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- [role="xpack"]
- [[data-tiers]]
- === Data tiers
- Common data lifecycle management patterns revolve around transitioning indices
- through multiple collections of nodes with different hardware characteristics in order
- to fulfil evolving CRUD, search, and aggregation needs as indices age. The concept
- of a tiered hardware architecture is not new in {es}.
- <<index-lifecycle-management, Index Lifecycle Management>> is instrumental in
- implementing tiered architectures by automating the managemnt of indices according to
- performance, resiliency and data retention requirements.
- <<overview-index-lifecycle-management, Hot/warm/cold>> architectures are common
- for timeseries data such as logging and metrics.
- A data tier is a collection of nodes with the same role. Data tiers are an integrated
- solution offering better support for optimising cost and improving performance.
- Formalized data tiers in ES allow configuration of the lifecycle and location of data
- in a hot/warm/cold topology without requiring the use of custom node attributes.
- Each tier formalises specific characteristics and data behaviours.
- The node roles that can currently define data tiers are:
- * <<data-content-node, data_content>>
- * <<data-hot-node, data_hot>>
- * <<data-warm-node, data_warm>>
- * <<data-cold-node, data_cold>>
- The more generic <<data-node, data role>> is not a data tier role, but
- it is the default node role if no roles are configured. If a node has the
- <<data-node, data>> role we treat the node as if it has all of the tier
- roles assigned.
- [[content-tier]]
- ==== Content tier
- The content tier is made of one or more nodes that have the <<data-content-node, data_content>>
- role. A content tier is designed to store and search user created content. Non-timeseries data
- doesn't necessarily follow the hot-warm-cold path. The hardware profiles are quite different to
- the <<hot-tier, hot tier>>. User created content prioritises high CPU to support complex
- queries and aggregations in a timely manner, as opposed to the <<hot-tier, hot tier>> which
- prioritises high IO.
- The content data has very long data retention characteristics and from a resiliency perspective
- the indices in this tier should be configured to use one or more replicas.
- NOTE: new indices that are not part of <<data-streams, data streams>> will be automatically allocated to the
- <<content-tier>>
- [[hot-tier]]
- ==== Hot tier
- The hot tier is made of one or more nodes that have the <<data-hot-node, data_hot>> role.
- It is the {es} entry point for timeseries data. This tier needs to be fast both for reads
- and writes, requiring more hardware resources such as SSD drives. The hot tier is usually
- hosting the data from recent days. From a resiliency perspective the indices in this
- tier should be configured to use one or more replicas.
- NOTE: new indices that are part of a <<data-streams, data stream>> will be automatically allocated to the
- <<hot-tier>>
- [[warm-tier]]
- ==== Warm tier
- The warm tier is made of one or more nodes that have the <<data-warm-node, data_warm>> role.
- This tier is where data goes once it is not queried as frequently as in the <<hot-tier, hot tier>>.
- It is a medium-fast tier that still allows data updates. The warm tier is usually
- hosting the data from recent weeks. From a resiliency perspective the indices in this
- tier should be configured to use one or more replicas.
- [[cold-tier]]
- ==== Cold tier
- The cold tier is made of one or more nodes that have the <<data-cold-node, data_cold>> role.
- Once the data in the <<warm-tier, warm tier>> is not updated anymore it can transition to the
- cold tier. The cold tier is still a responsive query tier but as the data transitions into this
- tier it can be compressed, shrunken, or configured to have zero replicas and be backed by
- a <<ilm-searchable-snapshot, snapshot>>. The cold tier is usually hosting the data from recent
- months or years.
- [discrete]
- [[data-tier-allocation]]
- === Data tier index allocation
- When an index is created {es} will automatically allocate the index to the <<content-tier, Content tier>>
- if the index is not part of a <<data-streams, data stream>> or to the <<hot-tier, Hot tier>> if the index
- is part of a <<data-streams, data stream>>.
- {es} will configure the <<tier-preference-allocation-filter, `index.routing.allocation.include._tier_preference`>>
- to `data_content` or `data_hot` respectively.
- These heuristics can be overridden by specifying any <<shard-allocation-filtering, shard allocation filtering>>
- settings in the create index request or index template that matches the new index.
- Specifying any configuration, including `null`, for `index.routing.allocation.include._tier_preference` will
- also opt out of the automatic new index allocation to tiers.
- [discrete]
- [[data-tier-migration]]
- === Data tier index migration
- <<index-lifecycle-management, Index Lifecycle Management>> automates the transition of managed
- indices through the available data tiers using the `migrate` action which is injected
- in every phase, unless it's manually specified in the phase or an
- <<ilm-allocate-action, allocate action>> modifying the allocation rules is manually configured.
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