split-index.asciidoc 8.9 KB

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  1. [[indices-split-index]]
  2. === Split index API
  3. ++++
  4. <titleabbrev>Split index</titleabbrev>
  5. ++++
  6. Splits an existing index into a new index with more primary shards.
  7. [source,console]
  8. ----
  9. POST /twitter/_split/split-twitter-index
  10. {
  11. "settings": {
  12. "index.number_of_shards": 2
  13. }
  14. }
  15. ----
  16. // TEST[s/^/PUT twitter\n{"settings":{"blocks.write":true}}\n/]
  17. [[split-index-api-request]]
  18. ==== {api-request-title}
  19. `POST /<index>/_split/<target-index>`
  20. `PUT /<index>/_split/<target-index>`
  21. [[split-index-api-prereqs]]
  22. ==== {api-prereq-title}
  23. Before you can split an index:
  24. * The index must be read-only.
  25. * The <<cluster-health, cluster health>> status must be green.
  26. You can do make an index read-only
  27. with the following request:
  28. [source,console]
  29. --------------------------------------------------
  30. PUT /my_source_index/_settings
  31. {
  32. "settings": {
  33. "index.blocks.write": true <1>
  34. }
  35. }
  36. --------------------------------------------------
  37. // TEST[s/^/PUT my_source_index\n/]
  38. <1> Prevents write operations to this index while still allowing metadata
  39. changes like deleting the index.
  40. The current write index on a data stream cannot be split. In order to split
  41. the current write index, the data stream must first be
  42. <<rollover-data-stream-ex,rolled over>> so that a new write index is created
  43. and then the previous write index can be split.
  44. [[split-index-api-desc]]
  45. ==== {api-description-title}
  46. The split index API allows you to split an existing index into a new index,
  47. where each original primary shard is split into two or more primary shards in
  48. the new index.
  49. The number of times the index can be split (and the number of shards that each
  50. original shard can be split into) is determined by the
  51. `index.number_of_routing_shards` setting. The number of routing shards
  52. specifies the hashing space that is used internally to distribute documents
  53. across shards with consistent hashing. For instance, a 5 shard index with
  54. `number_of_routing_shards` set to `30` (`5 x 2 x 3`) could be split by a
  55. factor of `2` or `3`. In other words, it could be split as follows:
  56. * `5` -> `10` -> `30` (split by 2, then by 3)
  57. * `5` -> `15` -> `30` (split by 3, then by 2)
  58. * `5` -> `30` (split by 6)
  59. While you can set the `index.number_of_routing_shards` setting explicitly at
  60. index creation time, the default value depends upon the number of primary
  61. shards in the original index. The default is designed to allow you to split
  62. by factors of 2 up to a maximum of 1024 shards. However, the original number
  63. of primary shards must taken into account. For instance, an index created
  64. with 5 primary shards could be split into 10, 20, 40, 80, 160, 320, or a
  65. maximum of 640 shards (with a single split action or multiple split actions).
  66. If the original index contains one primary shard (or a multi-shard index has
  67. been <<indices-shrink-index,shrunk>> down to a single primary shard), then the
  68. index may by split into an arbitrary number of shards greater than 1. The
  69. properties of the default number of routing shards will then apply to the
  70. newly split index.
  71. [[how-split-works]]
  72. ===== How splitting works
  73. A split operation:
  74. . Creates a new target index with the same definition as the source
  75. index, but with a larger number of primary shards.
  76. . Hard-links segments from the source index into the target index. (If
  77. the file system doesn't support hard-linking, then all segments are copied
  78. into the new index, which is a much more time consuming process.)
  79. . Hashes all documents again, after low level files are created, to delete
  80. documents that belong to a different shard.
  81. . Recovers the target index as though it were a closed index which
  82. had just been re-opened.
  83. [[incremental-resharding]]
  84. ===== Why doesn't Elasticsearch support incremental resharding?
  85. Going from `N` shards to `N+1` shards, aka. incremental resharding, is indeed a
  86. feature that is supported by many key-value stores. Adding a new shard and
  87. pushing new data to this new shard only is not an option: this would likely be
  88. an indexing bottleneck, and figuring out which shard a document belongs to
  89. given its `_id`, which is necessary for get, delete and update requests, would
  90. become quite complex. This means that we need to rebalance existing data using
  91. a different hashing scheme.
