OpenSearch/plugins/cloud-azure
Jason Tedor b0564cb75c Add integration test for Azure snapshot repository bug
This commit adds an integration test that replicates the Azure snapshot repository bug in elastic/elasticsearch-cloud-azure#51.

Closes elastic/elasticsearch-cloud-azure#100
2015-07-27 13:52:51 -04:00
..
licenses [build] cloud-aws doesn't register s3 repos anymore 2015-07-08 15:37:24 +02:00
rest-api-spec/test/cloud_azure Added rest tests for cloud plugins 2015-07-07 19:26:31 +02:00
src Add integration test for Azure snapshot repository bug 2015-07-27 13:52:51 -04:00
LICENSE.txt Added LICENSE and NOTICE files for all plugins 2015-06-23 12:50:31 +02:00
NOTICE.txt Added LICENSE and NOTICE files for all plugins 2015-06-23 12:50:31 +02:00
README.md CLITool: Port PluginManager to use CLITool 2015-07-21 14:15:39 +02:00
pom.xml Refactor pluginservice 2015-07-22 10:45:45 -04:00

README.md

Azure Cloud Plugin for Elasticsearch

The Azure Cloud plugin allows to use Azure API for the unicast discovery mechanism.

In order to install the plugin, run:

bin/plugin install elasticsearch/elasticsearch-cloud-azure/2.6.1

You need to install a version matching your Elasticsearch version:

Elasticsearch Azure Cloud Plugin Docs
master Build from source See below
es-1.x Build from source 2.7.0-SNAPSHOT
es-1.5 2.6.1 2.6.1
es-1.4 2.5.2 2.5.2
es-1.3 2.4.0 2.4.0
es-1.2 2.3.0 2.3.0
es-1.1 2.2.0 2.2.0
es-1.0 2.1.0 2.1.0
es-0.90 1.0.0.alpha1 1.0.0.alpha1

To build a SNAPSHOT version, you need to build it with Maven:

mvn clean install
plugin install cloud-azure \
       --url file:target/releases/elasticsearch-cloud-azure-X.X.X-SNAPSHOT.zip

Azure Virtual Machine Discovery

Azure VM discovery allows to use the azure APIs to perform automatic discovery (similar to multicast in non hostile multicast environments). Here is a simple sample configuration:

cloud:
    azure:
        management:
             subscription.id: XXX-XXX-XXX-XXX
             cloud.service.name: es-demo-app
             keystore:
                   path: /path/to/azurekeystore.pkcs12
                   password: WHATEVER
                   type: pkcs12

discovery:
    type: azure

How to start (short story)

  • Create Azure instances
  • Install Elasticsearch
  • Install Azure plugin
  • Modify elasticsearch.yml file
  • Start Elasticsearch

Azure credential API settings

The following are a list of settings that can further control the credential API:

  • cloud.azure.management.keystore.path: /path/to/keystore
  • cloud.azure.management.keystore.type: pkcs12, jceks or jks. Defaults to pkcs12.
  • cloud.azure.management.keystore.password: your_password for the keystore
  • cloud.azure.management.subscription.id: your_azure_subscription_id
  • cloud.azure.management.cloud.service.name: your_azure_cloud_service_name

Note that in previous versions, it was:

cloud:
    azure:
        keystore: /path/to/keystore
        password: your_password_for_keystore
        subscription_id: your_azure_subscription_id
        service_name: your_azure_cloud_service_name

Advanced settings

The following are a list of settings that can further control the discovery:

  • discovery.azure.host.type: either public_ip or private_ip (default). Azure discovery will use the one you set to ping other nodes. This feature was not documented before but was existing under cloud.azure.host_type.
  • discovery.azure.endpoint.name: when using public_ip this setting is used to identify the endpoint name used to forward requests to elasticsearch (aka transport port name). Defaults to elasticsearch. In Azure management console, you could define an endpoint elasticsearch forwarding for example requests on public IP on port 8100 to the virtual machine on port 9300. This feature was not documented before but was existing under cloud.azure.port_name.
  • discovery.azure.deployment.name: deployment name if any. Defaults to the value set with cloud.azure.management.cloud.service.name.
  • discovery.azure.deployment.slot: either staging or production (default).

