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  1. [[node-tool]]
  2. == elasticsearch-node
  3. The `elasticsearch-node` command enables you to perform certain unsafe
  4. operations on a node that are only possible while it is shut down. This command
  5. allows you to adjust the <<modules-node,role>> of a node and may be able to
  6. recover some data after a disaster or start a node even if it is incompatible
  7. with the data on disk.
  8. [float]
  9. === Synopsis
  10. [source,shell]
  11. --------------------------------------------------
  12. bin/elasticsearch-node repurpose|unsafe-bootstrap|detach-cluster|override-version
  13. [-E <KeyValuePair>]
  14. [-h, --help] ([-s, --silent] | [-v, --verbose])
  15. --------------------------------------------------
  16. [float]
  17. === Description
  18. This tool has four modes:
  19. * `elasticsearch-node repurpose` can be used to delete unwanted data from a
  20. node if it used to be a <<data-node,data node>> or a
  21. <<master-node,master-eligible node>> but has been repurposed not to have one
  22. or other of these roles.
  23. * `elasticsearch-node unsafe-bootstrap` can be used to perform _unsafe cluster
  24. bootstrapping_. It forces one of the nodes to form a brand-new cluster on
  25. its own, using its local copy of the cluster metadata.
  26. * `elasticsearch-node detach-cluster` enables you to move nodes from one
  27. cluster to another. This can be used to move nodes into a new cluster
  28. created with the `elasticsearch-node unsafe-bootstap` command. If unsafe
  29. cluster bootstrapping was not possible, it also enables you to move nodes
  30. into a brand-new cluster.
  31. * `elasticsearch-node override-version` enables you to start up a node
  32. even if the data in the data path was written by an incompatible version of
  33. {es}. This may sometimes allow you to downgrade to an earlier version of
  34. {es}.
  35. [[node-tool-repurpose]]
  36. [float]
  37. ==== Changing the role of a node
  38. There may be situations where you want to repurpose a node without following
  39. the <<change-node-role,proper repurposing processes>>. The `elasticsearch-node
  40. repurpose` tool allows you to delete any excess on-disk data and start a node
  41. after repurposing it.
  42. The intended use is:
  43. * Stop the node
  44. * Update `elasticsearch.yml` by setting `node.master` and `node.data` as
  45. desired.
  46. * Run `elasticsearch-node repurpose` on the node
  47. * Start the node
  48. If you run `elasticsearch-node repurpose` on a node with `node.data: false` and
  49. `node.master: true` then it will delete any remaining shard data on that node,
  50. but it will leave the index and cluster metadata alone. If you run
  51. `elasticsearch-node repurpose` on a node with `node.data: false` and
  52. `node.master: false` then it will delete any remaining shard data and index
  53. metadata, but it will leave the cluster metadata alone.
  54. [WARNING]
  55. Running this command can lead to data loss for the indices mentioned if the
  56. data contained is not available on other nodes in the cluster. Only run this
  57. tool if you understand and accept the possible consequences, and only after
  58. determining that the node cannot be repurposed cleanly.
  59. The tool provides a summary of the data to be deleted and asks for confirmation
  60. before making any changes. You can get detailed information about the affected
  61. indices and shards by passing the verbose (`-v`) option.
  62. [float]
  63. ==== Recovering data after a disaster
  64. Sometimes {es} nodes are temporarily stopped, perhaps because of the need to
  65. perform some maintenance activity or perhaps because of a hardware failure.
  66. After you resolve the temporary condition and restart the node,
  67. it will rejoin the cluster and continue normally. Depending on your
  68. configuration, your cluster may be able to remain completely available even
  69. while one or more of its nodes are stopped.
  70. Sometimes it might not be possible to restart a node after it has stopped. For
  71. example, the node's host may suffer from a hardware problem that cannot be
  72. repaired. If the cluster is still available then you can start up a fresh node
  73. on another host and {es} will bring this node into the cluster in place of the
  74. failed node.
