=== Java Virtual Machine
You should always run the most recent version of the Java Virtual Machine (JVM),
unless otherwise stated on the Elasticsearch website.((("deployment", "Java Virtual Machine (JVM)")))((("JVM (Java Virtual Machine)")))((("Java Virtual Machine", see="JVM"))) Elasticsearch, and in
particular Lucene, is a demanding piece of software. The unit and integration
tests from Lucene often expose bugs in the JVM itself. These bugs range from
mild annoyances to serious segfaults, so it is best to use the latest version
of the JVM where possible.
Java 7 is strongly preferred over Java 6. Either Oracle or OpenJDK are acceptable. They are comparable in performance and stability.
If your application is written in Java and you are using the transport client
or node client, make sure the JVM running your application is identical to the
server JVM. In few locations in Elasticsearch, Java's native serialization
is used (IP addresses, exceptions, and so forth). Unfortunately, Oracle has been known to
change the serialization format between minor releases, leading to strange errors.
This happens rarely, but it is best practice to keep the JVM versions identical
between client and server.
.Please Do Not Tweak JVM Settings
****
The JVM exposes dozens (hundreds even!) of settings, parameters, and configurations.((("JVM (Java Virtual Machine)", "avoiding custom configuration")))
They allow you to tweak and tune almost every aspect of the JVM.
When a knob is encountered, it is human nature to want to turn it. We implore
you to squash this desire and _not_ use custom JVM settings. Elasticsearch is
a complex piece of software, and the current JVM settings have been tuned
over years of real-world usage.
It is easy to start turning knobs, producing opaque effects that are hard to measure,
and eventually detune your cluster into a slow, unstable mess. When debugging
clusters, the first step is often to remove all custom configurations. About
half the time, this alone restores stability and performance.
****
=== Transport Client Versus Node Client
If you are using Java, you may wonder when to use the transport client versus the
node client.((("Java", "clients for Elasticsearch")))((("clients")))((("node client", "versus transport client")))((("transport client", "versus node client"))) As discussed at the beginning of the book, the transport client
acts as a communication layer between the cluster and your application. It knows
the API and can automatically round-robin between nodes, sniff the cluster for you,
and more. But it is _external_ to the cluster, similar to the REST clients.
The node client, on the other hand, is actually a node within the cluster (but
does not hold data, and cannot become master). Because it is a node, it knows
the entire cluster state (where all the nodes reside, which shards live in which
nodes, and so forth). This means it can execute APIs with one less network hop.
There are uses-cases for both clients:
- The transport client is ideal if you want to decouple your application from the
cluster. For example, if your application quickly creates and destroys
connections to the cluster, a transport client is much "lighter" than a node client,
since it is not part of a cluster.
+
Similarly, if you need to create thousands of connections, you don't want to
have thousands of node clients join the cluster. The TC will be a better choice.
- On the flipside, if you need only a few long-lived, persistent connection
objects to the cluster, a node client can be a bit more efficient since it knows
the cluster layout. But it ties your application into the cluster, so it may
pose problems from a firewall perspective.
=== Configuration Management
If you use configuration management already (Puppet, Chef, Ansible), you can skip this tip.((("deployment", "configuration management")))((("configuration management")))
If you don't use configuration management tools yet, you should! Managing
a handful of servers by `parallel-ssh` may work now, but it will become a nightmare
as you grow your cluster. It is almost impossible to edit 30 configuration files
by hand without making a mistake.
Configuration management tools help make your cluster consistent by automating
the process of config changes. It may take a little time to set up and learn,
but it will pay itself off handsomely over time.
