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- [[settings]]
- == Configuring Elasticsearch
- Elasticsearch ships with good defaults and requires very little configuration.
- Most settings can be changed on a running cluster using the
- <<cluster-update-settings>> API.
- The configuration files should contain settings which are node-specific (such
- as `node.name` and paths), or settings which a node requires in order to be
- able to join a cluster, such as `cluster.name` and `network.host`.
- [[config-files-location]]
- [float]
- === Config files location
- Elasticsearch has three configuration files:
- * `elasticsearch.yml` for configuring Elasticsearch
- * `jvm.options` for configuring Elasticsearch JVM settings
- * `log4j2.properties` for configuring Elasticsearch logging
- These files are located in the config directory, whose default location depends
- on whether or not the installation is from an archive distribution (`tar.gz` or
- `zip`) or a package distribution (Debian or RPM packages).
- For the archive distributions, the config directory location defaults to
- `$ES_HOME/config`. The location of the config directory can be changed via the
- `ES_PATH_CONF` environment variable as follows:
- [source,sh]
- -------------------------------
- ES_PATH_CONF=/path/to/my/config ./bin/elasticsearch
- -------------------------------
- Alternatively, you can `export` the `ES_PATH_CONF` environment variable via the
- command line or via your shell profile.
- For the package distributions, the config directory location defaults to
- `/etc/elasticsearch`. The location of the config directory can also be changed
- via the `ES_PATH_CONF` environment variable, but note that setting this in your
- shell is not sufficient. Instead, this variabled is sourced from
- `/etc/default/elasticsearch` (for the Debian package) and
- `/etc/sysconfig/elasticsearch` (for the RPM package). You will need to edit the
- `ES_PATH_CONF=/etc/elasticsearch` entry in one of these files accordingly to
- change the config directory location.
- [float]
- === Config file format
- The configuration format is http://www.yaml.org/[YAML]. Here is an
- example of changing the path of the data and logs directories:
- [source,yaml]
- --------------------------------------------------
- path:
- data: /var/lib/elasticsearch
- logs: /var/log/elasticsearch
- --------------------------------------------------
- Settings can also be flattened as follows:
- [source,yaml]
- --------------------------------------------------
- path.data: /var/lib/elasticsearch
- path.logs: /var/log/elasticsearch
- --------------------------------------------------
- [float]
- === Environment variable substitution
- Environment variables referenced with the `${...}` notation within the
- configuration file will be replaced with the value of the environment
- variable, for instance:
- [source,yaml]
- --------------------------------------------------
- node.name: ${HOSTNAME}
- network.host: ${ES_NETWORK_HOST}
- --------------------------------------------------
- [float]
- === Prompting for settings
- For settings that you do not wish to store in the configuration file, you can
- use the value `${prompt.text}` or `${prompt.secret}` and start Elasticsearch
- in the foreground. `${prompt.secret}` has echoing disabled so that the value
- entered will not be shown in your terminal; `${prompt.text}` will allow you to
- see the value as you type it in. For example:
- [source,yaml]
- --------------------------------------------------
- node:
- name: ${prompt.text}
- --------------------------------------------------
- When starting Elasticsearch, you will be prompted to enter the actual value
- like so:
- [source,sh]
- --------------------------------------------------
- Enter value for [node.name]:
- --------------------------------------------------
- NOTE: Elasticsearch will not start if `${prompt.text}` or `${prompt.secret}`
- is used in the settings and the process is run as a service or in the background.
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