  75. Each node stores its data in the data directories defined by the
  76. <<path-settings,`path.data` setting>>. This means that in a disaster you can
  77. also restart a node by moving its data directories to another host, presuming
  78. that those data directories can be recovered from the faulty host.
  79. {es} <<modules-discovery-quorums,requires a response from a majority of the
  80. master-eligible nodes>> in order to elect a master and to update the cluster
  81. state. This means that if you have three master-eligible nodes then the cluster
  82. will remain available even if one of them has failed. However if two of the
  83. three master-eligible nodes fail then the cluster will be unavailable until at
  84. least one of them is restarted.
  85. In very rare circumstances it may not be possible to restart enough nodes to
  86. restore the cluster's availability. If such a disaster occurs, you should
  87. build a new cluster from a recent snapshot and re-import any data that was
  88. ingested since that snapshot was taken.
  89. However, if the disaster is serious enough then it may not be possible to
  90. recover from a recent snapshot either. Unfortunately in this case there is no
  91. way forward that does not risk data loss, but it may be possible to use the
  92. `elasticsearch-node` tool to construct a new cluster that contains some of the
  93. data from the failed cluster.
  94. [[node-tool-override-version]]
  95. [float]
  96. ==== Bypassing version checks
  97. The data that {es} writes to disk is designed to be read by the current version
  98. and a limited set of future versions. It cannot generally be read by older
  99. versions, nor by versions that are more than one major version newer. The data
  100. stored on disk includes the version of the node that wrote it, and {es} checks
  101. that it is compatible with this version when starting up.
  102. In rare circumstances it may be desirable to bypass this check and start up an
  103. {es} node using data that was written by an incompatible version. This may not
  104. work if the format of the stored data has changed, and it is a risky process
  105. because it is possible for the format to change in ways that {es} may
  106. misinterpret, silently leading to data loss.
  107. To bypass this check, you can use the `elasticsearch-node override-version`
  108. tool to overwrite the version number stored in the data path with the current
  109. version, causing {es} to believe that it is compatible with the on-disk data.
  110. [[node-tool-unsafe-bootstrap]]
  111. [float]
  112. ===== Unsafe cluster bootstrapping
  113. If there is at least one remaining master-eligible node, but it is not possible
  114. to restart a majority of them, then the `elasticsearch-node unsafe-bootstrap`
  115. command will unsafely override the cluster's <<modules-discovery-voting,voting
  116. configuration>> as if performing another
  117. <<modules-discovery-bootstrap-cluster,cluster bootstrapping process>>.
  118. The target node can then form a new cluster on its own by using
  119. the cluster metadata held locally on the target node.
  120. [WARNING]
  121. These steps can lead to arbitrary data loss since the target node may not hold the latest cluster
  122. metadata, and this out-of-date metadata may make it impossible to use some or
  123. all of the indices in the cluster.
  124. Since unsafe bootstrapping forms a new cluster containing a single node, once
  125. you have run it you must use the <<node-tool-detach-cluster,`elasticsearch-node
  126. detach-cluster` tool>> to migrate any other surviving nodes from the failed
  127. cluster into this new cluster.
  128. When you run the `elasticsearch-node unsafe-bootstrap` tool it will analyse the
  129. state of the node and ask for confirmation before taking any action. Before
  130. asking for confirmation it reports the term and version of the cluster state on
  131. the node on which it runs as follows:
  132. [source,txt]
  133. ----
  134. Current node cluster state (term, version) pair is (4, 12)
  135. ----
  136. If you have a choice of nodes on which to run this tool then you should choose
  137. one with a term that is as large as possible. If there is more than one
  138. node with the same term, pick the one with the largest version.
  139. This information identifies the node with the freshest cluster state, which minimizes the
  140. quantity of data that might be lost. For example, if the first node reports
  141. `(4, 12)` and a second node reports `(5, 3)`, then the second node is preferred
  142. since its term is larger. However if the second node reports `(3, 17)` then
  143. the first node is preferred since its term is larger. If the second node
  144. reports `(4, 10)` then it has the same term as the first node, but has a
  145. smaller version, so the first node is preferred.
