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- [[modules-node]]
- == Node
- Any time that you start an instance of Elasticsearch, you are starting a
- _node_. A collection of connected nodes is called a
- <<modules-cluster,cluster>>. If you are running a single node of Elasticsearch,
- then you have a cluster of one node.
- Every node in the cluster can handle <<modules-http,HTTP>> and
- <<modules-transport,Transport>> traffic by default. The transport layer
- is used exclusively for communication between nodes and the
- {javaclient}/transport-client.html[Java `TransportClient`]; the HTTP layer is
- used only by external REST clients.
- All nodes know about all the other nodes in the cluster and can forward client
- requests to the appropriate node. Besides that, each node serves one or more
- purpose:
- <<master-node,Master-eligible node>>::
- A node that has `node.master` set to `true` (default), which makes it eligible
- to be <<modules-discovery-zen,elected as the _master_ node>>, which controls
- the cluster.
- <<data-node,Data node>>::
- A node that has `node.data` set to `true` (default). Data nodes hold data and
- perform data related operations such as CRUD, search, and aggregations.
- <<ingest,Ingest node>>::
- A node that has `node.ingest` set to `true` (default). Ingest nodes are able
- to apply an <<pipeline,ingest pipeline>> to a document in order to transform
- and enrich the document before indexing. With a heavy ingest load, it makes
- sense to use dedicated ingest nodes and to mark the master and data nodes as
- `node.ingest: false`.
- [NOTE]
- [[coordinating-node]]
- .Coordinating node
- ===============================================
- Requests like search requests or bulk-indexing requests may involve data held
- on different data nodes. A search request, for example, is executed in two
- phases which are coordinated by the node which receives the client request --
- the _coordinating node_.
- In the _scatter_ phase, the coordinating node forwards the request to the data
- nodes which hold the data. Each data node executes the request locally and
- returns its results to the coordinating node. In the _gather_ phase, the
- coordinating node reduces each data node's results into a single global
- resultset.
- Every node is implicitly a coordinating node. This means that a node that has
- all three `node.master`, `node.data` and `node.ingest` set to `false` will
- only act as a coordinating node, which cannot be disabled. As a result, such
- a node needs to have enough memory and CPU in order to deal with the gather
- phase.
- ===============================================
- [float]
- [[master-node]]
- === Master Eligible Node
- The master node is responsible for lightweight cluster-wide actions such as
- creating or deleting an index, tracking which nodes are part of the cluster,
- and deciding which shards to allocate to which nodes. It is important for
- cluster health to have a stable master node.
- Any master-eligible node (all nodes by default) may be elected to become the
- master node by the <<modules-discovery-zen,master election process>>.
- IMPORTANT: Master nodes must have access to the `data/` directory (just like
- `data` nodes) as this is where the cluster state is persisted between node restarts.
- Indexing and searching your data is CPU-, memory-, and I/O-intensive work
- which can put pressure on a node's resources. To ensure that your master
- node is stable and not under pressure, it is a good idea in a bigger
- cluster to split the roles between dedicated master-eligible nodes and
- dedicated data nodes.
- While master nodes can also behave as <<coordinating-node,coordinating nodes>>
- and route search and indexing requests from clients to data nodes, it is
- better _not_ to use dedicated master nodes for this purpose. It is important
- for the stability of the cluster that master-eligible nodes do as little work
- as possible.
- To create a dedicated master-eligible node, set:
- [source,yaml]
- -------------------
- node.master: true <1>
- node.data: false <2>
- node.ingest: false <3>
- cluster.remote.connect: false <4>
- -------------------
- <1> The `node.master` role is enabled by default.
- <2> Disable the `node.data` role (enabled by default).
- <3> Disable the `node.ingest` role (enabled by default).
- <4> Disable cross-cluster search (enabled by default).
- ifdef::include-xpack[]
- NOTE: These settings apply only when {xpack} is not installed. To create a
- dedicated master-eligible node when {xpack} is installed, see <<modules-node-xpack,{xpack} node settings>>.