For example:

discovery:
    type: azure
    azure:
        host:
            type: private_ip
        endpoint:
            name: elasticsearch
        deployment:
            name: your_azure_cloud_service_name
            slot: production

How to start (long story)

We will expose here one strategy which is to hide our Elasticsearch cluster from outside.

With this strategy, only VM behind this same virtual port can talk to each other. That means that with this mode, you can use elasticsearch unicast discovery to build a cluster.

Best, you can use the elasticsearch-cloud-azure plugin to let it fetch information about your nodes using azure API.

Prerequisites

Before starting, you need to have:

  • A Windows Azure account
  • SSH keys and certificate
  • OpenSSL that isn't from MacPorts, specifically OpenSSL 1.0.1f 6 Jan 2014 doesn't seem to create a valid keypair for ssh. FWIW, OpenSSL 1.0.1c 10 May 2012 on Ubuntu 12.04 LTS is known to work.

You should follow this guide to learn how to create or use existing SSH keys. If you have already did it, you can skip the following.

Here is a description on how to generate SSH keys using openssl:

# You may want to use another dir than /tmp
cd /tmp
openssl req -x509 -nodes -days 365 -newkey rsa:2048 -keyout azure-private.key -out azure-certificate.pem
chmod 600 azure-private.key azure-certificate.pem
openssl x509 -outform der -in azure-certificate.pem -out azure-certificate.cer

Generate a keystore which will be used by the plugin to authenticate with a certificate all Azure API calls.

# Generate a keystore (azurekeystore.pkcs12)
# Transform private key to PEM format
openssl pkcs8 -topk8 -nocrypt -in azure-private.key -inform PEM -out azure-pk.pem -outform PEM
# Transform certificate to PEM format
openssl x509 -inform der -in azure-certificate.cer -out azure-cert.pem
cat azure-cert.pem azure-pk.pem > azure.pem.txt
# You MUST enter a password!
openssl pkcs12 -export -in azure.pem.txt -out azurekeystore.pkcs12 -name azure -noiter -nomaciter

Upload the azure-certificate.cer file both in the elasticsearch Cloud Service (under Manage Certificates), and under Settings -> Manage Certificates.

Important: when prompted for a password, you need to enter a non empty one.

See this guide to have more details on how to create keys for Azure.

Once done, you need to upload your certificate in Azure:

  • Go to the management console.
  • Sign in using your account.
  • Click on Portal.
  • Go to Settings (bottom of the left list)
  • On the bottom bar, click on Upload and upload your azure-certificate.cer file.

You may want to use Windows Azure Command-Line Tool:

  • Install NodeJS, for example using homebrew on MacOS X:
brew install node
  • Install Azure tools:
sudo npm install azure-cli -g
  • Download and import your azure settings:
# This will open a browser and will download a .publishsettings file
azure account download

# Import this file (we have downloaded it to /tmp)
# Note, it will create needed files in ~/.azure. You can remove azure.publishsettings when done.
azure account import /tmp/azure.publishsettings

Creating your first instance

You need to have a storage account available. Check Azure Blob Storage documentation for more information.

You will need to choose the operating system you want to run on. To get a list of official available images, run:

azure vm image list

Let's say we are going to deploy an Ubuntu image on an extra small instance in West Europe:

  • Azure cluster name: azure-elasticsearch-cluster
  • Image: b39f27a8b8c64d52b05eac6a62ebad85__Ubuntu-13_10-amd64-server-20130808-alpha3-en-us-30GB
  • VM Name: myesnode1
  • VM Size: extrasmall
  • Location: West Europe
  • Login: elasticsearch
  • Password: password1234!!

Using command line:

azure vm create azure-elasticsearch-cluster \
                b39f27a8b8c64d52b05eac6a62ebad85__Ubuntu-13_10-amd64-server-20130808-alpha3-en-us-30GB \
                --vm-name myesnode1 \
                --location "West Europe" \
                --vm-size extrasmall \
                --ssh 22 \
                --ssh-cert /tmp/azure-certificate.pem \
                elasticsearch password1234\!\!

