| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118 | [[cluster-reroute]]== Cluster RerouteThe reroute command allows to explicitly execute a cluster rerouteallocation command including specific commands. For example, a shard canbe moved from one node to another explicitly, an allocation can becanceled, or an unassigned shard can be explicitly allocated on aspecific node.Here is a short example of how a simple reroute API call:[source,js]--------------------------------------------------curl -XPOST 'localhost:9200/_cluster/reroute' -d '{    "commands" : [ {        "move" :            {              "index" : "test", "shard" : 0,              "from_node" : "node1", "to_node" : "node2"            }        },        {          "allocate_replica" : {              "index" : "test", "shard" : 1, "node" : "node3"          }        }    ]}'--------------------------------------------------An important aspect to remember is the fact that once when an allocationoccurs, the cluster will aim at re-balancing its state back to an evenstate. For example, if the allocation includes moving a shard from`node1` to `node2`, in an `even` state, then another shard will be movedfrom `node2` to `node1` to even things out.The cluster can be set to disable allocations, which means that only theexplicitly allocations will be performed. Obviously, only once allcommands has been applied, the cluster will aim to be re-balance itsstate.Another option is to run the commands in `dry_run` (as a URI flag, or inthe request body). This will cause the commands to apply to the currentcluster state, and return the resulting cluster after the commands (andre-balancing) has been applied.If the `explain` parameter is specified, a detailed explanation of why thecommands could or could not be executed is returned.The commands supported are:`move`::    Move a started shard from one node to another node. Accepts    `index` and `shard` for index name and shard number, `from_node` for the    node to move the shard `from`, and `to_node` for the node to move the    shard to.`cancel`::    Cancel allocation of a shard (or recovery). Accepts `index`    and `shard` for index name and shard number, and `node` for the node to    cancel the shard allocation on. It also accepts `allow_primary` flag to    explicitly specify that it is allowed to cancel allocation for a primary    shard.  This can be used to force resynchronization of existing replicas    from the primary shard by cancelling them and allowing them to be    reinitialized through the standard reallocation process.`allocate_replica`::    Allocate an unassigned replica shard to a node. Accepts the    `index` and `shard` for index name and shard number, and `node` to    allocate the shard to. Takes <<modules-cluster,allocation deciders>> into account.Two more commands are available that allow the allocation of a primary shardto a node. These commands should however be used with extreme care, as primaryshard allocation is usually fully automatically handled by Elasticsearch.Reasons why a primary shard cannot be automatically allocated include the following:- A new index was created but there is no node which satisfies the allocation deciders.- An up-to-date shard copy of the data cannot be found on the current data nodes inthe cluster. To prevent data loss, the system does not automatically promote a staleshard copy to primary.As a manual override, two commands to forcefully allocate primary shardsare available:`allocate_stale_primary`::    Allocate a primary shard to a node that holds a stale copy. Accepts the    `index` and `shard` for index name and shard number, and `node` to    allocate the shard to. Using this command may lead to data loss    for the provided shard id. If a node which has the good copy of the    data rejoins the cluster later on, that data will be overwritten with    the data of the stale copy that was forcefully allocated with this    command. To ensure that these implications are well-understood,    this command requires the special field `accept_data_loss` to be    explicitly set to `true` for it to work.`allocate_empty_primary`::    Allocate an empty primary shard to a node. Accepts the    `index` and `shard` for index name and shard number, and `node` to    allocate the shard to. Using this command leads to a complete loss    of all data that was indexed into this shard, if it was previously    started. If a node which has a copy of the    data rejoins the cluster later on, that data will be deleted!    To ensure that these implications are well-understood,    this command requires the special field `accept_data_loss` to be    explicitly set to `true` for it to work.[float]=== Retry failed shardsThe cluster will attempt to allocate a shard a maximum of`index.allocation.max_retries` times in a row (defaults to `5`), before givingup and leaving the shard unallocated. This scenario can be caused bystructural problems such as having an analyzer which refers to a stopwordsfile which doesn't exist on all nodes.Once the problem has been corrected, allocation can be manually retried bycalling the <<cluster-reroute,`_reroute`>> API with `?retry_failed`, whichwill attempt a single retry round for these shards.
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