--- layout: default title: Tarball parent: Install OpenSearch nav_order: 50 --- # Tarball The tarball installation provides a self-contained directory with everything you need to run OpenSearch, including an integrated Java Development Kit (JDK). The tarball is a good option for testing and development. The tarball supports most Linux distributions, including CentOS 7, Amazon Linux 2, and Ubuntu 18.04. If you have your own Java installation and set `JAVA_HOME` in the terminal, macOS works, as well. 1. Download the tarball from the [OpenSearch downloads page](https://opensearch.org/downloads.html){:target='\_blank'}. 1. Extract the TAR file to a directory and change to that directory: ```bash # x64 tar -zxf opensearch-{{site.opensearch_version}}-linux-x64.tar.gz cd opensearch-{{site.opensearch_version}} # ARM64 tar -zxf opensearch-{{site.opensearch_version}}-linux-arm64.tar.gz cd opensearch-{{site.opensearch_version}} ``` 1. Run OpenSearch with the demo security configuration: ```bash ./opensearch-tar-install.sh ``` If you configure the security plugin for production use (or disable it), you can run OpenSearch using `./bin/opensearch`. 1. Open a second terminal session, and send requests to the server to verify that OpenSearch is up and running: ```bash curl -XGET https://localhost:9200 -u 'admin:admin' --insecure curl -XGET https://localhost:9200/_cat/plugins?v -u 'admin:admin' --insecure ``` ## Configuration You can modify `config/opensearch.yml` or specify environment variables as arguments using `-E`: ```bash ./opensearch-tar-install.sh -Ecluster.name=opensearch-cluster -Enode.name=opensearch-node1 -Ehttp.host=0.0.0.0 -Ediscovery.type=single-node ``` For other settings, see [Important settings]({{site.url}}{{site.baseurl}}/opensearch/install/important-settings/). ### (Optional) Set up Performance Analyzer In a tarball installation, Performance Analyzer collects data when it is enabled. But in order to read that data using the REST API on port 9600, you must first manually launch the associated reader agent process: 1. Make Performance Analyzer accessible outside of the host machine ```bash cd /usr/share/opensearch # navigate to the OpenSearch home directory cd config/opensearch-performance-analyzer/ vi performance-analyzer.properties ``` Uncomment the line `#webservice-bind-host` and set it to `0.0.0.0`: ``` # ======================== OpenSearch performance analyzer plugin config ========================= # NOTE: this is an example for Linux. Please modify the config accordingly if you are using it under other OS. # WebService bind host; default to all interfaces webservice-bind-host = 0.0.0.0 # Metrics data location metrics-location = /dev/shm/performanceanalyzer/ # Metrics deletion interval (minutes) for metrics data. # Interval should be between 1 to 60. metrics-deletion-interval = 1 # If set to true, the system cleans up the files behind it. So at any point, we should expect only 2 # metrics-db-file-prefix-path files. If set to false, no files are cleaned up. This can be useful, if you are archiving # the files and wouldn't like for them to be cleaned up. cleanup-metrics-db-files = true # WebService exposed by App's port webservice-listener-port = 9600 # Metric DB File Prefix Path location metrics-db-file-prefix-path = /tmp/metricsdb_ https-enabled = false #Setup the correct path for certificates certificate-file-path = specify_path private-key-file-path = specify_path # Plugin Stats Metadata file name, expected to be in the same location plugin-stats-metadata = plugin-stats-metadata # Agent Stats Metadata file name, expected to be in the same location agent-stats-metadata = agent-stats-metadata ``` 1. Make the CLI executable: ```bash sudo chmod +x ./bin/performance-analyzer-agent-cli ``` 1. Launch the agent CLI: ```bash OPENSEARCH_HOME="$PWD" OPENSEARCH_PATH_CONF="$PWD/config" ./bin/performance-analyzer-agent-cli ``` 1. In a separate window, enable the Performance Analyzer plugin: ```bash curl -XPOST localhost:9200/_plugins/_performanceanalyzer/cluster/config -H 'Content-Type: application/json' -d '{"enabled": true}' ``` If you receive the `curl: (52) Empty reply from server` error, you are likely protecting your cluster with the security plugin and you need to provide credentials. Modify the following command to use your username and password: ```bash curl -XPOST https://localhost:9200/_plugins/_performanceanalyzer/cluster/config -H 'Content-Type: application/json' -d '{"enabled": true}' -u 'admin:admin' -k ``` 1. Finally, enable the Root Cause Analyzer (RCA) framework ```bash curl -XPOST localhost:9200/_plugins/_performanceanalyzer/rca/cluster/config -H 'Content-Type: application/json' -d '{"enabled": true}' ``` Similar to step 4, if you run into `curl: (52) Empty reply from server`, run the command below to enable RCA ```bash curl -XPOST https://localhost:9200/_plugins/_performanceanalyzer/rca/cluster/config -H 'Content-Type: application/json' -d '{"enabled": true}' -u 'admin:admin' -k ``` {% comment %} ### (Optional) Removing Performance Analyzer See [Clean up Performance Analyzer files]({{site.url}}{{site.baseurl}}/plugins#optional-clean-up-performance-analyzer-files). {% endcomment %}