  146. [WARNING]
  147. Running this command can lead to arbitrary data loss. Only run this tool if you
  148. understand and accept the possible consequences and have exhausted all other
  149. possibilities for recovery of your cluster.
  150. The sequence of operations for using this tool are as follows:
  151. 1. Make sure you have really lost access to at least half of the
  152. master-eligible nodes in the cluster, and they cannot be repaired or recovered
  153. by moving their data paths to healthy hardware.
  154. 2. Stop **all** remaining nodes.
  155. 3. Choose one of the remaining master-eligible nodes to become the new elected
  156. master as described above.
  157. 4. On this node, run the `elasticsearch-node unsafe-bootstrap` command as shown
  158. below. Verify that the tool reported `Master node was successfully
  159. bootstrapped`.
  160. 5. Start this node and verify that it is elected as the master node.
  161. 6. Run the <<node-tool-detach-cluster,`elasticsearch-node detach-cluster`
  162. tool>>, described below, on every other node in the cluster.
  163. 7. Start all other nodes and verify that each one joins the cluster.
  164. 8. Investigate the data in the cluster to discover if any was lost during this
  165. process.
  166. When you run the tool it will make sure that the node that is being used to
  167. bootstrap the cluster is not running. It is important that all other
  168. master-eligible nodes are also stopped while this tool is running, but the tool
  169. does not check this.
  170. The message `Master node was successfully bootstrapped` does not mean that
  171. there has been no data loss, it just means that tool was able to complete its
  172. job.
  173. [[node-tool-detach-cluster]]
  174. [float]
  175. ===== Detaching nodes from their cluster
  176. It is unsafe for nodes to move between clusters, because different clusters
  177. have completely different cluster metadata. There is no way to safely merge the
  178. metadata from two clusters together.
  179. To protect against inadvertently joining the wrong cluster, each cluster
  180. creates a unique identifier, known as the _cluster UUID_, when it first starts
  181. up. Every node records the UUID of its cluster and refuses to join a
  182. cluster with a different UUID.
  183. However, if a node's cluster has permanently failed then it may be desirable to
  184. try and move it into a new cluster. The `elasticsearch-node detach-cluster`
  185. command lets you detach a node from its cluster by resetting its cluster UUID.
  186. It can then join another cluster with a different UUID.
  187. For example, after unsafe cluster bootstrapping you will need to detach all the
  188. other surviving nodes from their old cluster so they can join the new,
  189. unsafely-bootstrapped cluster.
  190. Unsafe cluster bootstrapping is only possible if there is at least one
  191. surviving master-eligible node. If there are no remaining master-eligible nodes
  192. then the cluster metadata is completely lost. However, the individual data
  193. nodes also contain a copy of the index metadata corresponding with their
  194. shards. This sometimes allows a new cluster to import these shards as
  195. <<modules-gateway-dangling-indices,dangling indices>>. You can sometimes
  196. recover some indices after the loss of all master-eligible nodes in a cluster
  197. by creating a new cluster and then using the `elasticsearch-node
  198. detach-cluster` command to move any surviving nodes into this new cluster.
  199. There is a risk of data loss when importing a dangling index because data nodes
  200. may not have the most recent copy of the index metadata and do not have any
  201. information about <<docs-replication,which shard copies are in-sync>>. This
  202. means that a stale shard copy may be selected to be the primary, and some of
  203. the shards may be incompatible with the imported mapping.
  204. [WARNING]
  205. Execution of this command can lead to arbitrary data loss. Only run this tool
  206. if you understand and accept the possible consequences and have exhausted all
  207. other possibilities for recovery of your cluster.
  208. The sequence of operations for using this tool are as follows:
  209. 1. Make sure you have really lost access to every one of the master-eligible
  210. nodes in the cluster, and they cannot be repaired or recovered by moving their
  211. data paths to healthy hardware.
  212. 2. Start a new cluster and verify that it is healthy. This cluster may comprise
  213. one or more brand-new master-eligible nodes, or may be an unsafely-bootstrapped
  214. cluster formed as described above.
