Skip to content

kdelemme/elasticsearch

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Elasticsearch

Elasticsearch is a distributed, RESTful search engine optimized for speed and relevance on production-scale workloads. You can use Elasticsearch to perform real-time search over massive datasets for applications including:

  • Vector search

  • Full-text search

  • Logs

  • Metrics

  • Application performance monitoring (APM)

  • Security logs

... and more!

To learn more about Elasticsearch’s features and capabilities, see our product page.

Get started

The simplest way to set up Elasticsearch is to create a managed deployment with Elasticsearch Service on Elastic Cloud.

If you prefer to install and manage Elasticsearch yourself, you can download the latest version from elastic.co/downloads/elasticsearch.

Run Elasticsearch locally

To try out Elasticsearch on your own machine, we recommend using Docker and running both Elasticsearch and Kibana. Docker images are available from the Elastic Docker registry.

Note
Starting in Elasticsearch 8.0, security is enabled by default. The first time you start Elasticsearch, TLS encryption is configured automatically, a password is generated for the elastic user, and a Kibana enrollment token is created so you can connect Kibana to your secured cluster.

For other installation options, see the Elasticsearch installation documentation.

Start Elasticsearch

  1. Install and start Docker Desktop. Go to Preferences > Resources > Advanced and set Memory to at least 4GB.

  2. Start an Elasticsearch container:

    docker network create elastic
    docker pull docker.elastic.co/elasticsearch/elasticsearch:{version} (1)
    docker run --name elasticsearch --net elastic -p 9200:9200 -p 9300:9300 -e "discovery.type=single-node" -t docker.elastic.co/elasticsearch/elasticsearch:{version}
    1. Replace {version} with the version of Elasticsearch you want to run.

      When you start Elasticsearch for the first time, the generated elastic user password and Kibana enrollment token are output to the terminal.

      Note
      You might need to scroll back a bit in the terminal to view the password and enrollment token.
  3. Copy the generated password and enrollment token and save them in a secure location. These values are shown only when you start Elasticsearch for the first time. You’ll use these to enroll Kibana with your Elasticsearch cluster and log in.

Start Kibana

Kibana enables you to easily send requests to Elasticsearch and analyze, visualize, and manage data interactively.

  1. In a new terminal session, start Kibana and connect it to your Elasticsearch container:

    docker pull docker.elastic.co/kibana/kibana:{version} (1)
    docker run --name kibana --net elastic -p 5601:5601 docker.elastic.co/kibana/kibana:{version}
    1. Replace {version} with the version of Kibana you want to run.

      When you start Kibana, a unique URL is output to your terminal.

  2. To access Kibana, open the generated URL in your browser.

    1. Paste the enrollment token that you copied when starting Elasticsearch and click the button to connect your Kibana instance with Elasticsearch.

    2. Log in to Kibana as the elastic user with the password that was generated when you started Elasticsearch.

Send requests to Elasticsearch

You send data and other requests to Elasticsearch through REST APIs. You can interact with Elasticsearch using any client that sends HTTP requests, such as the Elasticsearch language clients and curl. Kibana’s developer console provides an easy way to experiment and test requests. To access the console, go to Management > Dev Tools.

Add data

You index data into Elasticsearch by sending JSON objects (documents) through the REST APIs. Whether you have structured or unstructured text, numerical data, or geospatial data, Elasticsearch efficiently stores and indexes it in a way that supports fast searches.

For timestamped data such as logs and metrics, you typically add documents to a data stream made up of multiple auto-generated backing indices.

To add a single document to an index, submit an HTTP post request that targets the index.

POST /customer/_doc/1
{
  "firstname": "Jennifer",
  "lastname": "Walters"
}

This request automatically creates the customer index if it doesn’t exist, adds a new document that has an ID of 1, and stores and indexes the firstname and lastname fields.

The new document is available immediately from any node in the cluster. You can retrieve it with a GET request that specifies its document ID:

GET /customer/_doc/1

To add multiple documents in one request, use the _bulk API. Bulk data must be newline-delimited JSON (NDJSON). Each line must end in a newline character (\n), including the last line.

PUT customer/_bulk
{ "create": { } }
{ "firstname": "Monica","lastname":"Rambeau"}
{ "create": { } }
{ "firstname": "Carol","lastname":"Danvers"}
{ "create": { } }
{ "firstname": "Wanda","lastname":"Maximoff"}
{ "create": { } }
{ "firstname": "Jennifer","lastname":"Takeda"}

Search

Indexed documents are available for search in near real-time. The following search matches all customers with a first name of Jennifer in the customer index.

GET customer/_search
{
  "query" : {
    "match" : { "firstname": "Jennifer" }
  }
}

Explore

You can use Discover in Kibana to interactively search and filter your data. From there, you can start creating visualizations and building and sharing dashboards.

To get started, create a data view that connects to one or more Elasticsearch indices, data streams, or index aliases.

  1. Go to Management > Stack Management > Kibana > Data Views.

  2. Select Create data view.

  3. Enter a name for the data view and a pattern that matches one or more indices, such as customer.

  4. Select Save data view to Kibana.

To start exploring, go to Analytics > Discover.

Upgrade

To upgrade from an earlier version of Elasticsearch, see the Elasticsearch upgrade documentation.

Build from source

Elasticsearch uses Gradle for its build system.

To build a distribution for your local OS and print its output location upon completion, run:

./gradlew localDistro

To build a distribution for another platform, run the related command:

./gradlew :distribution:archives:linux-tar:assemble
./gradlew :distribution:archives:darwin-tar:assemble
./gradlew :distribution:archives:windows-zip:assemble

To build distributions for all supported platforms, run:

./gradlew assemble

Distributions are output to distribution/archives.

To run the test suite, see TESTING.

Documentation

For the complete Elasticsearch documentation visit elastic.co.

For information about our documentation processes, see the docs README.

Contribute

For contribution guidelines, see CONTRIBUTING.

Questions? Problems? Suggestions?

  • To report a bug or request a feature, create a GitHub Issue. Please ensure someone else hasn’t created an issue for the same topic.

  • Need help using Elasticsearch? Reach out on the Elastic Forum or Slack. A fellow community member or Elastic engineer will be happy to help you out.

About

Free and Open, Distributed, RESTful Search Engine

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Java 99.7%
  • Groovy 0.3%
  • Shell 0.0%
  • ANTLR 0.0%
  • Python 0.0%
  • Dockerfile 0.0%