Update docs for node specifications (#30468)

Expands and clarifies exactly what is and isn't allowed when specifying a
subset of the nodes as targets of a cluster API, and adds missing links to this
from the hot threads and cluster stats API docs.

Co-authored-by: David Turner <david.turner@elastic.co>
Co-authored-by: Yu <yu.liu003@gmail.com>
This commit is contained in:
Yu 2018-08-20 15:21:31 +02:00 committed by David Turner
parent f853f6f03c
commit a883e7dffc
3 changed files with 83 additions and 16 deletions

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@ -6,23 +6,70 @@
["float",id="cluster-nodes"]
== Node specification
Most cluster level APIs allow to specify which nodes to execute on (for
example, getting the node stats for a node). Nodes can be identified in
the APIs either using their internal node id, the node name, address,
custom attributes, or just the `_local` node receiving the request. For
example, here are some sample executions of nodes info:
Some cluster-level APIs may operate on a subset of the nodes which can be
specified with _node filters_. For example, the <<tasks,Task Management>>,
<<cluster-nodes-stats,Nodes Stats>>, and <<cluster-nodes-info,Nodes Info>> APIs
can all report results from a filtered set of nodes rather than from all nodes.
_Node filters_ are written as a comma-separated list of individual filters,
each of which adds or removes nodes from the chosen subset. Each filter can be
one of the following:
* `_all`, to add all nodes to the subset.
* `_local`, to add the local node to the subset.
* `_master`, to add the currently-elected master node to the subset.
* a node id or name, to add this node to the subset.
* an IP address or hostname, to add all matching nodes to the subset.
* a pattern, using `*` wildcards, which adds all nodes to the subset
whose name, address or hostname matches the pattern.
* `master:true`, `data:true`, `ingest:true` or `coordinating_only:true`, which
respectively add to the subset all master-eligible nodes, all data nodes,
all ingest nodes, and all coordinating-only nodes.
* `master:false`, `data:false`, `ingest:false` or `coordinating_only:false`,
which respectively remove from the subset all master-eligible nodes, all data
nodes, all ingest nodes, and all coordinating-only nodes.
* a pair of patterns, using `*` wildcards, of the form `attrname:attrvalue`,
which adds to the subset all nodes with a custom node attribute whose name
and value match the respective patterns. Custom node attributes are
configured by setting properties in the configuration file of the form
`node.attr.attrname: attrvalue`.
NOTE: node filters run in the order in which they are given, which is important
if using filters that remove nodes from the set. For example
`_all,master:false` means all the nodes except the master-eligible ones, but
`master:false,_all` means the same as `_all` because the `_all` filter runs
after the `master:false` filter.
NOTE: if no filters are given, the default is to select all nodes. However, if
any filters are given then they run starting with an empty chosen subset. This
means that filters such as `master:false` which remove nodes from the chosen
subset are only useful if they come after some other filters. When used on its
own, `master:false` selects no nodes.
Here are some examples of the use of node filters with the
<<cluster-nodes-info,Nodes Info>> APIs.
[source,js]
--------------------------------------------------
# Local
# If no filters are given, the default is to select all nodes
GET /_nodes
# Explicitly select all nodes
GET /_nodes/_all
# Select just the local node
GET /_nodes/_local
# Address
GET /_nodes/10.0.0.3,10.0.0.4
GET /_nodes/10.0.0.*
# Names
# Select the elected master node
GET /_nodes/_master
# Select nodes by name, which can include wildcards
GET /_nodes/node_name_goes_here
GET /_nodes/node_name_goes_*
# Attributes (set something like node.attr.rack: 2 in the config)
# Select nodes by address, which can include wildcards
GET /_nodes/10.0.0.3,10.0.0.4
GET /_nodes/10.0.0.*
# Select nodes by role
GET /_nodes/_all,master:false
GET /_nodes/data:true,ingest:true
GET /_nodes/coordinating_only:true
# Select nodes by custom attribute (e.g. with something like `node.attr.rack: 2` in the configuration file)
GET /_nodes/rack:2
GET /_nodes/ra*:2
GET /_nodes/ra*:2*

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@ -1,12 +1,23 @@
[[cluster-nodes-hot-threads]]
== Nodes hot_threads
An API allowing to get the current hot threads on each node in the
cluster. Endpoints are `/_nodes/hot_threads`, and
`/_nodes/{nodesIds}/hot_threads`.
This API yields a breakdown of the hot threads on each selected node in the
cluster. Its endpoints are `/_nodes/hot_threads` and
`/_nodes/{nodes}/hot_threads`:
The output is plain text with a breakdown of each node's top hot
threads. Parameters allowed are:
[source,js]
--------------------------------------------------
GET /_nodes/hot_threads
GET /_nodes/nodeId1,nodeId2/hot_threads
--------------------------------------------------
// CONSOLE
The first command gets the hot threads of all the nodes in the cluster. The
second command gets the hot threads of only `nodeId1` and `nodeId2`. Nodes can
be selected using <<cluster-nodes,node filters>>.
The output is plain text with a breakdown of each node's top hot threads. The
allowed parameters are:
[horizontal]
`threads`:: number of hot threads to provide, defaults to 3.

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@ -213,3 +213,12 @@ Will return, for example:
// 3. All of the numbers and strings on the right hand side of *every* field in
// the response are ignored. So we're really only asserting things about the
// the shape of this response, not the values in it.
This API can be restricted to a subset of the nodes using the `?nodeId`
parameter, which accepts <<cluster-nodes,node filters>>:
[source,js]
--------------------------------------------------
GET /_cluster/stats?nodeId=node1,node*,master:false
--------------------------------------------------
// CONSOLE