- endif::include-xpack[]
- [float]
- [[split-brain]]
- ==== Avoiding split brain with `minimum_master_nodes`
- To prevent data loss, it is vital to configure the
- `discovery.zen.minimum_master_nodes` setting (which defaults to `1`) so that
- each master-eligible node knows the _minimum number of master-eligible nodes_
- that must be visible in order to form a cluster.
- To explain, imagine that you have a cluster consisting of two master-eligible
- nodes. A network failure breaks communication between these two nodes. Each
- node sees one master-eligible node... itself. With `minimum_master_nodes` set
- to the default of `1`, this is sufficient to form a cluster. Each node elects
- itself as the new master (thinking that the other master-eligible node has
- died) and the result is two clusters, or a _split brain_. These two nodes
- will never rejoin until one node is restarted. Any data that has been written
- to the restarted node will be lost.
- Now imagine that you have a cluster with three master-eligible nodes, and
- `minimum_master_nodes` set to `2`. If a network split separates one node from
- the other two nodes, the side with one node cannot see enough master-eligible
- nodes and will realise that it cannot elect itself as master. The side with
- two nodes will elect a new master (if needed) and continue functioning
- correctly. As soon as the network split is resolved, the single node will
- rejoin the cluster and start serving requests again.
- This setting should be set to a _quorum_ of master-eligible nodes:
- (master_eligible_nodes / 2) + 1
- In other words, if there are three master-eligible nodes, then minimum master
- nodes should be set to `(3 / 2) + 1` or `2`:
- [source,yaml]
- ----------------------------
- discovery.zen.minimum_master_nodes: 2 <1>
- ----------------------------
- <1> Defaults to `1`.
- To be able to remain available when one of the master-eligible nodes fails,
- clusters should have at least three master-eligible nodes, with
- `minimum_master_nodes` set accordingly. A <<rolling-upgrades,rolling upgrade>>,
- performed without any downtime, also requires at least three master-eligible
- nodes to avoid the possibility of data loss if a network split occurs while the
- upgrade is in progress.
- This setting can also be changed dynamically on a live cluster with the
- <<cluster-update-settings,cluster update settings API>>:
- [source,js]
- ----------------------------
- PUT _cluster/settings
- {
- "transient": {
- "discovery.zen.minimum_master_nodes": 2
- }
- }
- ----------------------------
- // CONSOLE
- // TEST[catch:/cannot set discovery.zen.minimum_master_nodes to more than the current master nodes/]
- TIP: An advantage of splitting the master and data roles between dedicated
- nodes is that you can have just three master-eligible nodes and set
- `minimum_master_nodes` to `2`. You never have to change this setting, no
- matter how many dedicated data nodes you add to the cluster.
- [float]
- [[data-node]]
- === Data Node
- Data nodes hold the shards that contain the documents you have indexed. Data
- nodes handle data related operations like CRUD, search, and aggregations.
- These operations are I/O-, memory-, and CPU-intensive. It is important to
- monitor these resources and to add more data nodes if they are overloaded.
- The main benefit of having dedicated data nodes is the separation of the
- master and data roles.
- To create a dedicated data node, set:
- [source,yaml]
- -------------------
- node.master: false <1>
- node.data: true <2>
- node.ingest: false <3>
- cluster.remote.connect: false <4>
- -------------------
- <1> Disable the `node.master` role (enabled by default).
- <2> The `node.data` role is enabled by default.
- <3> Disable the `node.ingest` role (enabled by default).
- <4> Disable cross-cluster search (enabled by default).
- ifdef::include-xpack[]
- NOTE: These settings apply only when {xpack} is not installed. To create a
- dedicated data node when {xpack} is installed, see <<modules-node-xpack,{xpack} node settings>>.
- endif::include-xpack[]
- [float]
- [[node-ingest-node]]
- === Ingest Node
- Ingest nodes can execute pre-processing pipelines, composed of one or more
- ingest processors. Depending on the type of operations performed by the ingest
- processors and the required resources, it may make sense to have dedicated
- ingest nodes, that will only perform this specific task.
