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Learning Elasticsearch

Learning Elasticsearch

By : Andhavarapu
4.3 (4)
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Learning Elasticsearch

Learning Elasticsearch

4.3 (4)
By: Andhavarapu

Overview of this book

Elasticsearch is a modern, fast, distributed, scalable, fault tolerant, and open source search and analytics engine. You can use Elasticsearch for small or large applications with billions of documents. It is built to scale horizontally and can handle both structured and unstructured data. Packed with easy-to- follow examples, this book will ensure you will have a firm understanding of the basics of Elasticsearch and know how to utilize its capabilities efficiently. You will install and set up Elasticsearch and Kibana, and handle documents using the Distributed Document Store. You will see how to query, search, and index your data, and perform aggregation-based analytics with ease. You will see how to use Kibana to explore and visualize your data. Further on, you will learn to handle document relationships, work with geospatial data, and much more, with this easy-to-follow guide. Finally, you will see how you can set up and scale your Elasticsearch clusters in production environments.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)
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10
Exploring Elastic Stack (Elastic Cloud, Security, Graph, and Alerting)

Elasticsearch server logs

The server logs should be the go-to place when you are trying to figure out why a node is not starting or why shards are not being allocated. The logs provide insight into what's wrong. Elasticsearch uses log4j to handle the logging. The logs are written to the following:

ES_HOME/logs/cluster_name.log

By default, the logs are rotated every day. If you look at the logs directory, you should find something like this:



In the preceding example, the cluster name is es-dev. The current logs are written to es-dev.log. If you want to change the default log level, you can do so using the cluster setting API as shown next. In the following command, we are changing the logging level for the root logger. Elasticsearch also supports changing the log level for a single module-like discovery:

PUT /_cluster/settings
{
"transient": {
"logger...
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