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- [role="xpack"]
- [[data-tiers]]
- == Data tiers
- A _data tier_ is a collection of nodes with the same data role that
- typically share the same hardware profile:
- * <<content-tier, Content tier>> nodes handle the indexing and query load for content such as a product catalog.
- * <<hot-tier, Hot tier>> nodes handle the indexing load for time series data such as logs or metrics
- and hold your most recent, most-frequently-accessed data.
- * <<warm-tier, Warm tier>> nodes hold time series data that is accessed less-frequently
- and rarely needs to be updated.
- * <<cold-tier, Cold tier>> nodes hold time series data that is accessed infrequently and not normally updated.
- * <<frozen-tier, Frozen tier>> nodes hold time series data that is accessed rarely and never updated, kept in searchable snapshots.
- When you index documents directly to a specific index, they remain on content tier nodes indefinitely.
- When you index documents to a data stream, they initially reside on hot tier nodes.
- You can configure <<index-lifecycle-management, {ilm}>> ({ilm-init}) policies
- to automatically transition your time series data through the hot, warm, and cold tiers
- according to your performance, resiliency and data retention requirements.
- A node's <<data-node, data role>> is configured in `elasticsearch.yml`.
- For example, the highest-performance nodes in a cluster might be assigned to both the hot and content tiers:
- [source,yaml]
- --------------------------------------------------
- node.roles: ["data_hot", "data_content"]
- --------------------------------------------------
- [discrete]
- [[content-tier]]
- === Content tier
- Data stored in the content tier is generally a collection of items such as a product catalog or article archive.
- Unlike time series data, the value of the content remains relatively constant over time,
- so it doesn't make sense to move it to a tier with different performance characteristics as it ages.
- Content data typically has long data retention requirements, and you want to be able to retrieve
- items quickly regardless of how old they are.
- Content tier nodes are usually optimized for query performance--they prioritize processing power over IO throughput
- so they can process complex searches and aggregations and return results quickly.
- While they are also responsible for indexing, content data is generally not ingested at as high a rate
- as time series data such as logs and metrics. From a resiliency perspective the indices in this
- tier should be configured to use one or more replicas.
- New indices are automatically allocated to the <<content-tier>> unless they are part of a data stream.
- [discrete]
- [[hot-tier]]
- === Hot tier
- The hot tier is the {es} entry point for time series data and holds your most-recent,
- most-frequently-searched time series data.
- Nodes in the hot tier need to be fast for both reads and writes,
- which requires more hardware resources and faster storage (SSDs).
- For resiliency, indices in the hot tier should be configured to use one or more replicas.
- New indices that are part of a <<data-streams, data stream>> are automatically allocated to the
- hot tier.
- [discrete]
- [[warm-tier]]
- === Warm tier
- Time series data can move to the warm tier once it is being queried less frequently
- than the recently-indexed data in the hot tier.
- The warm tier typically holds data from recent weeks.
- Updates are still allowed, but likely infrequent.
- Nodes in the warm tier generally don't need to be as fast as those in the hot tier.
- For resiliency, indices in the warm tier should be configured to use one or more replicas.
- [discrete]
- [[cold-tier]]
- === Cold tier
- Once data is no longer being updated, it can move from the warm tier to the cold tier where it
- stays while being queried infrequently.
- The cold tier is still a responsive query tier, but data in the cold tier is not normally updated.
- As data transitions into the cold tier it can be compressed and shrunken.
- For resiliency, indices in the cold tier can rely on
- <<ilm-searchable-snapshot, searchable snapshots>>, eliminating the need for replicas.
- [discrete]
- [[frozen-tier]]
- === Frozen tier
- Once data is no longer being queried, or being queried rarely, it may move from
- the cold tier to the frozen tier where it stays for the rest of its life.
- The frozen tier uses <<searchable-snapshots,{search-snaps}>> to store and load
- data from a snapshot repository. Instead of using a full local copy of your
- data, these {search-snaps} use smaller <<shared-cache,local caches>> containing
- only recently searched data. If a search requires data that is not in a cache,
- {es} fetches the data as needed from the snapshot repository. This decouples
- compute and storage, letting you run searches over very large data sets with
- minimal compute resources, which significantly reduces your storage and
- operating costs.
- The <<ilm-index-lifecycle, frozen phase>> automatically converts data
- transitioning into the frozen tier into a shared-cache searchable snapshot.
- Search is typically slower on the frozen tier than the cold tier, because {es}
- must sometimes fetch data from the snapshot repository.
- NOTE: The frozen tier is not yet available on {ess-trial}[{ess}]. To
- recreate similar functionality, see
- <<searchable-snapshots-frozen-tier-on-cloud>>.
- [discrete]
- [[data-tier-allocation]]
- === Data tier index allocation
- When you create an index, by default {es} sets
- <<tier-preference-allocation-filter, `index.routing.allocation.include._tier_preference`>>
- to `data_content` to automatically allocate the index shards to the content tier.
- When {es} creates an index as part of a <<data-streams, data stream>>,
- by default {es} sets
- <<tier-preference-allocation-filter, `index.routing.allocation.include._tier_preference`>>
- to `data_hot` to automatically allocate the index shards to the hot tier.
- You can override the automatic tier-based allocation by specifying
- <<shard-allocation-filtering, shard allocation filtering>>
- settings in the create index request or index template that matches the new index.
- You can also explicitly set `index.routing.allocation.include._tier_preference`
- to opt out of the default tier-based allocation.
- If you set the tier preference to `null`, {es} ignores the data tier roles during allocation.
- [discrete]
- [[data-tier-migration]]
- === Automatic data tier migration
- {ilm-init} automatically transitions managed
- indices through the available data tiers using the <<ilm-migrate, migrate>> action.
- By default, this action is automatically injected in every phase.
- You can explicitly specify the migrate action to override the default behavior,
- or use the <<ilm-allocate, allocate action>> to manually specify allocation rules.
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