You should see something like:

info:    Executing command vm create
+ Looking up image
+ Looking up cloud service
+ Creating cloud service
+ Retrieving storage accounts
+ Configuring certificate
+ Creating VM
info:    vm create command OK

Now, your first instance is started. You need to install Elasticsearch on it.

Note on SSH

You need to give the private key and username each time you log on your instance:

ssh -i ~/.ssh/azure-private.key elasticsearch@myescluster.cloudapp.net

But you can also define it once in ~/.ssh/config file:

Host *.cloudapp.net
 User elasticsearch
 StrictHostKeyChecking no
 UserKnownHostsFile=/dev/null
 IdentityFile ~/.ssh/azure-private.key
# First, copy your keystore on this machine
scp /tmp/azurekeystore.pkcs12 azure-elasticsearch-cluster.cloudapp.net:/home/elasticsearch

# Then, connect to your instance using SSH
ssh azure-elasticsearch-cluster.cloudapp.net

Once connected, install Elasticsearch:

# Install Latest Java version
# Read http://www.webupd8.org/2012/01/install-oracle-java-jdk-7-in-ubuntu-via.html for details
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:webupd8team/java
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install oracle-java7-installer

# If you want to install OpenJDK instead
# sudo apt-get update
# sudo apt-get install openjdk-7-jre-headless

# Download Elasticsearch
curl -s https://download.elasticsearch.org/elasticsearch/elasticsearch/elasticsearch-1.0.0.deb -o elasticsearch-1.0.0.deb

# Prepare Elasticsearch installation
sudo dpkg -i elasticsearch-1.0.0.deb

Check that elasticsearch is running:

curl http://localhost:9200/

This command should give you a JSON result:

{
  "status" : 200,
  "name" : "Living Colossus",
  "version" : {
    "number" : "1.0.0",
    "build_hash" : "a46900e9c72c0a623d71b54016357d5f94c8ea32",
    "build_timestamp" : "2014-02-12T16:18:34Z",
    "build_snapshot" : false,
    "lucene_version" : "4.6"
  },
  "tagline" : "You Know, for Search"
}

Install elasticsearch cloud azure plugin

# Stop elasticsearch
sudo service elasticsearch stop

# Install the plugin
sudo /usr/share/elasticsearch/bin/plugin install elasticsearch/elasticsearch-cloud-azure/2.6.1

# Configure it
sudo vi /etc/elasticsearch/elasticsearch.yml

And add the following lines:

# If you don't remember your account id, you may get it with `azure account list`
cloud:
    azure:
        management:
             subscription.id: your_azure_subscription_id
             cloud.service.name: your_azure_cloud_service_name
             keystore:
                   path: /home/elasticsearch/azurekeystore.pkcs12
                   password: your_password_for_keystore

discovery:
    type: azure

# Recommended (warning: non durable disk)
# path.data: /mnt/resource/elasticsearch/data

Restart elasticsearch:

sudo service elasticsearch start

If anything goes wrong, check your logs in /var/log/elasticsearch.

Scaling Out!

You need first to create an image of your previous machine. Disconnect from your machine and run locally the following commands:

# Shutdown the instance
azure vm shutdown myesnode1

# Create an image from this instance (it could take some minutes)
azure vm capture myesnode1 esnode-image --delete

# Note that the previous instance has been deleted (mandatory)
# So you need to create it again and BTW create other instances.

azure vm create azure-elasticsearch-cluster \
                esnode-image \
                --vm-name myesnode1 \
                --location "West Europe" \
                --vm-size extrasmall \
                --ssh 22 \
                --ssh-cert /tmp/azure-certificate.pem \
                elasticsearch password1234\!\!

