Book Image

ElasticSearch Cookbook

By : Alberto Paro
Book Image

ElasticSearch Cookbook

By: Alberto Paro

Overview of this book

ElasticSearch is one of the most promising NoSQL technologies available and is built to provide a scalable search solution with built-in support for near real-time search and multi-tenancy. This practical guide is a complete reference for using ElasticSearch and covers 360 degrees of the ElasticSearch ecosystem. We will get started by showing you how to choose the correct transport layer, communicate with the server, and create custom internal actions for boosting tailored needs. Starting with the basics of the ElasticSearch architecture and how to efficiently index, search, and execute analytics on it, you will learn how to extend ElasticSearch by scripting and monitoring its behaviour. Step-by-step, this book will help you to improve your ability to manage data in indexing with more tailored mappings, along with searching and executing analytics with facets. The topics explored in the book also cover how to integrate ElasticSearch with Python and Java applications. This comprehensive guide will allow you to master storing, searching, and analyzing data with ElasticSearch.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
ElasticSearch Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Creating a REST plugin


The previous recipe described how to set up an environment and the steps required to build a simple plugins. In this recipe, we will see how to create one of the most common ElasticSearch plugin, the REST one.

These kinds of plugins allow extending the standard REST calls with custom ones to easily improve the capabilities of ElasticSearch.

In this recipe we will see how to define a REST entry point and in the next one how to execute this action distributed in shards.

Getting ready

You need a working ElasticSearch node, a maven built tool, and an optional Java IDE. The code of this recipe is available in the chapter12/rest_plugin directory.

How to do it...

To create a REST entry point, we need to create the action and then register it in the plugin. We need to perform the following steps:

  1. We create a REST "simple" action (RestSimpleAction.java):

    …
    public class RestSimpleAction extends BaseRestHandler {
        @Inject
        public RestSimpleAction(Settings settings, Client client...