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Learning Elastic Stack 7.0

Learning Elastic Stack 7.0

By : Pranav Shukla, Sharath Kumar M N
3.8 (6)
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Learning Elastic Stack 7.0

Learning Elastic Stack 7.0

3.8 (6)
By: Pranav Shukla, Sharath Kumar M N

Overview of this book

The Elastic Stack is a powerful combination of tools that help in performing distributed search, analytics, logging, and visualization of data. Elastic Stack 7.0 encompasses new features and capabilities that will enable you to find unique insights into analytics using these techniques. This book will give you a fundamental understanding of what the stack is all about, and guide you in using it efficiently to build powerful real-time data processing applications. The first few sections of the book will help you understand how to set up the stack by installing tools and exploring their basic configurations. You’ll then get up to speed with using Elasticsearch for distributed search and analytics, Logstash for logging, and Kibana for data visualization. As you work through the book, you will discover the technique of creating custom plugins using Kibana and Beats. This is followed by coverage of the Elastic X-Pack, a useful extension for effective security and monitoring. You’ll also find helpful tips on how to use Elastic Cloud and deploy Elastic Stack in production environments. By the end of this book, you’ll be well-versed with fundamental Elastic Stack functionalities and the role of each component in the stack to solve different data processing problems.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
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1
Section 1: Introduction to Elastic Stack and Elasticsearch
4
Section 2: Analytics and Visualizing Data
10
Section 3: Elastic Stack Extensions
12
Section 4: Production and Server Infrastructure

The basics of text analysis

The analysis of text data is different from other types of data analysis, such as numbers, dates, and times. The analysis of numeric and date/time datatypes can be done in a very definitive way. For example, if you are looking for all records with a price greater than, or equal to, 50, the result is a simple yes or no for each record. Either the record in question qualifies or doesn't qualify for inclusion in the query's result. Similarly, when querying something by date or time, the criteria for searching through records is very clearly defined – a record either falls into the date/time range or it doesn't.

However, the analysis of text/string data can be different. Text data can be of a different nature, and it can be used for structured or unstructured analysis.

Some examples of structured types of string fields are as follows...

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