  92. The most common way that key-value stores do this efficiently is by using
  93. consistent hashing. Consistent hashing only requires `1/N`-th of the keys to
  94. be relocated when growing the number of shards from `N` to `N+1`. However
  95. Elasticsearch's unit of storage, shards, are Lucene indices. Because of their
  96. search-oriented data structure, taking a significant portion of a Lucene index,
  97. be it only 5% of documents, deleting them and indexing them on another shard
  98. typically comes with a much higher cost than with a key-value store. This cost
  99. is kept reasonable when growing the number of shards by a multiplicative factor
  100. as described in the above section: this allows Elasticsearch to perform the
  101. split locally, which in-turn allows to perform the split at the index level
  102. rather than reindexing documents that need to move, as well as using hard links
  103. for efficient file copying.
  104. In the case of append-only data, it is possible to get more flexibility by
  105. creating a new index and pushing new data to it, while adding an alias that
  106. covers both the old and the new index for read operations. Assuming that the
  107. old and new indices have respectively +M+ and +N+ shards, this has no overhead
  108. compared to searching an index that would have +M+N+ shards.
  109. [[split-index]]
  110. ===== Split an index
  111. To split `my_source_index` into a new index called `my_target_index`, issue
  112. the following request:
  113. [source,console]
  114. --------------------------------------------------
  115. POST /my_source_index/_split/my_target_index
  116. {
  117. "settings": {
  118. "index.number_of_shards": 2
  119. }
  120. }
  121. --------------------------------------------------
  122. // TEST[continued]
  123. The above request returns immediately once the target index has been added to
  124. the cluster state -- it doesn't wait for the split operation to start.
  125. [IMPORTANT]
  126. =====================================
  127. Indices can only be split if they satisfy the following requirements:
  128. * the target index must not exist
  129. * The source index must have fewer primary shards than the target index.
  130. * The number of primary shards in the target index must be a multiple of the
  131. number of primary shards in the source index.
  132. * The node handling the split process must have sufficient free disk space to
  133. accommodate a second copy of the existing index.
  134. =====================================
  135. The `_split` API is similar to the <<indices-create-index, `create index` API>>
  136. and accepts `settings` and `aliases` parameters for the target index:
  137. [source,console]
  138. --------------------------------------------------
  139. POST /my_source_index/_split/my_target_index
  140. {
  141. "settings": {
  142. "index.number_of_shards": 5 <1>
  143. },
  144. "aliases": {
  145. "my_search_indices": {}
  146. }
  147. }
  148. --------------------------------------------------
  149. // TEST[s/^/PUT my_source_index\n{"settings": {"index.blocks.write": true, "index.number_of_shards": "1"}}\n/]
  150. <1> The number of shards in the target index. This must be a multiple of the
  151. number of shards in the source index.
  152. NOTE: Mappings may not be specified in the `_split` request.
  153. [[monitor-split]]
  154. ===== Monitor the split process
  155. The split process can be monitored with the <<cat-recovery,`_cat recovery`
  156. API>>, or the <<cluster-health, `cluster health` API>> can be used to wait
  157. until all primary shards have been allocated by setting the `wait_for_status`
  158. parameter to `yellow`.
  159. The `_split` API returns as soon as the target index has been added to the
  160. cluster state, before any shards have been allocated. At this point, all
  161. shards are in the state `unassigned`. If, for any reason, the target index
  162. can't be allocated, its primary shard will remain `unassigned` until it
  163. can be allocated on that node.
  164. Once the primary shard is allocated, it moves to state `initializing`, and the
  165. split process begins. When the split operation completes, the shard will
  166. become `active`. At that point, Elasticsearch will try to allocate any
  167. replicas and may decide to relocate the primary shard to another node.
  168. [[split-wait-active-shards]]
  169. ===== Wait for active shards
  170. Because the split operation creates a new index to split the shards to,
  171. the <<create-index-wait-for-active-shards,wait for active shards>> setting
  172. on index creation applies to the split index action as well.
  173. [[split-index-api-path-params]]
  174. ==== {api-path-parms-title}
  175. `<index>`::
  176. (Required, string)
  177. Name of the source index to split.
  178. include::{es-repo-dir}/rest-api/common-parms.asciidoc[tag=target-index]
  179. [[split-index-api-query-params]]
  180. ==== {api-query-parms-title}
  181. include::{es-repo-dir}/rest-api/common-parms.asciidoc[tag=wait_for_active_shards]
  182. include::{es-repo-dir}/rest-api/common-parms.asciidoc[tag=timeoutparms]
  183. [[split-index-api-request-body]]
  184. ==== {api-request-body-title}
  185. include::{es-repo-dir}/rest-api/common-parms.asciidoc[tag=target-index-aliases]
  186. include::{es-repo-dir}/rest-api/common-parms.asciidoc[tag=target-index-settings]