- Elasticsearch Guide: other versions:
- Getting Started
- Set up Elasticsearch
- Installing Elasticsearch
- Configuring Elasticsearch
- Important Elasticsearch configuration
- Important System Configuration
- Bootstrap Checks
- Heap size check
- File descriptor check
- Memory lock check
- Maximum number of threads check
- Maximum size virtual memory check
- Max file size check
- Maximum map count check
- Client JVM check
- Use serial collector check
- System call filter check
- OnError and OnOutOfMemoryError checks
- Early-access check
- G1GC check
- Stopping Elasticsearch
- Upgrade Elasticsearch
- Set up X-Pack
- Breaking changes
- Breaking changes in 6.0
- Aggregations changes
- Analysis changes
- Cat API changes
- Clients changes
- Cluster changes
- Document API changes
- Indices changes
- Ingest changes
- Java API changes
- Mapping changes
- Packaging changes
- Percolator changes
- Plugins changes
- Reindex changes
- REST changes
- Scripting changes
- Search and Query DSL changes
- Settings changes
- Stats and info changes
- Breaking changes in 6.1
- Breaking changes in 6.0
- X-Pack Breaking Changes
- API Conventions
- Document APIs
- Search APIs
- Aggregations
- Metrics Aggregations
- Avg Aggregation
- Cardinality Aggregation
- Extended Stats Aggregation
- Geo Bounds Aggregation
- Geo Centroid Aggregation
- Max Aggregation
- Min Aggregation
- Percentiles Aggregation
- Percentile Ranks Aggregation
- Scripted Metric Aggregation
- Stats Aggregation
- Sum Aggregation
- Top Hits Aggregation
- Value Count Aggregation
- Bucket Aggregations
- Adjacency Matrix Aggregation
- Children Aggregation
- Composite Aggregation
- Date Histogram Aggregation
- Date Range Aggregation
- Diversified Sampler Aggregation
- Filter Aggregation
- Filters Aggregation
- Geo Distance Aggregation
- GeoHash grid Aggregation
- Global Aggregation
- Histogram Aggregation
- IP Range Aggregation
- Missing Aggregation
- Nested Aggregation
- Range Aggregation
- Reverse nested Aggregation
- Sampler Aggregation
- Significant Terms Aggregation
- Significant Text Aggregation
- Terms Aggregation
- Pipeline Aggregations
- Avg Bucket Aggregation
- Derivative Aggregation
- Max Bucket Aggregation
- Min Bucket Aggregation
- Sum Bucket Aggregation
- Stats Bucket Aggregation
- Extended Stats Bucket Aggregation
- Percentiles Bucket Aggregation
- Moving Average Aggregation
- Cumulative Sum Aggregation
- Bucket Script Aggregation
- Bucket Selector Aggregation
- Bucket Sort Aggregation
- Serial Differencing Aggregation
- Matrix Aggregations
- Caching heavy aggregations
- Returning only aggregation results
- Aggregation Metadata
- Returning the type of the aggregation
- Metrics Aggregations
- Indices APIs
- Create Index
- Delete Index
- Get Index
- Indices Exists
- Open / Close Index API
- Shrink Index
- Split Index
- Rollover Index
- Put Mapping
- Get Mapping
- Get Field Mapping
- Types Exists
- Index Aliases
- Update Indices Settings
- Get Settings
- Analyze
- Index Templates
- Indices Stats
- Indices Segments
- Indices Recovery
- Indices Shard Stores
- Clear Cache
- Flush
- Refresh
- Force Merge
- cat APIs
- Cluster APIs
- Query DSL
- Mapping
- Analysis
- Anatomy of an analyzer
- Testing analyzers
- Analyzers
- Normalizers
- Tokenizers
- Token Filters
- Standard Token Filter
- ASCII Folding Token Filter
- Flatten Graph Token Filter
- Length Token Filter
- Lowercase Token Filter
- Uppercase Token Filter
- NGram Token Filter
- Edge NGram Token Filter
- Porter Stem Token Filter
- Shingle Token Filter
- Stop Token Filter
- Word Delimiter Token Filter
- Word Delimiter Graph Token Filter
- Stemmer Token Filter
- Stemmer Override Token Filter
- Keyword Marker Token Filter
- Keyword Repeat Token Filter
- KStem Token Filter
- Snowball Token Filter
- Phonetic Token Filter
- Synonym Token Filter
- Synonym Graph Token Filter
- Compound Word Token Filters
- Reverse Token Filter
- Elision Token Filter
- Truncate Token Filter
- Unique Token Filter
- Pattern Capture Token Filter
- Pattern Replace Token Filter
- Trim Token Filter
- Limit Token Count Token Filter
- Hunspell Token Filter
- Common Grams Token Filter
- Normalization Token Filter
- CJK Width Token Filter
- CJK Bigram Token Filter
- Delimited Payload Token Filter
- Keep Words Token Filter
- Keep Types Token Filter
- Classic Token Filter
- Apostrophe Token Filter
- Decimal Digit Token Filter
- Fingerprint Token Filter
- Minhash Token Filter
- Character Filters
- Modules
- Index Modules
- Ingest Node
- Pipeline Definition
- Ingest APIs
- Accessing Data in Pipelines
- Handling Failures in Pipelines
- Processors
- Append Processor
- Convert Processor
- Date Processor
- Date Index Name Processor
- Fail Processor
- Foreach Processor
- Grok Processor
- Gsub Processor
