262 lines
8.9 KiB
Plaintext
262 lines
8.9 KiB
Plaintext
[[modules-remote-clusters]]
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== Remote clusters
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ifndef::include-xpack[]
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The _remote clusters_ module enables you to establish uni-directional
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connections to a remote cluster. This functionality is used in
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<<modules-cross-cluster-search,{ccs}>>.
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endif::[]
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ifdef::include-xpack[]
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The _remote clusters_ module enables you to establish uni-directional
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connections to a remote cluster. This functionality is used in
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{stack-ov}/xpack-ccr.html[{ccr}] and
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<<modules-cross-cluster-search,{ccs}>>.
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endif::[]
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Remote cluster connections work by configuring a remote cluster and connecting
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only to a limited number of nodes in that remote cluster. Each remote cluster
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is referenced by a name and a list of seed nodes. When a remote cluster is
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registered, its cluster state is retrieved from one of the seed nodes and up
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to three _gateway nodes_ are selected to be connected to as part of remote
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cluster requests. All the communication required between different clusters
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goes through the <<modules-transport,transport layer>>. Remote cluster
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connections consist of uni-directional connections from the coordinating
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node to the selected remote _gateway nodes_ only.
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[float]
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[[gateway-nodes-selection]]
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=== Gateway nodes selection
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The _gateway nodes_ selection depends on the following criteria:
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- *version*: Remote nodes must be compatible with the cluster they are
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registered to. This is subject to the same rules as <<rolling-upgrades>>.
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Any node can communicate with any other node on the same major version (e.g.
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6.0 can talk to any 6.x node). Only nodes on the last minor version of a
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certain major version can communicate with nodes on the following major
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version (e.g. 6.7 can communicate with 7.0, as well as any 7.x node, while
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6.6 or earlier cannot talk to any 7.x node). Note that version compatibility
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is symmetric, meaning that if 6.7 can communicate with 7.0, 7.0 can also
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communicate with 6.7. The matrix below summarizes compatibility as described
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above.
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[cols="^,^,^,^,^,^"]
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|====
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| Compatibility | 5.0->5.5 | 5.6 | 6.0->6.6 | 6.7 | 7.x
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| 5.0->5.5 | Yes | Yes | No | No | No
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| 5.6 | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No
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| 6.0->6.6 | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No
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| 6.7 | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes
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| 7.x | No | No | No | Yes | Yes
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|====
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- *role*: Dedicated master nodes never get selected.
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- *attributes*: You can tag which nodes should be selected
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(see <<remote-cluster-settings>>), though such tagged nodes still have
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to satisfy the two above requirements.
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[float]
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[[configuring-remote-clusters]]
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=== Configuring remote clusters
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You can configure remote clusters globally by using
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<<cluster-update-settings,cluster settings>>, which you can update dynamically.
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Alternatively, you can configure them locally on individual nodes by using the
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`elasticsearch.yml` file.
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If you specify the settings in `elasticsearch.yml` files, only the nodes with
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those settings can connect to the remote cluster. In other words, functionality
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that relies on remote cluster requests must be driven specifically from those
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nodes. For example:
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[source,yaml]
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--------------------------------
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cluster:
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remote:
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cluster_one: <1>
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seeds: 127.0.0.1:9300
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transport.ping_schedule: 30s <2>
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cluster_two:
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seeds: 127.0.0.1:9301
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transport.compress: true <3>
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skip_unavailable: true <4>
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--------------------------------
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<1> `cluster_one` and `cluster_two` are arbitrary _cluster aliases_ representing
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the connection to each cluster. These names are subsequently used to distinguish
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between local and remote indices.
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<2> A keep-alive ping is configured for `cluster_one`.
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<3> Compression is explicitly enabled for requests to `cluster_two`.
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<4> Disconnected remote clusters are optional for `cluster_two`.
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For more information about the optional transport settings, see
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<<modules-transport>>.