- Introduction
- 入門
- 是什么
- 安裝
- API
- 文檔
- 索引
- 搜索
- 聚合
- 小結
- 分布式
- 結語
- 分布式集群
- 空集群
- 集群健康
- 添加索引
- 故障轉移
- 橫向擴展
- 更多擴展
- 應對故障
- 數據
- 文檔
- 索引
- 獲取
- 存在
- 更新
- 創建
- 刪除
- 版本控制
- 局部更新
- Mget
- 批量
- 結語
- 分布式增刪改查
- 路由
- 分片交互
- 新建、索引和刪除
- 檢索
- 局部更新
- 批量請求
- 批量格式
- 搜索
- 空搜索
- 多索引和多類型
- 分頁
- 查詢字符串
- 映射和分析
- 數據類型差異
- 確切值對決全文
- 倒排索引
- 分析
- 映射
- 復合類型
- 結構化查詢
- 請求體查詢
- 結構化查詢
- 查詢與過濾
- 重要的查詢子句
- 過濾查詢
- 驗證查詢
- 結語
- 排序
- 排序
- 字符串排序
- 相關性
- 字段數據
- 分布式搜索
- 查詢階段
- 取回階段
- 搜索選項
- 掃描和滾屏
- 索引管理
- 創建刪除
- 設置
- 配置分析器
- 自定義分析器
- 映射
- 根對象
- 元數據中的source字段
- 元數據中的all字段
- 元數據中的ID字段
- 動態映射
- 自定義動態映射
- 默認映射
- 重建索引
- 別名
- 深入分片
- 使文本可以被搜索
- 動態索引
- 近實時搜索
- 持久化變更
- 合并段
- 結構化搜索
- 查詢準確值
- 組合過濾
- 查詢多個準確值
- 包含,而不是相等
- 范圍
- 處理 Null 值
- 緩存
- 過濾順序
- 全文搜索
- 匹配查詢
- 多詞查詢
- 組合查詢
- 布爾匹配
- 增加子句
- 控制分析
- 關聯失效
- 多字段搜索
- 多重查詢字符串
- 單一查詢字符串
- 最佳字段
- 最佳字段查詢調優
- 多重匹配查詢
- 最多字段查詢
- 跨字段對象查詢
- 以字段為中心查詢
- 全字段查詢
- 跨字段查詢
- 精確查詢
- 模糊匹配
- Phrase matching
- Slop
- Multi value fields
- Scoring
- Relevance
- Performance
- Shingles
- Partial_Matching
- Postcodes
- Prefix query
- Wildcard Regexp
- Match phrase prefix
- Index time
- Ngram intro
- Search as you type
- Compound words
- Relevance
- Scoring theory
- Practical scoring
- Query time boosting
- Query scoring
- Not quite not
- Ignoring TFIDF
- Function score query
- Popularity
- Boosting filtered subsets
- Random scoring
- Decay functions
- Pluggable similarities
- Conclusion
- Language intro
- Intro
- Using
- Configuring
- Language pitfalls
- One language per doc
- One language per field
- Mixed language fields
- Conclusion
- Identifying words
- Intro
- Standard analyzer
- Standard tokenizer
- ICU plugin
- ICU tokenizer
- Tidying text
- Token normalization
- Intro
- Lowercasing
- Removing diacritics
- Unicode world
- Case folding
- Character folding
- Sorting and collations
- Stemming
- Intro
- Algorithmic stemmers
- Dictionary stemmers
- Hunspell stemmer
- Choosing a stemmer
- Controlling stemming
- Stemming in situ
- Stopwords
- Intro
- Using stopwords
- Stopwords and performance
- Divide and conquer
- Phrase queries
- Common grams
- Relevance
- Synonyms
- Intro
- Using synonyms
- Synonym formats
- Expand contract
- Analysis chain
- Multi word synonyms
- Symbol synonyms
- Fuzzy matching
- Intro
- Fuzziness
- Fuzzy query
- Fuzzy match query
- Scoring fuzziness
- Phonetic matching
- Aggregations
- overview
- circuit breaker fd settings
- filtering
- facets
- docvalues
- eager
- breadth vs depth
- Conclusion
- concepts buckets
- basic example
- add metric
- nested bucket
- extra metrics
- bucket metric list
- histogram
- date histogram
- scope
- filtering
- sorting ordering
- approx intro
- cardinality
- percentiles
- sigterms intro
- sigterms
- fielddata
- analyzed vs not
- 地理坐標點
- 地理坐標點
- 通過地理坐標點過濾
- 地理坐標盒模型過濾器
- 地理距離過濾器
- 緩存地理位置過濾器
- 減少內存占用
- 按距離排序
- Geohashe
- Geohashe
- Geohashe映射
- Geohash單元過濾器
- 地理位置聚合
- 地理位置聚合
- 按距離聚合
- Geohash單元聚合器
- 范圍(邊界)聚合器
- 地理形狀
- 地理形狀
- 映射地理形狀
- 索引地理形狀
- 查詢地理形狀
- 在查詢中使用已索引的形狀
- 地理形狀的過濾與緩存
- 關系
- 關系
- 應用級別的Join操作
- 扁平化你的數據
- Top hits
- Concurrency
- Concurrency solutions
- 嵌套
- 嵌套對象
- 嵌套映射
- 嵌套查詢
- 嵌套排序
- 嵌套集合
- Parent Child
- Parent child
- Indexing parent child
- Has child
- Has parent
- Children agg
- Grandparents
- Practical considerations
- Scaling
- Shard
- Overallocation
- Kagillion shards
- Capacity planning
- Replica shards
- Multiple indices
- Index per timeframe
- Index templates
- Retiring data
- Index per user
- Shared index
- Faking it
- One big user
- Scale is not infinite
- Cluster Admin
- Marvel
- Health
- Node stats
- Other stats
- Deployment
- hardware
- other
- config
- dont touch
- heap
- file descriptors
- conclusion
- cluster settings
- Post Deployment
- dynamic settings
- logging
- indexing perf
- rolling restart
- backup
- restore
- conclusion