- Join Processor
- JSON Processor
- KV Processor
- Lowercase Processor
- Remove Processor
- Rename Processor
- Script Processor
- Set Processor
- Split Processor
- Sort Processor
- Trim Processor
- Uppercase Processor
- Dot Expander Processor
- URL Decode Processor
- Monitoring Elasticsearch
- X-Pack APIs
- Info API
- Explore API
- Machine Learning APIs
- Close Jobs
- Create Datafeeds
- Create Jobs
- Delete Datafeeds
- Delete Jobs
- Delete Model Snapshots
- Flush Jobs
- Forecast Jobs
- Get Buckets
- Get Overall Buckets
- Get Categories
- Get Datafeeds
- Get Datafeed Statistics
- Get Influencers
- Get Jobs
- Get Job Statistics
- Get Model Snapshots
- Get Records
- Open Jobs
- Post Data to Jobs
- Preview Datafeeds
- Revert Model Snapshots
- Start Datafeeds
- Stop Datafeeds
- Update Datafeeds
- Update Jobs
- Update Model Snapshots
- Security APIs
- Watcher APIs
- Migration APIs
- Deprecation Info APIs
- Definitions
- X-Pack Commands
- How To
- Testing
- Glossary of terms
- Release Notes
- 6.1.4 Release Notes
- 6.1.3 Release Notes
- 6.1.2 Release Notes
- 6.1.1 Release Notes
- 6.1.0 Release Notes
- 6.0.1 Release Notes
- 6.0.0 Release Notes
- 6.0.0-rc2 Release Notes
- 6.0.0-rc1 Release Notes
- 6.0.0-beta2 Release Notes
- 6.0.0-beta1 Release Notes
- 6.0.0-alpha2 Release Notes
- 6.0.0-alpha1 Release Notes
- 6.0.0-alpha1 Release Notes (Changes previously released in 5.x)
- X-Pack Release Notes
WARNING: Version 6.1 of Elasticsearch has passed its EOL date.
This documentation is no longer being maintained and may be removed. If you are running this version, we strongly advise you to upgrade. For the latest information, see the current release documentation.
Bootstrap Checks
editBootstrap Checks
editCollectively, we have a lot of experience with users suffering unexpected issues because they have not configured important settings. In previous versions of Elasticsearch, misconfiguration of some of these settings were logged as warnings. Understandably, users sometimes miss these log messages. To ensure that these settings receive the attention that they deserve, Elasticsearch has bootstrap checks upon startup.
These bootstrap checks inspect a variety of Elasticsearch and system settings and compare them to values that are safe for the operation of Elasticsearch. If Elasticsearch is in development mode, any bootstrap checks that fail appear as warnings in the Elasticsearch log. If Elasticsearch is in production mode, any bootstrap checks that fail will cause Elasticsearch to refuse to start.
There are some bootstrap checks that are always enforced to prevent Elasticsearch from running with incompatible settings. These checks are documented individually.
Development vs. production mode
editBy default, Elasticsearch binds to loopback addresses for HTTP and transport (internal) communication. This is fine for downloading and playing with Elasticsearch as well as everyday development, but it’s useless for production systems. To join a cluster, an Elasticsearch node must be reachable via transport communication. To join a cluster via a non-loopback address, a node must bind transport to a non-loopback address and not be using single-node discovery. Thus, we consider an Elasticsearch node to be in development mode if it can not form a cluster with another machine via a non-loopback address, and is otherwise in production mode if it can join a cluster via non-loopback addresses.
Note that HTTP and transport can be configured independently via
http.host
and transport.host
; this
can be useful for configuring a single node to be reachable via HTTP for testing
purposes without triggering production mode.
Single-node discovery
editWe recognize that some users need to bind transport to an external interface for
testing their usage of the transport client. For this situation, we provide the
discovery type single-node
(configure it by setting discovery.type
to
single-node
); in this situation, a node will elect itself master and will not
join a cluster with any other node.
Forcing the bootstrap checks
editIf you are running a single node in production, it is possible to evade the
bootstrap checks (either by not binding transport to an external interface, or
by binding transport to an external interface and setting the discovery type to
single-node
). For this situation, you can force execution of the bootstrap
checks by setting the system property es.enforce.bootstrap.checks
to true
(set this in Setting JVM options, or by adding -Des.enforce.bootstrap.checks=true
to the environment variable ES_JAVA_OPTS
). We strongly encourage you to do
this if you are in this specific situation. This system property can be used to
force execution of the bootstrap checks independent of the node configuration.