cluster.asciidoc 9.0 KB

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  1. [[modules-cluster]]
  2. == Cluster
  3. [float]
  4. [[shards-allocation]]
  5. === Shards Allocation
  6. Shards allocation is the process of allocating shards to nodes. This can
  7. happen during initial recovery, replica allocation, rebalancing, or
  8. handling nodes being added or removed.
  9. The following settings may be used:
  10. `cluster.routing.allocation.allow_rebalance`::
  11. Allow to control when rebalancing will happen based on the total
  12. state of all the indices shards in the cluster. `always`,
  13. `indices_primaries_active`, and `indices_all_active` are allowed,
  14. defaulting to `indices_all_active` to reduce chatter during
  15. initial recovery.
  16. `cluster.routing.allocation.cluster_concurrent_rebalance`::
  17. Allow to control how many concurrent rebalancing of shards are
  18. allowed cluster wide, and default it to `2`.
  19. `cluster.routing.allocation.node_initial_primaries_recoveries`::
  20. Allow to control specifically the number of initial recoveries
  21. of primaries that are allowed per node. Since most times local
  22. gateway is used, those should be fast and we can handle more of
  23. those per node without creating load.
  24. `cluster.routing.allocation.node_concurrent_recoveries`::
  25. How many concurrent recoveries are allowed to happen on a node.
  26. Defaults to `2`.
  27. `cluster.routing.allocation.enable`::
  28. Controls shard allocation for all indices, by allowing specific
  29. kinds of shard to be allocated.
  30. Can be set to:
  31. * `all` (default) - Allows shard allocation for all kinds of shards.
  32. * `primaries` - Allows shard allocation only for primary shards.
  33. * `new_primaries` - Allows shard allocation only for primary shards for new indices.
  34. * `none` - No shard allocations of any kind are allowed for all indices.
  35. `cluster.routing.allocation.same_shard.host`::
  36. Allows to perform a check to prevent allocation of multiple instances
  37. of the same shard on a single host, based on host name and host address.
  38. Defaults to `false`, meaning that no check is performed by default. This
  39. setting only applies if multiple nodes are started on the same machine.
  40. `indices.recovery.concurrent_streams`::
  41. The number of streams to open (on a *node* level) to recover a
  42. shard from a peer shard. Defaults to `3`.
  43. [float]
  44. [[allocation-awareness]]
  45. === Shard Allocation Awareness
  46. Cluster allocation awareness allows to configure shard and replicas
  47. allocation across generic attributes associated the nodes. Lets explain
  48. it through an example:
  49. Assume we have several racks. When we start a node, we can configure an
  50. attribute called `rack_id` (any attribute name works), for example, here
  51. is a sample config:
  52. ----------------------
  53. node.rack_id: rack_one
  54. ----------------------
  55. The above sets an attribute called `rack_id` for the relevant node with
  56. a value of `rack_one`. Now, we need to configure the `rack_id` attribute
  57. as one of the awareness allocation attributes (set it on *all* (master
  58. eligible) nodes config):
  59. --------------------------------------------------------
  60. cluster.routing.allocation.awareness.attributes: rack_id
  61. --------------------------------------------------------
  62. The above will mean that the `rack_id` attribute will be used to do
  63. awareness based allocation of shard and its replicas. For example, lets
  64. say we start 2 nodes with `node.rack_id` set to `rack_one`, and deploy a
  65. single index with 5 shards and 1 replica. The index will be fully
  66. deployed on the current nodes (5 shards and 1 replica each, total of 10
  67. shards).
  68. Now, if we start two more nodes, with `node.rack_id` set to `rack_two`,
  69. shards will relocate to even the number of shards across the nodes, but,
  70. a shard and its replica will not be allocated in the same `rack_id`
  71. value.
  72. The awareness attributes can hold several values, for example:
  73. -------------------------------------------------------------
  74. cluster.routing.allocation.awareness.attributes: rack_id,zone
  75. -------------------------------------------------------------
  76. *NOTE*: When using awareness attributes, shards will not be allocated to
  77. nodes that don't have values set for those attributes.
  78. [float]
  79. [[forced-awareness]]
  80. === Forced Awareness
  81. Sometimes, we know in advance the number of values an awareness
  82. attribute can have, and more over, we would like never to have more
  83. replicas than needed allocated on a specific group of nodes with the
  84. same awareness attribute value. For that, we can force awareness on
  85. specific attributes.
