198 lines
8.1 KiB
Plaintext
198 lines
8.1 KiB
Plaintext
[[java-rest-high-getting-started]]
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== Getting started
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This section describes how to get started with the high-level REST client from
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getting the artifact to using it in an application.
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[[java-rest-high-compatibility]]
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=== Compatibility
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The Java High Level REST Client requires Java 1.8 and depends on the Elasticsearch
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core project. The client version is the same as the Elasticsearch version that the
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client was developed for. It accepts the same request arguments as the `TransportClient`
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and returns the same response objects. See the <<java-rest-high-level-migration>>
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if you need to migrate an application from `TransportClient` to the new REST client.
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The High Level Client is guaranteed to be able to communicate with any Elasticsearch
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node running on the same major version and greater or equal minor version. It
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doesn't need to be in the same minor version as the Elasticsearch nodes it
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communicates with, as it is forward compatible meaning that it supports
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communicating with later versions of Elasticsearch than the one it was developed for.
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The 6.0 client is able to communicate with any 6.x Elasticsearch node, while the 6.1
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client is for sure able to communicate with 6.1, 6.2 and any later 6.x version, but
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there may be incompatibility issues when communicating with a previous Elasticsearch
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node version, for instance between 6.1 and 6.0, in case the 6.1 client supports new
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request body fields for some APIs that are not known by the 6.0 node(s).
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It is recommended to upgrade the High Level Client when upgrading the Elasticsearch
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cluster to a new major version, as REST API breaking changes may cause unexpected
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results depending on the node that is hit by the request, and newly added APIs will
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only be supported by the newer version of the client. The client should always be
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updated last, once all of the nodes in the cluster have been upgraded to the new
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major version.
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[[java-rest-high-javadoc]]
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=== Javadoc
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The javadoc for the REST high level client can be found at {rest-high-level-client-javadoc}/index.html.
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[[java-rest-high-getting-started-maven]]
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=== Maven Repository
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The high-level Java REST client is hosted on
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https://search.maven.org/search?q=g:org.elasticsearch.client[Maven
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Central]. The minimum Java version required is `1.8`.
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The High Level REST Client is subject to the same release cycle as
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Elasticsearch. Replace the version with the desired client version.
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If you are looking for a SNAPSHOT version, you should add our snapshot repository to your Maven config:
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["source","xml",subs="attributes"]
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--------------------------------------------------
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<repositories>
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<repository>
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<id>es-snapshots</id>
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<name>elasticsearch snapshot repo</name>
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<url>https://snapshots.elastic.co/maven/</url>
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</repository>
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<repositories>
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--------------------------------------------------
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or in Gradle:
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["source","groovy",subs="attributes"]
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--------------------------------------------------
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maven {
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url "https://snapshots.elastic.co/maven/"
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}
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--------------------------------------------------
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[[java-rest-high-getting-started-maven-maven]]
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==== Maven configuration
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Here is how you can configure the dependency using maven as a dependency manager.
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Add the following to your `pom.xml` file:
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["source","xml",subs="attributes"]
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--------------------------------------------------
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<dependency>
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<groupId>org.elasticsearch.client</groupId>
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<artifactId>elasticsearch-rest-high-level-client</artifactId>
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<version>{version}</version>
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</dependency>
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--------------------------------------------------
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[[java-rest-high-getting-started-maven-gradle]]
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==== Gradle configuration
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Here is how you can configure the dependency using gradle as a dependency manager.
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Add the following to your `build.gradle` file:
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["source","groovy",subs="attributes"]
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--------------------------------------------------
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dependencies {
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compile 'org.elasticsearch.client:elasticsearch-rest-high-level-client:{version}'
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}
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--------------------------------------------------
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[[java-rest-high-getting-started-maven-lucene]]
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==== Lucene Snapshot repository
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The very first releases of any major version (like a beta), might have been built on top of a Lucene Snapshot version.
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In such a case you will be unable to resolve the Lucene dependencies of the client.
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For example, if you want to use the `7.0.0-beta1` version which depends on Lucene `8.0.0-snapshot-83f9835`, you must
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define the following repository.
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For Maven:
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["source","xml",subs="attributes"]
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--------------------------------------------------
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<repository>
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<id>elastic-lucene-snapshots</id>
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<name>Elastic Lucene Snapshots</name>
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<url>https://s3.amazonaws.com/download.elasticsearch.org/lucenesnapshots/83f9835</url>
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<releases><enabled>true</enabled></releases>
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<snapshots><enabled>false</enabled></snapshots>
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</repository>
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--------------------------------------------------
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For Gradle:
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["source","groovy",subs="attributes"]
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--------------------------------------------------
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maven {
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name 'lucene-snapshots'
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url 'https://s3.amazonaws.com/download.elasticsearch.org/lucenesnapshots/83f9835'
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}
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--------------------------------------------------
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[[java-rest-high-getting-started-dependencies]]
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=== Dependencies
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The High Level Java REST Client depends on the following artifacts and their
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transitive dependencies:
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- org.elasticsearch.client:elasticsearch-rest-client
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- org.elasticsearch:elasticsearch
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[[java-rest-high-getting-started-initialization]]
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=== Initialization
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A `RestHighLevelClient` instance needs a <<java-rest-low-usage-initialization,REST low-level client builder>>
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to be built as follows:
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["source","java",subs="attributes,callouts,macros"]
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--------------------------------------------------
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include-tagged::{doc-tests}/MiscellaneousDocumentationIT.java[rest-high-level-client-init]
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--------------------------------------------------
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The high-level client will internally create the low-level client used to
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perform requests based on the provided builder. That low-level client
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maintains a pool of connections and starts some threads so you should
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close the high-level client when you are well and truly done with
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it and it will in turn close the internal low-level client to free those
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resources. This can be done through the `close`:
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["source","java",subs="attributes,callouts,macros"]
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--------------------------------------------------
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include-tagged::{doc-tests}/MiscellaneousDocumentationIT.java[rest-high-level-client-close]
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--------------------------------------------------
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In the rest of this documentation about the Java High Level Client, the `RestHighLevelClient` instance
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will be referenced as `client`.
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[[java-rest-high-getting-started-request-options]]
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=== RequestOptions
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All APIs in the `RestHighLevelClient` accept a `RequestOptions` which you can
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use to customize the request in ways that won't change how Elasticsearch
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executes the request. For example, this is the place where you'd specify a
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`NodeSelector` to control which node receives the request. See the
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<<java-rest-low-usage-request-options,low level client documentation>> for
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more examples of customizing the options.
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[[java-rest-high-getting-started-asynchronous-usage]]
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=== Asynchronous usage
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All of the the methods across the different clients exist in a traditional synchronous and
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asynchronous variant. The difference is that the asynchronous ones use asynchronous requests
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in the REST Low Level Client. This is useful if you are doing multiple requests or are using e.g.
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rx java, Kotlin co-routines, or similar frameworks.
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The asynchronous methods are recognizable by the fact that they have the word "Async" in their name
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and return a `Cancellable` instance. The asynchronous methods accept the same request object
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as the synchronous variant and accept a generic `ActionListener<T>` where `T` is the return
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type of the synchronous method.
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All asynchronous methods return a `Cancellable` object with a `cancel` method that you may call
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in case you want to abort the request. Cancelling
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no longer needed requests is a good way to avoid putting unnecessary
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load on Elasticsearch.
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Using the `Cancellable` instance is optional and you can safely ignore this if you have
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no need for this. A use case for this would be using this with e.g. Kotlin's `suspendCancellableCoRoutine`.
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