| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229230231232233234235236237238239240241242243244245246247248249250251252253254255256257258259260261262263264265266267268269270271272273274275276277278279280281282283284285286287288289290291292293294295296297298299300301302303304305306307308309310311312313314315316317318319320321322323324325326327328329 | [[modules-node]]== NodeAny time that you start an instance of Elasticsearch, you are starting a_node_. A collection of connected nodes is  called a<<modules-cluster,cluster>>. If you are running a single node of Elasticsearch,then you have a cluster of one node.Every node in the cluster can handle <<modules-http,HTTP>> and<<modules-transport,Transport>> traffic by default. The transport layeris used exclusively for communication between nodes and the{javaclient}/transport-client.html[Java `TransportClient`]; the HTTP layer isused only by external REST clients.All nodes know about all the other nodes in the cluster and can forward clientrequests to the appropriate node. Besides that, each node serves one or morepurpose:<<master-node,Master-eligible node>>::A node that has `node.master` set to `true` (default), which makes it eligibleto be <<modules-discovery-zen,elected as the _master_ node>>, which controlsthe cluster.<<data-node,Data node>>::A node that has `node.data` set to `true` (default). Data nodes hold data andperform data related operations such as CRUD, search, and aggregations.<<ingest,Ingest node>>::A node that has `node.ingest` set to `true` (default). Ingest nodes are ableto apply an <<pipeline,ingest pipeline>> to a document in order to transformand enrich the document before indexing. With a heavy ingest load, it makessense to use dedicated ingest nodes and to mark the master and data nodes as`node.ingest: false`.<<modules-tribe,Tribe node>>::A tribe node, configured via the `tribe.*` settings, is a special type  ofcoordinating only node that can connect to multiple clusters and performsearch and other operations across all connected clusters.By default a node is a master-eligible node and a data node, plus it canpre-process documents through ingest pipelines. This is very convenient forsmall clusters but, as the cluster grows, it becomes important to considerseparating dedicated master-eligible nodes from dedicated data nodes.[NOTE][[coordinating-node]].Coordinating node===============================================Requests like search requests or bulk-indexing requests may involve data heldon different data nodes. A search request, for example, is executed in twophases which are coordinated by the node which receives the client request --the _coordinating node_.In the _scatter_ phase, the coordinating node forwards the request to the datanodes which hold the data.  Each data node executes the request locally andreturns its results to the coordinating node. In the _gather_  phase, thecoordinating node reduces each data node's results into a single globalresultset.Every node is implicitly a coordinating node. This means that a node that hasall three `node.master`, `node.data` and `node.ingest` set to `false` willonly act as a coordinating node, which cannot be disabled. As a result, sucha node needs to have enough memory and CPU in order to deal with the gatherphase.===============================================[float][[master-node]]=== Master Eligible NodeThe master node is responsible for lightweight cluster-wide actions such ascreating or deleting an index, tracking which nodes are part of the cluster,and deciding which shards to allocate to which nodes. It is important forcluster health to have a stable master node.Any master-eligible node (all nodes by default) may be elected to become themaster node by the <<modules-discovery-zen,master election process>>.IMPORTANT: Master nodes must have access to the `data/` directory (just like`data` nodes) as this is where the cluster state is persisted between node restarts.Indexing and searching your data is CPU-, memory-, and I/O-intensive workwhich can put pressure on a node's resources. To ensure that your masternode is stable and not under pressure, it is a good idea in a biggercluster to split the roles between dedicated master-eligible nodes anddedicated data nodes.While master nodes can also behave as <<coordinating-node,coordinating nodes>>and route search and indexing requests from clients to data nodes, it isbetter _not_ to use dedicated master nodes for this purpose. It is importantfor the stability of the cluster that master-eligible nodes do as little workas possible.To create a dedicated master-eligible node, set:[source,yaml]-------------------node.master: true <1>node.data: false <2>node.ingest: false <3>-------------------<1> The `node.master` role is enabled by default.<2> Disable the `node.data` role (enabled by default).<3> Disable the `node.ingest` role (enabled by default).ifdef::include-xpack[]NOTE: These settings apply only when {xpack} is not installed. To create adedicated master-eligible node when {xpack} is installed, see <<modules-node-xpack,{xpack} node settings>>.endif::include-xpack[][float][[split-brain]]==== Avoiding split brain with `minimum_master_nodes`To prevent data loss, it is vital to configure the`discovery.zen.minimum_master_nodes` setting (which defaults to `1`) so thateach master-eligible node knows the _minimum number of master-eligible nodes_that must be visible in order to form a cluster.To explain, imagine that you have a cluster consisting of two master-eligiblenodes. A network failure breaks communication between these two nodes.  Eachnode sees one master-eligible node... itself. With `minimum_master_nodes` setto the default of `1`,  this is sufficient to form a cluster. Each node electsitself as the new master (thinking that the other master-eligible node hasdied) and the result is two clusters, or a _split brain_.  These two nodeswill never rejoin until one node is restarted.  Any data that has been writtento the restarted node will be lost.Now imagine that you have a cluster with three master-eligible nodes, and`minimum_master_nodes` set to `2`.  If a network split separates one node fromthe other two nodes, the side with one node cannot see enough master-eligiblenodes and will realise that it cannot elect itself as master.  The side withtwo nodes will elect a new master (if needed) and continue functioningcorrectly.  