OpenSearch/docs/reference/ilm/overview-ilm.asciidoc

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[role="xpack"]
[testenv="basic"]
[[overview-index-lifecycle-management]]
== Index lifecycle management overview
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<titleabbrev>Overview</titleabbrev>
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You can create and apply {ilm-cap} ({ilm-init}) policies to automatically manage your indices
according to your performance, resiliency, and retention requirements.
Index lifecycle policies can trigger actions such as:
* **Rollover** -
include::../glossary.asciidoc[tag=rollover-def-short]
* **Shrink** -
include::../glossary.asciidoc[tag=shrink-def-short]
* **Force merge** -
include::../glossary.asciidoc[tag=force-merge-def-short]
* **Freeze** -
include::../glossary.asciidoc[tag=freeze-def-short]
* **Delete** - Permanently remove an index, including all of its data and metadata.
Typically, you associate a lifecycle policy with an index template so it is automatically applied
to new indices.
You can also apply a policy manually when you create an index.
{ilm-init} simplifies managing indices in hot-warm-cold architectures,
which are common when you're working with time-series data such as logs and metrics.
As an index ages, it moves through four possible phases:
* Hot--the index is actively being updated and queried.
* Warm--the index is no longer being updated, but is still being queried.
* Cold--the index is no longer being updated and is seldom queried. The
information still needs to be searchable, but it's okay if those queries are
slower.
* Delete--the index is no longer needed and can safely be deleted.
A lifecycle policy controls how an index moves between phases and
what actions to perform during each phase. You can specify:
* The maximum size or age at which you want to roll over to a new index.
* The point at which the index is no longer being updated and the number of
primary shards can be reduced.
* When to force a merge to permanently delete documents marked for deletion.
* The point at which the index can be moved to less performant hardware.
* The point at which the availability is not as critical and the number of
replicas can be reduced.
* When the index can be safely deleted.
For example, if you are indexing metrics data from a fleet of ATMs into
Elasticsearch, you might define a policy that says:
. When the index reaches 50GB, roll over to a new index.
. Move the old index into the warm stage, mark it read only, and shrink it down
to a single shard.
. After 7 days, move the index into the cold stage and move it to less expensive
hardware.
. Delete the index once the required 30 day retention period is reached.
[IMPORTANT]
===========================
To use {ilm-init}, all nodes in a cluster must run the same version.
Although it might be possible to create and apply policies in a mixed-version cluster,
there is no guarantee they will work as intended.
Attempting to use a policy that contains actions that aren't
supported on all nodes in a cluster will cause errors.
===========================