluster is running as expected.
When you start Elasticsearch for the first time you’ll see a distinct block like the one below in the output from Elasticsearch (you may have to scroll up if it’s been a while):
-> Elasticsearch security features have been automatically configured! -> Authentication is enabled and cluster connections are encrypted. -> Password for the elastic user (reset with `bin/elasticsearch-reset-password -u elastic`): lhQpLELkjkrawaBoaz0Q -> HTTP CA certificate SHA-256 fingerprint: a52dd93511e8c6045e21f16654b77c9ee0f34aea26d9f40320b531c474676228 ...
Depending on the circumstances there are two options for verifying the HTTPS connection, either verifying with the CA certificate itself or via the HTTP CA certificate fingerprint.
TLS configuration
editThe generated root CA certificate can be found in the certs
directory in your
Elasticsearch config location ($ES_CONF_PATH/certs/http_ca.crt
). If you’re running Elasticsearch
in Docker there is
additional documentation for retrieving the CA certificate.
Without any additional configuration you can specify https://
node urls, and
the certificates used to sign these requests will be verified. To turn off
certificate verification, you must specify an tls
object in the top level
config and set rejectUnauthorized: false
. The default tls
values are the
same that Node.js’s tls.connect()
uses.
const { Client } = require('@elastic/elasticsearch') const client = new Client({ node: 'https://localhost:9200', auth: { username: 'elastic', password: 'changeme' }, tls: { ca: fs.readFileSync('./http_ca.crt'), rejectUnauthorized: false } })
CA fingerprint
editYou can configure the client to only trust certificates that are signed by a specific CA certificate
(CA certificate pinning) by providing a caFingerprint
option.
This will verify that the fingerprint of the CA certificate that has signed
the certificate of the server matches the supplied value.
You must configure a SHA256 digest.
const { Client } = require('@elastic/elasticsearch') const client = new Client({ node: 'https://example.com' auth: { ... }, // the fingerprint (SHA256) of the CA certificate that is used to sign // the certificate that the Elasticsearch node presents for TLS. caFingerprint: '20:0D:CA:FA:76:...', tls: { // might be required if it's a self-signed certificate rejectUnauthorized: false } })
The certificate fingerprint can be calculated using openssl x509
with the
certificate file:
openssl x509 -fingerprint -sha256 -noout -in /path/to/http_ca.crt
If you don’t have access to the generated CA file from Elasticsearch you can use the
following script to output the root CA fingerprint of the Elasticsearch instance with
openssl s_client
:
# Replace the values of 'localhost' and '9200' to the # corresponding host and port values for the cluster. openssl s_client -connect localhost:9200 -servername localhost -showcerts </dev/null 2>/dev/null \ | openssl x509 -fingerprint -sha256 -noout -in /dev/stdin
The output of openssl x509
will look something like this:
SHA256 Fingerprint=A5:2D:D9:35:11:E8:C6:04:5E:21:F1:66:54:B7:7C:9E:E0:F3:4A:EA:26:D9:F4:03:20:B5:31:C4:74:67:62:28
Connecting without security enabled
editRunning Elasticsearch without security enabled is not recommended.
If your cluster is configured with security explicitly disabled then you can connect via HTTP:
const { Client } = require('@elastic/elasticsearch') const client = new Client({ node: 'http://example.com' })
Authentication strategies
editFollowing you can find all the supported authentication strategies.
ApiKey authentication
editYou can use the
ApiKey
authentication by passing the apiKey
parameter via the auth
option. The
apiKey
parameter can be either a base64 encoded string or an object with the
values that you can obtain from the
create api key endpoint.
If you provide both basic authentication credentials and the ApiKey configuration, the ApiKey takes precedence.
const { Client } = require('@elastic/elasticsearch') const client = new Client({ node: 'https://localhost:9200', auth: { apiKey: 'base64EncodedKey' } })
const { Client } = require('@elastic/elasticsearch') const client = new Client({ node: 'https://localhost:9200', auth: { apiKey: { id: 'foo', api_key: 'bar' } } })
Bearer authentication
editYou can provide your credentials by passing the bearer
token
parameter via the auth
option.
Useful for service account tokens.
Be aware that it does not handle automatic token refresh.
const { Client } = require('@elastic/elasticsearch') const client = new Client({ node: 'https://localhost:9200', auth: { bearer: 'token' } })
Basic authentication
editYou can provide your credentials by passing the username
and password
parameters via the auth
option.
If you provide both basic authentication credentials and the Api Key configuration, the Api Key will take precedence.
const { Client } = require('@elastic/elasticsearch') const client = new Client({ node: 'https://localhost:9200', auth: { username: 'elastic', password: 'changeme' } })
Otherwise, you can provide your credentials in the node(s) URL.
const { Client } = require('@elastic/elasticsearch') const client = new Client({ node: 'https://username:password@localhost:9200' })
Usage
editUsing the client is straightforward, it supports all the public APIs of Elasticsearch, and every method exposes the same signature.
const { Client } = require('@elastic/elasticsearch') const client = new Client({ cloud: { id: '<cloud-id>' }, auth: { apiKey: 'base64EncodedKey' } }) const result = await client.search({ index: 'my-index', query: { match: { hello: 'world' } } })
The returned value of every API call is the response body from Elasticsearch.