- To create a dedicated ingest node, set:
- [source,yaml]
- -------------------
- node.master: false <1>
- node.data: false <2>
- node.ingest: true <3>
- cluster.remote.connect: false <4>
- -------------------
- <1> Disable the `node.master` role (enabled by default).
- <2> Disable the `node.data` role (enabled by default).
- <3> The `node.ingest` role is enabled by default.
- <4> Disable cross-cluster search (enabled by default).
- ifdef::include-xpack[]
- NOTE: These settings apply only when {xpack} is not installed. To create a
- dedicated ingest node when {xpack} is installed, see <<modules-node-xpack,{xpack} node settings>>.
- endif::include-xpack[]
- [float]
- [[coordinating-only-node]]
- === Coordinating only node
- If you take away the ability to be able to handle master duties, to hold data,
- and pre-process documents, then you are left with a _coordinating_ node that
- can only route requests, handle the search reduce phase, and distribute bulk
- indexing. Essentially, coordinating only nodes behave as smart load balancers.
- Coordinating only nodes can benefit large clusters by offloading the
- coordinating node role from data and master-eligible nodes. They join the
- cluster and receive the full <<cluster-state,cluster state>>, like every other
- node, and they use the cluster state to route requests directly to the
- appropriate place(s).
- WARNING: Adding too many coordinating only nodes to a cluster can increase the
- burden on the entire cluster because the elected master node must await
- acknowledgement of cluster state updates from every node! The benefit of
- coordinating only nodes should not be overstated -- data nodes can happily
- serve the same purpose.
- To create a dedicated coordinating node, set:
- [source,yaml]
- -------------------
- node.master: false <1>
- node.data: false <2>
- node.ingest: false <3>
- cluster.remote.connect: false <4>
- -------------------
- <1> Disable the `node.master` role (enabled by default).
- <2> Disable the `node.data` role (enabled by default).
- <3> Disable the `node.ingest` role (enabled by default).
- <4> Disable cross-cluster search (enabled by default).
- ifdef::include-xpack[]
- NOTE: These settings apply only when {xpack} is not installed. To create a
- dedicated coordinating node when {xpack} is installed, see <<modules-node-xpack,{xpack} node settings>>.
- endif::include-xpack[]
- [float]
- == Node data path settings
- [float]
- [[data-path]]
- === `path.data`
- Every data and master-eligible node requires access to a data directory where
- shards and index and cluster metadata will be stored. The `path.data` defaults
- to `$ES_HOME/data` but can be configured in the `elasticsearch.yml` config
- file an absolute path or a path relative to `$ES_HOME` as follows:
- [source,yaml]
- -----------------------
- path.data: /var/elasticsearch/data
- -----------------------
- Like all node settings, it can also be specified on the command line as:
- [source,sh]
- -----------------------
- ./bin/elasticsearch -Epath.data=/var/elasticsearch/data
- -----------------------
- TIP: When using the `.zip` or `.tar.gz` distributions, the `path.data` setting
- should be configured to locate the data directory outside the Elasticsearch
- home directory, so that the home directory can be deleted without deleting
- your data! The RPM and Debian distributions do this for you already.
- [float]
- [[max-local-storage-nodes]]
- === `node.max_local_storage_nodes`
- The <<data-path,data path>> can be shared by multiple nodes, even by nodes from different
- clusters. This is very useful for testing failover and different configurations on your development
- machine. In production, however, it is recommended to run only one node of Elasticsearch per server.
- By default, Elasticsearch is configured to prevent more than one node from sharing the same data
- path. To allow for more than one node (e.g., on your development machine), use the setting
- `node.max_local_storage_nodes` and set this to a positive integer larger than one.
- WARNING: Never run different node types (i.e. master, data) from the same data directory. This can
- lead to unexpected data loss.
- [float]
- == Other node settings
- More node settings can be found in <<modules,Modules>>. Of particular note are
- the <<cluster.name,`cluster.name`>>, the <<node.name,`node.name`>> and the
- <<modules-network,network settings>>.
- ifdef::include-xpack[]
- include::ml-node.asciidoc[]
- endif::include-xpack[]
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