Note: It could happen that azure changes the endpoint public IP address. DNS propagation could take some minutes before you can connect again using name. You can get from azure the IP address if needed, using:

# Look at Network `Endpoints 0 Vip`
azure vm show myesnode1

Let's start more instances!

for x in $(seq  2 10)
	do
		echo "Launching azure instance #$x..."
		azure vm create azure-elasticsearch-cluster \
		                esnode-image \
		                --vm-name myesnode$x \
		                --vm-size extrasmall \
		                --ssh $((21 + $x)) \
		                --ssh-cert /tmp/azure-certificate.pem \
		                --connect \
		                elasticsearch password1234\!\!
	done

If you want to remove your running instances:

azure vm delete myesnode1

Azure Repository

To enable Azure repositories, you have first to set your azure storage settings in elasticsearch.yml file:

cloud:
    azure:
        storage:
            account: your_azure_storage_account
            key: your_azure_storage_key

For information, in previous version of the azure plugin, settings were:

cloud:
    azure:
        storage_account: your_azure_storage_account
        storage_key: your_azure_storage_key

The Azure repository supports following settings:

  • container: Container name. Defaults to elasticsearch-snapshots
  • base_path: Specifies the path within container to repository data. Defaults to empty (root directory).
  • chunk_size: Big files can be broken down into chunks during snapshotting if needed. The chunk size can be specified in bytes or by using size value notation, i.e. 1g, 10m, 5k. Defaults to 64m (64m max)
  • compress: When set to true metadata files are stored in compressed format. This setting doesn't affect index files that are already compressed by default. Defaults to false.

Some examples, using scripts:

# The simpliest one
$ curl -XPUT 'http://localhost:9200/_snapshot/my_backup1' -d '{
    "type": "azure"
}'

# With some settings
$ curl -XPUT 'http://localhost:9200/_snapshot/my_backup2' -d '{
    "type": "azure",
    "settings": {
        "container": "backup_container",
        "base_path": "backups",
        "chunk_size": "32m",
        "compress": true
    }
}'

Example using Java:

client.admin().cluster().preparePutRepository("my_backup3")
    .setType("azure").setSettings(Settings.settingsBuilder()
        .put(Storage.CONTAINER, "backup_container")
        .put(Storage.CHUNK_SIZE, new ByteSizeValue(32, ByteSizeUnit.MB))
    ).get();

Repository validation rules

According to the containers naming guide, a container name must be a valid DNS name, conforming to the following naming rules:

  • Container names must start with a letter or number, and can contain only letters, numbers, and the dash (-) character.
  • Every dash (-) character must be immediately preceded and followed by a letter or number; consecutive dashes are not permitted in container names.
  • All letters in a container name must be lowercase.
  • Container names must be from 3 through 63 characters long.

Testing

Integrations tests in this plugin require working Azure configuration and therefore disabled by default. To enable tests prepare a config file elasticsearch.yml with the following content:

cloud:
  azure:
    storage:
      account: "YOUR-AZURE-STORAGE-NAME"
      key: "YOUR-AZURE-STORAGE-KEY"

Replaces account, key with your settings. Please, note that the test will delete all snapshot/restore related files in the specified bucket.

To run test:

mvn -Dtests.azure=true -Dtests.config=/path/to/config/file/elasticsearch.yml clean test

Working around a bug in Windows SMB and Java on windows

When using a shared file system based on the SMB protocol (like Azure File Service) to store indices, the way Lucene open index segment files is with a write only flag. This is the correct way to open the files, as they will only be used for writes and allows different FS implementations to optimize for it. Sadly, in windows with SMB, this disables the cache manager, causing writes to be slow. This has been described in LUCENE-6176, but it affects each and every Java program out there!. This need and must be fixed outside of ES and/or Lucene, either in windows or OpenJDK. For now, we are providing an experimental support to open the files with read flag, but this should be considered experimental and the correct way to fix it is in OpenJDK or Windows.

The Azure Cloud plugin provides two storage types optimized for SMB:

  • smb_mmap_fs: a SMB specific implementation of the default mmap fs
  • smb_simple_fs: a SMB specific implementation of the default simple fs

To use one of these specific storage types, you need to install the Azure Cloud plugin and restart the node. Then configure Elasticsearch to set the storage type you want.

This can be configured for all indices by adding this to the elasticsearch.yml file:

index.store.type: smb_simple_fs

Note that setting will be applied for newly created indices.

It can also be set on a per-index basis at index creation time:

curl -XPUT localhost:9200/my_index -d '{
   "settings": {
       "index.store.type": "smb_mmap_fs"
   }
}'

License

This software is licensed under the Apache 2 license, quoted below.

Copyright 2009-2014 Elasticsearch <http://www.elasticsearch.org>

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not
use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of
the License at

    http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT
WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under
the License.