As soon as the network split is resolved, the single node willrejoin the cluster and start serving requests again.This setting should be set to a _quorum_ of master-eligible nodes:  (master_eligible_nodes / 2) + 1In other words, if there are three master-eligible nodes, then minimum masternodes should be set to `(3 / 2) + 1` or `2`:[source,yaml]----------------------------discovery.zen.minimum_master_nodes: 2 <1>----------------------------<1> Defaults to `1`.This setting can also be changed dynamically on a live cluster with the<<cluster-update-settings,cluster update settings API>>:[source,js]----------------------------PUT _cluster/settings{  "transient": {    "discovery.zen.minimum_master_nodes": 2  }}----------------------------// CONSOLE// TEST[catch:/cannot set discovery.zen.minimum_master_nodes to more than the current master nodes/]TIP: An advantage of splitting the master and data roles between dedicatednodes is that you can have just three master-eligible nodes and set`minimum_master_nodes` to `2`. You never have to change this setting, nomatter how many dedicated data nodes you add to the cluster.[float][[data-node]]=== Data NodeData nodes hold the shards that contain the documents you have indexed. Datanodes handle data related operations like CRUD, search, and aggregations.These operations are I/O-, memory-, and CPU-intensive. It is important tomonitor these resources and to add more data nodes if they are overloaded.The main benefit of having dedicated data nodes is the separation of themaster and data roles.To create a dedicated data node, set:[source,yaml]-------------------node.master: false <1>node.data: true <2>node.ingest: false <3>-------------------<1> Disable the `node.master` role (enabled by default).<2> The `node.data` role is enabled by default.<3> Disable the `node.ingest` role (enabled by default).ifdef::include-xpack[]NOTE: These settings apply only when {xpack} is not installed. To create adedicated data node when {xpack} is installed, see <<modules-node-xpack,{xpack} node settings>>.endif::include-xpack[][float][[node-ingest-node]]=== Ingest NodeIngest nodes can execute pre-processing pipelines, composed of one or moreingest processors. Depending on the type of operations performed by the ingestprocessors and the required resources, it may make sense to have dedicatedingest nodes, that will only perform this specific task.To create a dedicated ingest node, set:[source,yaml]-------------------node.master: false <1>node.data: false <2>node.ingest: true <3>search.remote.connect: false <4>-------------------<1> Disable the `node.master` role (enabled by default).<2> Disable the `node.data` role (enabled by default).<3> The `node.ingest` role is enabled by default.<4> Disable cross-cluster search (enabled by default).ifdef::include-xpack[]NOTE: These settings apply only when {xpack} is not installed. To create adedicated ingest node when {xpack} is installed, see <<modules-node-xpack,{xpack} node settings>>.endif::include-xpack[][float][[coordinating-only-node]]=== Coordinating only nodeIf you take away the ability to be able to handle master duties, to hold data,and pre-process documents, then you are left with a _coordinating_ node thatcan only route requests, handle the search reduce phase, and distribute bulkindexing. Essentially, coordinating only nodes behave as smart load balancers.Coordinating only nodes can benefit large clusters by offloading thecoordinating node role from data and master-eligible nodes.  They join thecluster and receive the full <<cluster-state,cluster state>>, like every othernode, and they use the cluster state to route requests directly to theappropriate place(s).WARNING: Adding too many coordinating only nodes to a cluster can increase theburden on the entire cluster because the elected master node must awaitacknowledgement of cluster state updates from every node! The benefit ofcoordinating only nodes should not be overstated -- data nodes can happilyserve the same purpose.To create a dedicated coordinating node, set:[source,yaml]-------------------node.master: false <1>node.data: false <2>node.ingest: false <3>search.remote.connect: false <4>-------------------<1> Disable the `node.master` role (enabled by default).<2> Disable the `node.data` role (enabled by default).<3> Disable the `node.ingest` role (enabled by default).<4> Disable cross-cluster search (enabled by default).ifdef::include-xpack[]NOTE: These settings apply only when {xpack} is not installed. To create adedicated coordinating node when {xpack} is installed, see <<modules-node-xpack,{xpack} node settings>>.endif::include-xpack[][float]== Node data path settings[float][[data-path]]=== `path.data`Every data and master-eligible node requires access to a data directory whereshards and index and cluster metadata will be stored. The `path.data` defaultsto `$ES_HOME/data` but can be configured in the `elasticsearch.yml` configfile an absolute path or a path relative to `$ES_HOME` as follows:[source,yaml]-----------------------path.data:  /var/elasticsearch/data-----------------------Like all node settings, it can also be specified on the command line as:[source,sh]-----------------------./bin/elasticsearch -Epath.data=/var/elasticsearch/data-----------------------TIP: When using the `.zip` or `.tar.gz` distributions, the `path.data` settingshould be configured to locate the data directory outside the Elasticsearchhome directory, so that the home directory can be deleted without deletingyour data! The RPM and Debian distributions do this for you already.[float][[max-local-storage-nodes]]=== `node.max_local_storage_nodes`The <<data-path,data path>> can be shared by multiple nodes, even by nodes from differentclusters. This is very useful for testing failover and different configurations on your developmentmachine. In production, however, it is recommended to run only one node of Elasticsearch per server.By default, Elasticsearch is configured to prevent more than one node from sharing the same datapath. To allow for more than one node (e.g., on your development machine), use the setting`node.max_local_storage_nodes` and set this to a positive integer larger than one.WARNING: Never run different node types (i.e. master, data) from the same data directory. This canlead to unexpected data loss.[float]== Other node settingsMore node settings can be found in <<modules,Modules>>.  Of particular note arethe <<cluster.name,`cluster.name`>>, the <<node.name,`node.name`>> and the<<modules-network,network settings>>.ifdef::include-xpack[]include::{xes-repo-dir}/node.asciidoc[]endif::include-xpack[]
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