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Elasticsearch 8.x Cookbook

Elasticsearch 8.x Cookbook

By : Alberto Paro
4 (6)
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Elasticsearch 8.x Cookbook

Elasticsearch 8.x Cookbook

4 (6)
By: Alberto Paro

Overview of this book

Elasticsearch is a Lucene-based distributed search engine at the heart of the Elastic Stack that allows you to index and search unstructured content with petabytes of data. With this updated fifth edition, you'll cover comprehensive recipes relating to what's new in Elasticsearch 8.x and see how to create and run complex queries and analytics. The recipes will guide you through performing index mapping, aggregation, working with queries, and scripting using Elasticsearch. You'll focus on numerous solutions and quick techniques for performing both common and uncommon tasks such as deploying Elasticsearch nodes, using the ingest module, working with X-Pack, and creating different visualizations. As you advance, you'll learn how to manage various clusters, restore data, and install Kibana to monitor a cluster and extend it using a variety of plugins. Furthermore, you'll understand how to integrate your Java, Scala, Python, and big data applications such as Apache Spark and Pig with Elasticsearch and create efficient data applications powered by enhanced functionalities and custom plugins. By the end of this Elasticsearch cookbook, you'll have gained in-depth knowledge of implementing the Elasticsearch architecture and be able to manage, search, and store data efficiently and effectively using Elasticsearch.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
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Installing plugins in Elasticsearch

One of the main features of Elasticsearch is the possibility to extend it with plugins. Plugins extend Elasticsearch features and functionalities in several ways.

In Elasticsearch, these are native plugins. These are JAR files that contain application code, and are used for the following reasons:

  • Script engines
  • Custom analyzers, tokenizers, and scoring
  • Custom mapping
  • REST entry points
  • Ingestion pipeline stages
  • Supporting new storage (Hadoop and Google Cloud Platform (GCP) Cloud Storage)
  • Extending X-Pack (that is, with a custom authorization provider)

Getting ready

You need a working Elasticsearch installation, as we described in the Downloading and installing Elasticsearch recipe, as well as a prompt/shell to execute commands in the Elasticsearch install directory.

How to do it…

Elasticsearch provides a script for automatic downloads and for the installation of plugins in bin/directory called...

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