NOTE: You are looking at documentation for an older release. For the latest information, see the current release documentation.
Client Settings
editClient Settings
editThe client that you use to connect to S3 has a number of settings available.
The settings have the form s3.client.CLIENT_NAME.SETTING_NAME
. By default,
s3
repositories use a client named default
, but this can be modified using
the repository setting client
. For example:
PUT _snapshot/my_s3_repository { "type": "s3", "settings": { "bucket": "my_bucket", "client": "my_alternate_client" } }
Most client settings can be added to the elasticsearch.yml
configuration file
with the exception of the secure settings, which you add to the Elasticsearch keystore.
For more information about creating and updating the Elasticsearch keystore, see
Secure settings.
For example, before you start the node, run these commands to add AWS access key settings to the keystore:
bin/elasticsearch-keystore add s3.client.default.access_key bin/elasticsearch-keystore add s3.client.default.secret_key
All client secure settings of this plugin are
reloadable. After you
reload the settings, the internal s3
clients, used to transfer the snapshot
contents, will utilize the latest settings from the keystore. Any existing s3
repositories, as well as any newly created ones, will pick up the new values
stored in the keystore.
In-progress snapshot/restore tasks will not be preempted by a reload of the client’s secure settings. The task will complete using the client as it was built when the operation started.
The following list contains the available client settings. Those that must be
stored in the keystore are marked as "secure" and are reloadable; the other
settings belong in the elasticsearch.yml
file.
-
access_key
(Secure) -
An S3 access key. The
secret_key
setting must also be specified. -
secret_key
(Secure) -
An S3 secret key. The
access_key
setting must also be specified. -
session_token
-
An S3 session token. The
access_key
andsecret_key
settings must also be specified. (Secure) -
endpoint
-
The S3 service endpoint to connect to. This defaults to
s3.amazonaws.com
but the AWS documentation lists alternative S3 endpoints. If you are using an S3-compatible service then you should set this to the service’s endpoint. -
protocol
-
The protocol to use to connect to S3. Valid values are either
http
orhttps
. Defaults tohttps
. -
proxy.host
- The host name of a proxy to connect to S3 through.
-
proxy.port
- The port of a proxy to connect to S3 through.
-
proxy.username
(Secure) -
The username to connect to the
proxy.host
with. -
proxy.password
(Secure) -
The password to connect to the
proxy.host
with. -
read_timeout
-
The socket timeout for connecting to S3. The value should specify the unit.
For example, a value of
5s
specifies a 5 second timeout. The default value is 50 seconds. -
max_retries
-
The number of retries to use when an S3 request fails. The default value is
3
. -
use_throttle_retries
-
Whether retries should be throttled (i.e. should back off). Must be
true
orfalse
. Defaults totrue
.
S3-compatible services
editThere are a number of storage systems that provide an S3-compatible API, and
the repository-s3
plugin allows you to use these systems in place of AWS S3.
To do so, you should set the s3.client.CLIENT_NAME.endpoint
setting to the
system’s endpoint. This setting accepts IP addresses and hostnames and may
include a port. For example, the endpoint may be 172.17.0.2
or
172.17.0.2:9000
. You may also need to set s3.client.CLIENT_NAME.protocol
to
http
if the endpoint does not support HTTPS.
Minio is an example of a storage system that provides an
S3-compatible API. The repository-s3
plugin allows Elasticsearch to work with
Minio-backed repositories as well as repositories stored on AWS S3. Other
S3-compatible storage systems may also work with Elasticsearch, but these are not tested
or supported.