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- [role="xpack"]
- [[data-tier-shard-filtering]]
- === Index-level data tier allocation filtering
- You can use index-level allocation settings to control which <<data-tiers, data tier>>
- the index is allocated to. The data tier allocator is a
- <<shard-allocation-filtering, shard allocation filter>> that uses two built-in
- node attributes: `_tier` and `_tier_preference`.
- These tier attributes are set using the data node roles:
- * <<data-content-node, data_content>>
- * <<data-hot-node, data_hot>>
- * <<data-warm-node, data_warm>>
- * <<data-cold-node, data_cold>>
- NOTE: The <<data-node, data>> role is not a valid data tier and cannot be used
- for data tier filtering.
- [discrete]
- [[data-tier-allocation-filters]]
- ====Data tier allocation settings
- `index.routing.allocation.include._tier`::
- Assign the index to a node whose `node.roles` configuration has at
- least one of to the comma-separated values.
- `index.routing.allocation.require._tier`::
- Assign the index to a node whose `node.roles` configuration has _all_
- of the comma-separated values.
- `index.routing.allocation.exclude._tier`::
- Assign the index to a node whose `node.roles` configuration has _none_ of the
- comma-separated values.
- [[tier-preference-allocation-filter]]
- `index.routing.allocation.include._tier_preference`::
- Assign the index to the first tier in the list that has an available node.
- This prevents indices from remaining unallocated if no nodes are available
- in the preferred tier.
- For example, if you set `index.routing.allocation.include._tier_preference`
- to `data_warm,data_hot`, the index is allocated to the warm tier if there
- are nodes with the `data_warm` role. If there are no nodes in the warm tier,
- but there are nodes with the `data_hot` role, the index is allocated to
- the hot tier.
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