  215. 3. Stop **all** remaining data nodes.
  216. 4. On each data node, run the `elasticsearch-node detach-cluster` tool as shown
  217. below. Verify that the tool reported `Node was successfully detached from the
  218. cluster`.
  219. 5. If necessary, configure each data node to
  220. <<modules-discovery-hosts-providers,discover the new cluster>>.
  221. 6. Start each data node and verify that it has joined the new cluster.
  222. 7. Wait for all recoveries to have completed, and investigate the data in the
  223. cluster to discover if any was lost during this process.
  224. The message `Node was successfully detached from the cluster` does not mean
  225. that there has been no data loss, it just means that tool was able to complete
  226. its job.
  227. [float]
  228. === Parameters
  229. `repurpose`:: Delete excess data when a node's roles are changed.
  230. `unsafe-bootstrap`:: Specifies to unsafely bootstrap this node as a new
  231. one-node cluster.
  232. `detach-cluster`:: Specifies to unsafely detach this node from its cluster so
  233. it can join a different cluster.
  234. `override-version`:: Overwrites the version number stored in the data path so
  235. that a node can start despite being incompatible with the on-disk data.
  236. `-E <KeyValuePair>`:: Configures a setting.
  237. `-h, --help`:: Returns all of the command parameters.
  238. `-s, --silent`:: Shows minimal output.
  239. `-v, --verbose`:: Shows verbose output.
  240. [float]
  241. === Examples
  242. [float]
  243. ==== Repurposing a node as a dedicated master node (master: true, data: false)
  244. In this example, a former data node is repurposed as a dedicated master node.
  245. First update the node's settings to `node.master: true` and `node.data: false`
  246. in its `elasticsearch.yml` config file. Then run the `elasticsearch-node
  247. repurpose` command to find and remove excess shard data:
  248. [source,txt]
  249. ----
  250. node$ ./bin/elasticsearch-node repurpose
  251. WARNING: Elasticsearch MUST be stopped before running this tool.
  252. Found 2 shards in 2 indices to clean up
  253. Use -v to see list of paths and indices affected
  254. Node is being re-purposed as master and no-data. Clean-up of shard data will be performed.
  255. Do you want to proceed?
  256. Confirm [y/N] y
  257. Node successfully repurposed to master and no-data.
  258. ----
  259. [float]
  260. ==== Repurposing a node as a coordinating-only node (master: false, data: false)
  261. In this example, a node that previously held data is repurposed as a
  262. coordinating-only node. First update the node's settings to `node.master:
  263. false` and `node.data: false` in its `elasticsearch.yml` config file. Then run
  264. the `elasticsearch-node repurpose` command to find and remove excess shard data
  265. and index metadata:
  266. [source,txt]
  267. ----
  268. node$./bin/elasticsearch-node repurpose
  269. WARNING: Elasticsearch MUST be stopped before running this tool.
  270. Found 2 indices (2 shards and 2 index meta data) to clean up
  271. Use -v to see list of paths and indices affected
  272. Node is being re-purposed as no-master and no-data. Clean-up of index data will be performed.
  273. Do you want to proceed?
  274. Confirm [y/N] y
  275. Node successfully repurposed to no-master and no-data.
  276. ----
  277. [float]
  278. ==== Unsafe cluster bootstrapping
  279. Suppose your cluster had five master-eligible nodes and you have permanently
  280. lost three of them, leaving two nodes remaining.
  281. * Run the tool on the first remaining node, but answer `n` at the confirmation
  282. step.
  283. [source,txt]
  284. ----
  285. node_1$ ./bin/elasticsearch-node unsafe-bootstrap
  286. WARNING: Elasticsearch MUST be stopped before running this tool.
  287. Current node cluster state (term, version) pair is (4, 12)
  288. You should only run this tool if you have permanently lost half or more
  289. of the master-eligible nodes in this cluster, and you cannot restore the
  290. cluster from a snapshot. This tool can cause arbitrary data loss and its
  291. use should be your last resort. If you have multiple surviving master
  292. eligible nodes, you should run this tool on the node with the highest
  293. cluster state (term, version) pair.
