Index-level shard allocation settings
Stack
Elastic Cloud Serverless projects restrict the available Elasticsearch settings to a supported subset, identified with a Serverless badge next to the setting name. For a complete list of available index settings, refer to the Serverless index settings list.
You can use shard allocation filters to control where Elasticsearch allocates shards of a particular index. These per-index filters are applied in conjunction with cluster-wide allocation filtering and allocation awareness.
Shard allocation filters can be based on custom node attributes or the built-in _name, _host_ip, _publish_ip, _ip, _host, _id, _tier and _tier_preference attributes. Index lifecycle management uses filters based on custom node attributes to determine how to reallocate shards when moving between phases.
The cluster.routing.allocation settings are dynamic, enabling existing indices to be moved immediately from one set of nodes to another. Shards are only relocated if it is possible to do so without breaking another routing constraint, such as never allocating a primary and replica shard on the same node.
For example, you could use a custom node attribute to indicate a node’s performance characteristics and use shard allocation filtering to route shards for a particular index to the most appropriate class of hardware.
To filter based on a custom node attribute:
Specify the filter characteristics with a custom node attribute in each node’s
elasticsearch.ymlconfiguration file. For example, if you havesmall,medium, andbignodes, you could add asizeattribute to filter based on node size.node.attr.size: mediumYou can also set custom attributes when you start a node:
./bin/elasticsearch -Enode.attr.size=mediumAdd a routing allocation filter to the index. The
index.routing.allocationsettings support three types of filters:include,exclude, andrequire. For example, to tell Elasticsearch to allocate shards from thetestindex to eitherbigormediumnodes, useindex.routing.allocation.include:PUT test/_settings{ "index.routing.allocation.include.size": "big,medium" }If you specify multiple filters the following conditions must be satisfied simultaneously by a node in order for shards to be relocated to it:
- If any
requiretype conditions are specified, all of them must be satisfied - If any
excludetype conditions are specified, none of them may be satisfied - If any
includetype conditions are specified, at least one of them must be satisfied
For example, to move the
testindex tobignodes inrack1, you could specify:PUT test/_settings{ "index.routing.allocation.require.size": "big", "index.routing.allocation.require.rack": "rack1" }- If any
index.routing.allocation.include.{{attribute}}- Assign the index to a node whose
{{attribute}}has at least one of the comma-separated values. index.routing.allocation.require.{{attribute}}- Assign the index to a node whose
{{attribute}}has all of the comma-separated values. index.routing.allocation.exclude.{{attribute}}- Assign the index to a node whose
{{attribute}}has none of the comma-separated values.
The index allocation settings support the following built-in attributes:
_name- Match nodes by node name
_host_ip- Match nodes by host IP address (IP associated with hostname)
_publish_ip- Match nodes by publish IP address
_ip- Match either
_host_ipor_publish_ip _host- Match nodes by hostname
_id- Match nodes by node id
_tier- Match nodes by the node’s data tier role. For more details see data tier allocation filtering
You can use wildcards when specifying attribute values, for example:
PUT test/_settings
{
"index.routing.allocation.include._ip": "192.168.2.*"
}