If you need to access additonal metadata, such as the status code or headers,
you must specify meta: true
in the request options:
const { Client } = require('@elastic/elasticsearch') const client = new Client({ cloud: { id: '<cloud-id>' }, auth: { apiKey: 'base64EncodedKey' } }) const result = await client.search({ index: 'my-index', query: { match: { hello: 'world' } } }, { meta: true })
In this case, the result will be:
{ body: object | boolean statusCode: number headers: object warnings: string[], meta: object }
The body is a boolean value when you use HEAD
APIs.
Aborting a request
editIf needed, you can abort a running request by using the AbortController
standard.
If you abort a request, the request will fail with a
RequestAbortedError
.
const AbortController = require('node-abort-controller') const { Client } = require('@elastic/elasticsearch') const client = new Client({ cloud: { id: '<cloud-id>' }, auth: { apiKey: 'base64EncodedKey' } }) const abortController = new AbortController() setImmediate(() => abortController.abort()) const result = await client.search({ index: 'my-index', query: { match: { hello: 'world' } } }, { signal: abortController.signal })
Request specific options
editIf needed you can pass request specific options in a second object:
const result = await client.search({ index: 'my-index', body: { query: { match: { hello: 'world' } } } }, { ignore: [404], maxRetries: 3 })
The supported request specific options are:
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`number |
string` - Max request timeout for the request in milliseconds, it overrides the client default. |
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`string |
boolean` - Enables body compression for the request. |
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Using the Client in a Function-as-a-Service Environment
editThis section illustrates the best practices for leveraging the Elasticsearch client in a Function-as-a-Service (FaaS) environment. The most influential optimization is to initialize the client outside of the function, the global scope. This practice does not only improve performance but also enables background functionality as – for example – sniffing. The following examples provide a skeleton for the best practices.
GCP Cloud Functions
edit'use strict' const { Client } = require('@elastic/elasticsearch') const client = new Client({ // client initialisation }) exports.testFunction = async function (req, res) { // use the client }
AWS Lambda
edit'use strict' const { Client } = require('@elastic/elasticsearch') const client = new Client({ // client initialisation }) exports.handler = async function (event, context) { // use the client }
Azure Functions
edit'use strict' const { Client } = require('@elastic/elasticsearch') const client = new Client({ // client initialisation }) module.exports = async function (context, req) { // use the client }
Resources used to assess these recommendations:
Connecting through a proxy
editAdded in v7.10.0
If you need to pass through an http(s) proxy for connecting to Elasticsearch, the client
out of the box offers a handy configuration for helping you with it. Under the
hood, it uses the hpagent
module.
In versions 8.0+ of the client, the default Connection
type is set to UndiciConnection
, which does not support proxy configurations.
To use a proxy, you will need to use the HttpConnection
class from @elastic/transport
instead.
import { HttpConnection } from '@elastic/transport' const client = new Client({ node: 'http://localhost:9200', proxy: 'http://localhost:8080', Connection: HttpConnection, })
Basic authentication is supported as well:
const client = new Client({ node: 'http://localhost:9200', proxy: 'http:user:pwd@//localhost:8080', Connection: HttpConnection, })
If you are connecting through a non-http(s) proxy, such as a socks5
or pac
,
you can use the agent
option to configure it.
const SocksProxyAgent = require('socks-proxy-agent') const client = new Client({ node: 'http://localhost:9200', agent () { return new SocksProxyAgent('socks://127.0.0.1:1080') }, Connection: HttpConnection, })
Error handling
editThe client exposes a variety of error objects that you can use to enhance your
error handling. You can find all the error objects inside the errors
key in
the client.
const { errors } = require('@elastic/elasticsearch') console.log(errors)
You can find the errors exported by the client in the table below.
Error |
Description |
Properties |
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Every error inherits from this class, it is the basic error generated by the client. |
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Generated when a request exceeds the |
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Generated when an error occurs during the request, it can be a connection error or a malformed stream of data. |
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Generated if the user calls the |
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Given the configuration, the ConnectionPool was not able to find a usable Connection for this request. |
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Generated if the serialization fails. |
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Generated if the deserialization fails. |
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Generated if there is a malformed configuration or parameter. |
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Generated when in case of a |
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Keep-alive connections
editBy default, the client uses persistent, keep-alive connections to reduce the overhead of creating a new HTTP connection for each Elasticsearch request.
If you are using the default UndiciConnection
connection class, it maintains a pool of 256 connections with a keep-alive of 10 minutes.
If you are using the legacy HttpConnection
connection class, it maintains a pool of 256 connections with a keep-alive of 1 minute.
If you need to disable keep-alive connections, you can override the HTTP agent with your preferred HTTP agent options:
const client = new Client({ node: 'http://localhost:9200', // the function takes as parameter the option // object passed to the Connection constructor agent: (opts) => new CustomAgent() })
Or you can disable the HTTP agent entirely:
const client = new Client({ node: 'http://localhost:9200', // Disable agent and keep-alive agent: false })
Closing a client’s connections
editIf you would like to close all open connections being managed by an instance of the client, use the close()
function:
const client = new Client({ node: 'http://localhost:9200' }); client.close();
Automatic product check
editSince v7.14.0, the client performs a required product check before the first call. This pre-flight product check allows the client to establish the version of Elasticsearch that it is communicating with. The product check requires one additional HTTP request to be sent to the server as part of the request pipeline before the main API call is sent. In most cases, this will succeed during the very first API call that the client sends. Once the product check completes, no further product check HTTP requests are sent for subsequent API calls.