[[client]] == Client You can use the *Java client* in multiple ways: * Perform standard <>, <>, <> and <> operations on an existing cluster * Perform administrative tasks on a running cluster * Start full nodes when you want to run Elasticsearch embedded in your own application or when you want to launch unit or integration tests Obtaining an elasticsearch `Client` is simple. The most common way to get a client is by: 1. Creating an embedded <> that acts as a node within a cluster. 2. Requesting a `Client` from your embedded `Node`. Another manner is by creating a <> that connects to a cluster. *Important:* ______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Please note that you are encouraged to use the same version on client and cluster sides. You may hit some incompatibility issues when mixing major versions. ______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ [[node-client]] === Node Client Instantiating a node based client is the simplest way to get a `Client` that can execute operations against elasticsearch. [source,java] -------------------------------------------------- // on startup Node node = new Node(Settings.EMPTY).start(); Client client = node.client(); // on shutdown node.close(); -------------------------------------------------- When you start a `Node`, it joins an elasticsearch cluster. You can have different clusters by simply setting the `cluster.name` setting, or explicitly using the `clusterName` method on the builder. You can define `cluster.name` in the `/src/main/resources/elasticsearch.yml` file in your project. As long as `elasticsearch.yml` is present in the classpath, it will be used when you start your node. [source,yaml] -------------------------------------------------- cluster.name: yourclustername -------------------------------------------------- Or in Java: [source,java] -------------------------------------------------- Node node = nodeBuilder().clusterName("yourclustername").node(); Client client = node.client(); -------------------------------------------------- The benefit of using the `Client` is the fact that operations are automatically routed to the node(s) the operations need to be executed on, without performing a "double hop". For example, the index operation will automatically be executed on the shard that it will end up existing at. When you start a `Node`, the most important decision is whether it should hold data or not. In other words, should indices and shards be allocated to it. Many times we would like to have the clients just be clients, without shards being allocated to them. This is simple to configure by setting either `node.data` setting to `false` or `node.client` to `true` (the `NodeBuilder` respective helper methods on it): [source,java] -------------------------------------------------- // on startup // Embedded node clients behave just like standalone nodes, // which means that they will leave the HTTP port open! Node node = new Node(Settings.settingsBuilder() .put("http.enabled", false) .put("node.client", true).build()) .start(); Client client = node.client(); // on shutdown node.close(); -------------------------------------------------- Another common usage is to start the `Node` and use the `Client` in unit/integration tests. In such a case, we would like to start a "local" `Node` (with a "local" discovery and transport). Again, this is just a matter of a simple setting when starting the `Node`. Note, "local" here means local on the JVM (well, actually class loader) level, meaning that two *local* servers started within the same JVM will discover themselves and form a cluster. [source,java] -------------------------------------------------- // on startup Node node = new Node(Settings.builder().put("node.local", true).build()).start(); Client client = node.client(); // on shutdown node.close(); -------------------------------------------------- [[node-client-downsides]] ==== Node Client Downsides Embedding a node client into your application is the easiest way to connect to an Elasticsearch cluster, but it carries some downsides. - Frequently starting and stopping one or more node clients creates unnecessary noise across the cluster. - Embedded node client will respond to outside requests, just like any other client. ** You almost always want to disable HTTP for an _embedded_ node client. [[transport-client]] === Transport Client The `TransportClient` connects remotely to an Elasticsearch cluster using the transport module. It does not join the cluster, but simply gets one or more initial transport addresses and communicates with them in round robin fashion on each action (though most actions will probably be "two hop" operations). [source,java] -------------------------------------------------- // on startup Client client = TransportClient.builder().build() .addTransportAddress(new InetSocketTransportAddress(InetAddress.getByName("host1"), 9300)) .addTransportAddress(new InetSocketTransportAddress(InetAddress.getByName("host2"), 9300)); // on shutdown client.close(); -------------------------------------------------- Note that you have to set the cluster name if you use one different than "elasticsearch": [source,java] -------------------------------------------------- Settings settings = Settings.settingsBuilder() .put("cluster.name", "myClusterName").build(); Client client = TransportClient.builder().settings(settings).build(); //Add transport addresses and do something with the client... -------------------------------------------------- The client allows sniffing the rest of the cluster, which adds data nodes into its list of machines to use. In this case, note that the IP addresses used will be the ones that the other nodes were started with (the "publish" address). In order to enable it, set the `client.transport.sniff` to `true`: [source,java] -------------------------------------------------- Settings settings = Settings.settingsBuilder() .put("client.transport.sniff", true).build(); TransportClient client = TransportClient.builder().settings(settings).build(); -------------------------------------------------- Other transport client level settings include: [cols="<,<",options="header",] |======================================================================= |Parameter |Description |`client.transport.ignore_cluster_name` |Set to `true` to ignore cluster name validation of connected nodes. (since 0.19.4) |`client.transport.ping_timeout` |The time to wait for a ping response from a node. Defaults to `5s`. |`client.transport.nodes_sampler_interval` |How often to sample / ping the nodes listed and connected. Defaults to `5s`. |=======================================================================