The indexing service uses several of the global configs in [Configuration](Configuration.html) and has the following set of configurations as well:
### Must be set on Overlord and Middle Manager
#### Node Configs
|Property|Description|Default|
|--------|-----------|-------|
|`druid.host`|The host for the current node. This is used to advertise the current processes location as reachable from another node and should generally be specified such that `http://${druid.host}/` could actually talk to this process|none|
|`druid.port`|This is the port to actually listen on; unless port mapping is used, this will be the same port as is on `druid.host`|none|
|`druid.service`|The name of the service. This is used as a dimension when emitting metrics and alerts to differentiate between the various services|none|
#### Task Logging
If you are running the indexing service in remote mode, the task logs must S3 or HDFS.
|Property|Description|Default|
|--------|-----------|-------|
|`druid.indexer.logs.type`|Choices:noop, s3, hdfs, file. Where to store task logs|file|
|`druid.indexer.storage.type`|Choices are "local" or "metadata". Indicates whether incoming tasks should be stored locally (in heap) or in metadata storage. Storing incoming tasks in metadata storage allows for tasks to be resumed if the overlord should fail.|local|
|`druid.indexer.storage.recentlyFinishedThreshold`|A duration of time to store task results.|PT24H|
|`druid.indexer.queue.maxSize`|Maximum number of active tasks at one time.|Integer.MAX_VALUE|
|`druid.indexer.queue.startDelay`|Sleep this long before starting overlord queue management. This can be useful to give a cluster time to re-orient itself after e.g. a widespread network issue.|PT1M|
|`druid.indexer.queue.restartDelay`|Sleep this long when overlord queue management throws an exception before trying again.|PT30S|
|`druid.indexer.queue.storageSyncRate`|Sync overlord state this often with an underlying task persistence mechanism.|PT1M|
The following configs only apply if the overlord is running in remote mode:
|Property|Description|Default|
|--------|-----------|-------|
|`druid.indexer.runner.taskAssignmentTimeout`|How long to wait after a task as been assigned to a middle manager before throwing an error.|PT5M|
Issuing a GET request at the same URL will return the current worker config spec that is currently in place. The worker config spec list above is just a sample for EC2 and it is possible to extend the code base for other deployment environments. A description of the worker config spec is shown below.
|`selectStrategy`|How to assign tasks to middlemanagers. Choices are `fillCapacity`, `fillCapacityWithAffinity`, and `equalDistribution`.|fillCapacity|
|`availabilityZone`|What availability zone to run in.|none|
|`nodeData`|A JSON object that describes how to launch new nodes.|none; required|
|`userData`|A JSON object that describes how to configure new nodes. If you have set druid.indexer.autoscale.workerVersion, this must have a versionReplacementString. Otherwise, a versionReplacementString is not necessary.|none; optional|
### MiddleManager Configs
Middle managers pass their configurations down to their child peons. The middle manager requires the following configs:
|`druid.indexer.runner.allowedPrefixes`|Whitelist of prefixes for configs that can be passed down to child peons.|"com.metamx", "druid", "io.druid", "user.timezone","file.encoding"|
|`druid.indexer.runner.compressZnodes`|Indicates whether or not the middle managers should compress Znodes.|true|
|`druid.indexer.runner.classpath`|Java classpath for the peon.|System.getProperty("java.class.path")|
|`druid.worker.ip`|The IP of the worker.|localhost|
|`druid.worker.version`|Version identifier for the middle manager.|0|
|`druid.worker.capacity`|Maximum number of tasks the middle manager can accept.|Number of available processors - 1|
#### Peon Configs
Although peons inherit the configurations of their parent middle managers, explicit child peon configs in middlemanager can be set by prefixing them with:
```
druid.indexer.fork.property
```
Additional peon configs include:
|Property|Description|Default|
|--------|-----------|-------|
|`druid.peon.mode`|Choices are "local" and "remote". Setting this to local means you intend to run the peon as a standalone node (Not recommended).|remote|
|`druid.indexer.task.baseDir`|Base temporary working directory.|/tmp|
|`druid.indexer.task.baseTaskDir`|Base temporary working directory for tasks.|/tmp/persistent/tasks|
|`druid.indexer.task.hadoopWorkingPath`|Temporary working directory for Hadoop tasks.|/tmp/druid-indexing|
|`druid.indexer.task.defaultRowFlushBoundary`|Highest row count before persisting to disk. Used for indexing generating tasks.|50000|
|`druid.indexer.task.defaultHadoopCoordinates`|Hadoop version to use with HadoopIndexTasks that do not request a particular version.|org.apache.hadoop:hadoop-client:2.3.0|
|`druid.indexer.task.chathandler.type`|Choices are "noop" and "announce". Certain tasks will use service discovery to announce an HTTP endpoint that events can be posted to.|noop|
If the peon is running in remote mode, there must be an overlord up and running. Peons in remote mode can set the following configurations:
|Property|Description|Default|
|--------|-----------|-------|
|`druid.peon.taskActionClient.retry.minWait`|The minimum retry time to communicate with overlord.|PT1M|
|`druid.peon.taskActionClient.retry.maxWait`|The maximum retry time to communicate with overlord.|PT10M|
|`druid.peon.taskActionClient.retry.maxRetryCount`|The maximum number of retries to communicate with overlord.|10|