135 lines
5.2 KiB
Plaintext
135 lines
5.2 KiB
Plaintext
[[indices-upgrade]]
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== Upgrade
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The upgrade API allows to upgrade one or more indices to the latest Lucene
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format through an API. The upgrade process converts any segments written with
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older formats.
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.When to use the `upgrade` API
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**************************************************
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Newer versions of Lucene often come with a new index format which provides bug
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fixes and performance improvements. In order to take advantage of these
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improvements, the segments in each shard need to be rewritten using the latest
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Lucene format.
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.Automatic upgrading
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Indices that are actively being written to will automatically write new
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segments in the latest format. The background merge process which combines
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multiple small segments into a single bigger segment will also write the new
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merged segment in the latest format.
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.Optional manual upgrades
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Some old segments may never be merged away because they are already too big to
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be worth merging, and indices that no longer receive changes will not be
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upgraded automatically. Upgrading segments is not required for most
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Elasticsearch upgrades because it can read older formats from the current and
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previous major version of Lucene.
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You can, however, choose to upgrade old segments manually to take advantage of
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the latest format. The `upgrade` API will rewrite any old segments in the
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latest Lucene format. It can be run on one index, multiple or all indices, so
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you can control when it is run and how many indices it should upgrade.
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.When you must use the `upgrade` API
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Elasticsearch can only read formats from the current and previous major
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version of Lucene. For instance, Elasticsearch 2.x (Lucene 5) can read disk
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formats from Elasticsearch 0.90 and 1.x (Lucene 4), but not from Elasticsearch
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0.20 and before (Lucene 3).
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In fact, an Elasticsearch 2.0 cluster will refuse to start if any indices
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created before Elasticsearch 0.90 are present, and it will refuse to open them
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if they are imported as dangling indices later on. It will not be possible to
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restore an index created with Elasticsearch 0.20.x and before into a 2.0
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cluster.
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These ancient indices must either be deleted or upgraded before migrating to
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Elasticsearch 2.0. Upgrading will:
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* Rewrite old segments in the latest Lucene format.
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* Add the `index.version.minimum_compatible` setting to the index, to mark it as
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2.0 compatible
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Instead of upgrading all segments that weren't written with the most recent
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version of Lucene, you can choose to do the minimum work required before
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moving to Elasticsearch 2.0, by specifying the `only_ancient_segments` option,
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which will only rewrite segments written by Lucene 3.
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**************************************************
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[float]
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=== Start an upgrade
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[source,sh]
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--------------------------------------------------
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$ curl -XPOST 'http://localhost:9200/twitter/_upgrade'
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--------------------------------------------------
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NOTE: Upgrading is an I/O intensive operation, and is limited to processing a
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single shard per node at a time. It also is not allowed to run at the same
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time as an optimize/force-merge.
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This call will block until the upgrade is complete. If the http connection
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is lost, the request will continue in the background, and
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any new requests will block until the previous upgrade is complete.
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[float]
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[[upgrade-parameters]]
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==== Request Parameters
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The `upgrade` API accepts the following request parameters:
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[horizontal]
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`only_ancient_segments`:: If true, only very old segments (from a
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previous Lucene major release) will be upgraded. While this will do
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the minimal work to ensure the next major release of Elasticsearch can
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read the segments, it's dangerous because it can leave other very old
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segments in sub-optimal formats. Defaults to `false`.
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[float]
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=== Check upgrade status
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Use a `GET` request to monitor how much of an index is upgraded. This
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can also be used prior to starting an upgrade to identify which
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indices you want to upgrade at the same time.
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The `ancient` byte values that are returned indicate total bytes of
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segments whose version is extremely old (Lucene major version is
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different from the current version), showing how much upgrading is
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necessary when you run with `only_ancient_segments=true`.
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[source,sh]
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--------------------------------------------------
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curl 'http://localhost:9200/twitter/_upgrade?pretty&human'
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--------------------------------------------------
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------------------------
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{
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"size": "21gb",
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"size_in_bytes": "21000000000",
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"size_to_upgrade": "10gb",
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"size_to_upgrade_in_bytes": "10000000000"
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"size_to_upgrade_ancient": "1gb",
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"size_to_upgrade_ancient_in_bytes": "1000000000"
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"indices": {
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"twitter": {
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"size": "21gb",
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"size_in_bytes": "21000000000",
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"size_to_upgrade": "10gb",
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"size_to_upgrade_in_bytes": "10000000000"
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"size_to_upgrade_ancient": "1gb",
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"size_to_upgrade_ancient_in_bytes": "1000000000"
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}
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}
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}
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--------------------------------------------------
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The level of details in the upgrade status command can be controlled by
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setting `level` parameter to `cluster`, `index` (default) or `shard` levels.
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For example, you can run the upgrade status command with `level=shard` to
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get detailed upgrade information of each individual shard.
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