Book Image

Elasticsearch Server - Third Edition

By : Rafal Kuc
Book Image

Elasticsearch Server - Third Edition

By: Rafal Kuc

Overview of this book

ElasticSearch is a very fast and scalable open source search engine, designed with distribution and cloud in mind, complete with all the goodies that Apache Lucene has to offer. ElasticSearch’s schema-free architecture allows developers to index and search unstructured content, making it perfectly suited for both small projects and large big data warehouses, even those with petabytes of unstructured data. This book will guide you through the world of the most commonly used ElasticSearch server functionalities. You’ll start off by getting an understanding of the basics of ElasticSearch and its data indexing functionality. Next, you will see the querying capabilities of ElasticSearch, followed by a through explanation of scoring and search relevance. After this, you will explore the aggregation and data analysis capabilities of ElasticSearch and will learn how cluster administration and scaling can be used to boost your application performance. You’ll find out how to use the friendly REST APIs and how to tune ElasticSearch to make the most of it. By the end of this book, you will have be able to create amazing search solutions as per your project’s specifications.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Elasticsearch Server Third Edition
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

The update settings API


Elasticsearch lets us tune itself by specifying the various parameters in the elasticsearch.yml file. But you should treat this file as the set of default values that can be changed in the runtime using the Elasticsearch REST API. We can change both the per index setting and the cluster wide settings. However, you should remember that not all properties can be dynamically changed. If you try to alter these parameters, Elasticsearch will respond with a proper error.

The cluster settings API

In order to set one of the cluster properties, we need to use the HTTP PUT method and send a proper request to the _cluster/settings URI. However, we have two options: adding the changes as transient or permanent.

The first one, transient, will set the property only until the first restart. In order to do this, we send the following command:

curl -XPUT 'localhost:9200/_cluster/settings' -d '{
  "transient" : {
    "PROPERTY_NAME" : "PROPERTY_VALUE"
  }
}'

As you can see, in the preceding...