  294. Do you want to proceed?
  295. Confirm [y/N] n
  296. ----
  297. * Run the tool on the second remaining node, and again answer `n` at the
  298. confirmation step.
  299. [source,txt]
  300. ----
  301. node_2$ ./bin/elasticsearch-node unsafe-bootstrap
  302. WARNING: Elasticsearch MUST be stopped before running this tool.
  303. Current node cluster state (term, version) pair is (5, 3)
  304. You should only run this tool if you have permanently lost half or more
  305. of the master-eligible nodes in this cluster, and you cannot restore the
  306. cluster from a snapshot. This tool can cause arbitrary data loss and its
  307. use should be your last resort. If you have multiple surviving master
  308. eligible nodes, you should run this tool on the node with the highest
  309. cluster state (term, version) pair.
  310. Do you want to proceed?
  311. Confirm [y/N] n
  312. ----
  313. * Since the second node has a greater term it has a fresher cluster state, so
  314. it is better to unsafely bootstrap the cluster using this node:
  315. [source,txt]
  316. ----
  317. node_2$ ./bin/elasticsearch-node unsafe-bootstrap
  318. WARNING: Elasticsearch MUST be stopped before running this tool.
  319. Current node cluster state (term, version) pair is (5, 3)
  320. You should only run this tool if you have permanently lost half or more
  321. of the master-eligible nodes in this cluster, and you cannot restore the
  322. cluster from a snapshot. This tool can cause arbitrary data loss and its
  323. use should be your last resort. If you have multiple surviving master
  324. eligible nodes, you should run this tool on the node with the highest
  325. cluster state (term, version) pair.
  326. Do you want to proceed?
  327. Confirm [y/N] y
  328. Master node was successfully bootstrapped
  329. ----
  330. [float]
  331. ==== Detaching nodes from their cluster
  332. After unsafely bootstrapping a new cluster, run the `elasticsearch-node
  333. detach-cluster` command to detach all remaining nodes from the failed cluster
  334. so they can join the new cluster:
  335. [source, txt]
  336. ----
  337. node_3$ ./bin/elasticsearch-node detach-cluster
  338. WARNING: Elasticsearch MUST be stopped before running this tool.
  339. You should only run this tool if you have permanently lost all of the
  340. master-eligible nodes in this cluster and you cannot restore the cluster
  341. from a snapshot, or you have already unsafely bootstrapped a new cluster
  342. by running `elasticsearch-node unsafe-bootstrap` on a master-eligible
  343. node that belonged to the same cluster as this node. This tool can cause
  344. arbitrary data loss and its use should be your last resort.
  345. Do you want to proceed?
  346. Confirm [y/N] y
  347. Node was successfully detached from the cluster
  348. ----
  349. [float]
  350. ==== Bypassing version checks
  351. Run the `elasticsearch-node override-version` command to overwrite the version
  352. stored in the data path so that a node can start despite being incompatible
  353. with the data stored in the data path:
  354. [source, txt]
  355. ----
  356. node$ ./bin/elasticsearch-node override-version
  357. WARNING: Elasticsearch MUST be stopped before running this tool.
  358. This data path was last written by Elasticsearch version [x.x.x] and may no
  359. longer be compatible with Elasticsearch version [y.y.y]. This tool will bypass
  360. this compatibility check, allowing a version [y.y.y] node to start on this data
  361. path, but a version [y.y.y] node may not be able to read this data or may read
  362. it incorrectly leading to data loss.
  363. You should not use this tool. Instead, continue to use a version [x.x.x] node
  364. on this data path. If necessary, you can use reindex-from-remote to copy the
  365. data from here into an older cluster.
  366. Do you want to proceed?
  367. Confirm [y/N] y
  368. Successfully overwrote this node's metadata to bypass its version compatibility checks.
  369. ----