  86. For example, lets say we have an awareness attribute called `zone`, and
  87. we know we are going to have two zones, `zone1` and `zone2`. Here is how
  88. we can force awareness on a node:
  89. [source,js]
  90. -------------------------------------------------------------------
  91. cluster.routing.allocation.awareness.force.zone.values: zone1,zone2
  92. cluster.routing.allocation.awareness.attributes: zone
  93. -------------------------------------------------------------------
  94. Now, lets say we start 2 nodes with `node.zone` set to `zone1` and
  95. create an index with 5 shards and 1 replica. The index will be created,
  96. but only 5 shards will be allocated (with no replicas). Only when we
  97. start more shards with `node.zone` set to `zone2` will the replicas be
  98. allocated.
  99. [float]
  100. ==== Automatic Preference When Searching / GETing
  101. When executing a search, or doing a get, the node receiving the request
  102. will prefer to execute the request on shards that exists on nodes that
  103. have the same attribute values as the executing node.
  104. [float]
  105. ==== Realtime Settings Update
  106. The settings can be updated using the <<cluster-update-settings,cluster update settings API>> on a live cluster.
  107. [float]
  108. [[allocation-filtering]]
  109. === Shard Allocation Filtering
  110. Allow to control allocation of indices on nodes based on include/exclude
  111. filters. The filters can be set both on the index level and on the
  112. cluster level. Lets start with an example of setting it on the cluster
  113. level:
  114. Lets say we have 4 nodes, each has specific attribute called `tag`
  115. associated with it (the name of the attribute can be any name). Each
  116. node has a specific value associated with `tag`. Node 1 has a setting
  117. `node.tag: value1`, Node 2 a setting of `node.tag: value2`, and so on.
  118. We can create an index that will only deploy on nodes that have `tag`
  119. set to `value1` and `value2` by setting
  120. `index.routing.allocation.include.tag` to `value1,value2`. For example:
  121. [source,js]
  122. --------------------------------------------------
  123. curl -XPUT localhost:9200/test/_settings -d '{
  124. "index.routing.allocation.include.tag" : "value1,value2"
  125. }'
  126. --------------------------------------------------
  127. On the other hand, we can create an index that will be deployed on all
  128. nodes except for nodes with a `tag` of value `value3` by setting
  129. `index.routing.allocation.exclude.tag` to `value3`. For example:
  130. [source,js]
  131. --------------------------------------------------
  132. curl -XPUT localhost:9200/test/_settings -d '{
  133. "index.routing.allocation.exclude.tag" : "value3"
  134. }'
  135. --------------------------------------------------
  136. `index.routing.allocation.require.*` can be used to
  137. specify a number of rules, all of which MUST match in order for a shard
  138. to be allocated to a node. This is in contrast to `include` which will
  139. include a node if ANY rule matches.
  140. The `include`, `exclude` and `require` values can have generic simple
  141. matching wildcards, for example, `value1*`. A special attribute name
  142. called `_ip` can be used to match on node ip values. In addition `_host`
  143. attribute can be used to match on either the node's hostname or its ip
  144. address. Similarly `_name` and `_id` attributes can be used to match on
  145. node name and node id accordingly.
  146. Obviously a node can have several attributes associated with it, and
  147. both the attribute name and value are controlled in the setting. For
  148. example, here is a sample of several node configurations:
  149. [source,js]
  150. --------------------------------------------------
  151. node.group1: group1_value1
  152. node.group2: group2_value4
  153. --------------------------------------------------
  154. In the same manner, `include`, `exclude` and `require` can work against
  155. several attributes, for example:
  156. [source,js]
  157. --------------------------------------------------
  158. curl -XPUT localhost:9200/test/_settings -d '{
  159. "index.routing.allocation.include.group1" : "xxx"
  160. "index.routing.allocation.include.group2" : "yyy",
  161. "index.routing.allocation.exclude.group3" : "zzz",
  162. "index.routing.allocation.require.group4" : "aaa"
  163. }'
  164. --------------------------------------------------
  165. The provided settings can also be updated in real time using the update
  166. settings API, allowing to "move" indices (shards) around in realtime.
  167. Cluster wide filtering can also be defined, and be updated in real time
  168. using the cluster update settings API. This setting can come in handy
  169. for things like decommissioning nodes (even if the replica count is set
  170. to 0). Here is a sample of how to decommission a node based on `_ip`
  171. address:
  172. [source,js]
  173. --------------------------------------------------
  174. curl -XPUT localhost:9200/_cluster/settings -d '{
  175. "transient" : {
  176. "cluster.routing.allocation.exclude._ip" : "10.0.0.1"
  177. }
  178. }'
  179. --------------------------------------------------