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- === Network changes
- ==== Bind to localhost
- Elasticsearch 2.x will only bind to localhost by default. It will try to bind
- to both 127.0.0.1 (IPv4) and [::1] (IPv6), but will work happily in
- environments where only IPv4 or IPv6 is available. This change prevents
- Elasticsearch from trying to connect to other nodes on your network unless you
- specifically tell it to do so. When moving to production you should configure
- the `network.host` parameter, either in the `elasticsearch.yml` config file or
- on the command line:
- [source,sh]
- --------------------
- bin/elasticsearch --network.host 192.168.1.5
- bin/elasticsearch --network.host _non_loopback_
- --------------------
- The full list of options that network.host accepts can be found in the <<modules-network>>.
- ==== Multicast removed
- Multicast has been removed (although it is still
- {plugins}/discovery-multicast.html[provided as a plugin] for now). Instead,
- and only when bound to localhost, Elasticsearch will use unicast to contact
- the first 5 ports in the `transport.tcp.port` range, which defaults to
- `9300-9400`.
- This preserves the zero-config auto-clustering experience for the developer,
- but it means that you will have to provide a list of <<unicast,unicast hosts>>
- when moving to production, for instance:
- [source,yaml]
- ---------------------
- discovery.zen.ping.unicast.hosts: [ 192.168.1.2, 192.168.1.3 ]
- ---------------------
- You don’t need to list all of the nodes in your cluster as unicast hosts, but
- you should specify at least a quorum (majority) of master-eligible nodes. A
- big cluster will typically have three dedicated master nodes, in which case we
- recommend listing all three of them as unicast hosts.
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