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If you use <<cluster-update-settings,cluster settings>>, the remote clusters
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are available on every node in the cluster. For example:
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------
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PUT _cluster/settings
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{
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"persistent": {
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"cluster": {
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"remote": {
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"cluster_one": {
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"seeds": [
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"127.0.0.1:9300"
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],
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"transport.ping_schedule": "30s"
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},
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"cluster_two": {
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"seeds": [
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"127.0.0.1:9301"
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],
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"transport.compress": true,
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"skip_unavailable": true
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},
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"cluster_three": {
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"seeds": [
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"127.0.0.1:9302"
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]
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}
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}
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}
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}
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}
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--------------------------------
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// CONSOLE
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// TEST[setup:host]
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// TEST[s/127.0.0.1:9300/\${transport_host}/]
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You can dynamically update the compression and ping schedule settings. However,
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you must re-include seeds in the settings update request. For example:
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------
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PUT _cluster/settings
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{
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"persistent": {
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"cluster": {
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"remote": {
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"cluster_one": {
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"seeds": [
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"127.0.0.1:9300"
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],
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"transport.ping_schedule": "60s"
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},
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"cluster_two": {
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"seeds": [
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"127.0.0.1:9301"
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],
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"transport.compress": false
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}
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}
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}
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}
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}
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--------------------------------
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// CONSOLE
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// TEST[continued]
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NOTE: When the compression or ping schedule settings change, all the existing
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node connections must close and re-open, which can cause in-flight requests to
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fail.
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A remote cluster can be deleted from the cluster settings by setting its seeds and optional settings to `null` :
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------
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PUT _cluster/settings
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{
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"persistent": {
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"cluster": {
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"remote": {
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"cluster_two": { <1>
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"seeds": null,
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"skip_unavailable": null,
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"transport": {
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"compress": null
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}
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}
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}
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}
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}
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}
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--------------------------------
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// CONSOLE
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// TEST[continued]
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<1> `cluster_two` would be removed from the cluster settings, leaving
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`cluster_one` and `cluster_three` intact.
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[float]
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[[remote-cluster-settings]]
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=== Remote cluster settings
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`cluster.remote.connections_per_cluster`::
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The number of gateway nodes to connect to per remote cluster. The default is
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`3`.
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`cluster.remote.initial_connect_timeout`::
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The time to wait for remote connections to be established when the node
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starts. The default is `30s`.
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`cluster.remote.node.attr`::
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A node attribute to filter out nodes that are eligible as a gateway node in
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the remote cluster. For instance a node can have a node attribute
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`node.attr.gateway: true` such that only nodes with this attribute will be
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connected to if `cluster.remote.node.attr` is set to `gateway`.
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`cluster.remote.connect`::
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By default, any node in the cluster can act as a cross-cluster client and
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connect to remote clusters. The `cluster.remote.connect` setting can be set to
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`false` (defaults to `true`) to prevent certain nodes from connecting to
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remote clusters. Remote cluster requests must be sent to a node that is
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allowed to act as a cross-cluster client.
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`cluster.remote.${cluster_alias}.skip_unavailable`::
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Per cluster boolean setting that allows to skip specific clusters when no
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nodes belonging to them are available and they are the targetof a remote
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cluster request. Default is `false`, meaning that all clusters are mandatory
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by default, but they can selectively be made optional by setting this setting
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to `true`.
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`cluster.remote.${cluster_alias}.transport.ping_schedule`::
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Sets the time interval between regular application-level ping messages that
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are sent to ensure that transport connections to nodes belonging to remote
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clusters are kept alive. If set to `-1`, application-level ping messages to
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this remote cluster are not sent. If unset, application-level ping messages
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are sent according to the global `transport.ping_schedule` setting, which
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defaults to `-1` meaning that pings are not sent.
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`cluster.remote.${cluster_alias}.transport.compress`::
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Per cluster boolean setting that enables you to configure compression for
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requests to a specific remote cluster. This setting impacts only requests
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sent to the remote cluster. If the inbound request is compressed,
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Elasticsearch compresses the response. If unset, the global
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`transport.compress` is used as the fallback setting.
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`cluster.remote.${cluster_alias}.proxy`::
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Sets a proxy address for the specified remote cluster. By default this is not
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set, meaning that Elasticsearch will connect directly to the nodes in the
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remote cluster using their <<advanced-network-settings,publish addresses>>.
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If this setting is set to an IP address or hostname then Elasticsearch will
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connect to the nodes in the remote cluster using this address instead.
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[float]
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[[retrieve-remote-clusters-info]]
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=== Retrieving remote clusters info
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You can use the <<cluster-remote-info, remote cluster info API>> to retrieve
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information about the configured remote clusters, as well as the remote nodes
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that the node is connected to.
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