| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115 | [role="xpack"][testenv="basic"][[setup-xpack-client]]== Configuring {xpack} Java Clientsdeprecated[7.0.0, The `TransportClient` is deprecated in favour of the {java-rest}/java-rest-high.html[Java High Level REST Client] and will be removed in Elasticsearch 8.0. The {java-rest}/java-rest-high-level-migration.html[migration guide] describes all the steps needed to migrate.]If you want to use a Java {javaclient}/transport-client.html[transport client] with acluster where {xpack} is installed, then you must download and configure the{xpack} transport client.. Add the {xpack} transport JAR file to your *CLASSPATH*. You can download the {xpack}distribution and extract the JAR file manually or you can get it from thehttps://artifacts.elastic.co/maven/org/elasticsearch/client/x-pack-transport/{version}/x-pack-transport-{version}.jar[Elasticsearch Maven repository].As with any dependency, you will also need its transitive dependencies. Refer to thehttps://artifacts.elastic.co/maven/org/elasticsearch/client/x-pack-transport/{version}/x-pack-transport-{version}.pom[X-Pack POM filefor your version] when downloading for offline usage.. If you are using Maven, you need to add the {xpack} JAR file as a dependency inyour project's `pom.xml` file:+--[source,xml]--------------------------------------------------------------<project ...>     <repositories>     <!-- add the elasticsearch repo -->      <repository>         <id>elasticsearch-releases</id>         <url>https://artifacts.elastic.co/maven</url>         <releases>          <enabled>true</enabled>         </releases>         <snapshots>            <enabled>false</enabled>         </snapshots>      </repository>      ...   </repositories>   ...   <dependencies>      <!-- add the x-pack jar as a dependency -->      <dependency>         <groupId>org.elasticsearch.client</groupId>         <artifactId>x-pack-transport</artifactId>              <version>{version}</version>      </dependency>      ...   </dependencies>   ...</project>----------------------------------------------------------------. If you are using Gradle, you need to add the {xpack} JAR file as a dependency inyour `build.gradle` file:+--[source,groovy]--------------------------------------------------------------repositories {  /* ... Any other repositories ... */  // Add the Elasticsearch Maven Repository  maven {    url "https://artifacts.elastic.co/maven"  }}dependencies {  compile "org.elasticsearch.client:x-pack-transport:{version}"  /* ... */}----------------------------------------------------------------. If you are using a repository manager such as https://www.sonatype.com/nexus-repository-oss[Nexus OSS] within yourcompany, you need to add the repository as per the following screenshot:+--image::security/images/nexus.png["Adding the Elastic repo in Nexus",link="images/nexus.png"]Then in your project's `pom.xml` if using maven, add the following repositories and dependencies definitions:[source,xml]--------------------------------------------------------------<dependencies>    <dependency>        <groupId>org.elasticsearch.client</groupId>        <artifactId>x-pack-transport</artifactId>        <version>{version}</version>    </dependency></dependencies><repositories>    <repository>        <id>local-nexus</id>        <name>Elastic Local Nexus</name>        <url>http://0.0.0.0:8081/repository/elasticsearch/</url>        <releases>            <enabled>true</enabled>        </releases>        <snapshots>            <enabled>false</enabled>        </snapshots>    </repository>  </repositories>----------------------------------------------------------------. If you are using {stack} {security-features}, there are more configurationsteps. See {stack-ov}/java-clients.html[Java Client and Security].
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