WARNING: Version 6.2 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.
Configuring Elasticsearch
editConfiguring Elasticsearch
editElasticsearch ships with good defaults and requires very little configuration. Most settings can be changed on a running cluster using the Cluster Update Settings API.
The configuration files should contain settings which are node-specific (such
as node.name
and paths), or settings which a node requires in order to be
able to join a cluster, such as cluster.name
and network.host
.
Config files location
editElasticsearch has three configuration files:
-
elasticsearch.yml
for configuring Elasticsearch -
jvm.options
for configuring Elasticsearch JVM settings -
log4j2.properties
for configuring Elasticsearch logging
These files are located in the config directory, whose default location depends
on whether or not the installation is from an archive distribution (tar.gz
or
zip
) or a package distribution (Debian or RPM packages).
For the archive distributions, the config directory location defaults to
$ES_HOME/config
. The location of the config directory can be changed via the
ES_PATH_CONF
environment variable as follows:
ES_PATH_CONF=/path/to/my/config ./bin/elasticsearch
Alternatively, you can export
the ES_PATH_CONF
environment variable via the
command line or via your shell profile.
For the package distributions, the config directory location defaults to
/etc/elasticsearch
. The location of the config directory can also be changed
via the ES_PATH_CONF
environment variable, but note that setting this in your
shell is not sufficient. Instead, this variable is sourced from
/etc/default/elasticsearch
(for the Debian package) and
/etc/sysconfig/elasticsearch
(for the RPM package). You will need to edit the
ES_PATH_CONF=/etc/elasticsearch
entry in one of these files accordingly to
change the config directory location.
Config file format
editThe configuration format is YAML. Here is an example of changing the path of the data and logs directories:
path: data: /var/lib/elasticsearch logs: /var/log/elasticsearch
Settings can also be flattened as follows:
path.data: /var/lib/elasticsearch path.logs: /var/log/elasticsearch
Environment variable substitution
editEnvironment variables referenced with the ${...}
notation within the
configuration file will be replaced with the value of the environment
variable, for instance:
node.name: ${HOSTNAME} network.host: ${ES_NETWORK_HOST}
Prompting for settings
editFor settings that you do not wish to store in the configuration file, you can
use the value ${prompt.text}
or ${prompt.secret}
and start Elasticsearch
in the foreground. ${prompt.secret}
has echoing disabled so that the value
entered will not be shown in your terminal; ${prompt.text}
will allow you to
see the value as you type it in. For example:
node: name: ${prompt.text}
When starting Elasticsearch, you will be prompted to enter the actual value like so:
Enter value for [node.name]:
Elasticsearch will not start if ${prompt.text}
or ${prompt.secret}
is used in the settings and the process is run as a service or in the background.