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HTTP
editHTTP
editThe http module allows to expose elasticsearch APIs over HTTP.
The http mechanism is completely asynchronous in nature, meaning that there is no blocking thread waiting for a response. The benefit of using asynchronous communication for HTTP is solving the C10k problem.
When possible, consider using HTTP keep alive when connecting for better performance and try to get your favorite client not to do HTTP chunking.
Settings
editThe following are the settings that can be configured for HTTP:
Setting | Description |
---|---|
|
A bind port range. Defaults to |
|
The port that HTTP clients should use when
communicating with this node. Useful when a cluster node is behind a
proxy or firewall and the |
|
The host address to bind the HTTP service to. Defaults to |
|
The host address to publish for HTTP clients to connect to. Defaults to |
|
Used to set the |
|
The max content of an HTTP request. Defaults to
|
|
The max length of an HTTP URL. Defaults
to |
|
The max size of allowed headers. Defaults to |
|
Support for compression when possible (with
Accept-Encoding). Defaults to |
|
Defines the compression level to use.
Defaults to |
|
Enable or disable cross-origin resource sharing,
i.e. whether a browser on another origin can do requests to
Elasticsearch. Defaults to |
|
Which origins to allow. Defaults to |
|
Browsers send a "preflight" OPTIONS-request to
determine CORS settings. |
|
Which methods to allow. Defaults to
|
|
Which headers to allow. Defaults to
|
|
Whether the |
|
Enables or disables the output of detailed error messages
and stack traces in response output. Note: When set to |
|
Enable or disable HTTP pipelining, defaults to |
|
The maximum number of events to be queued up in memory before a HTTP connection is closed, defaults to |
It also uses the common network settings.
Disable HTTP
editThe http module can be completely disabled and not started by setting
http.enabled
to false
. Elasticsearch nodes (and Java clients) communicate
internally using the transport interface, not HTTP. It
might make sense to disable the http
layer entirely on nodes which are not
meant to serve REST requests directly. For instance, you could disable HTTP on
data-only nodes if you also have
client nodes which are intended to serve all REST requests.
Be aware, however, that you will not be able to send any REST requests (eg to
retrieve node stats) directly to nodes which have HTTP disabled.