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You're reading from  Learning Elasticsearch

Product typeBook
Published inJun 2017
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781787128453
Edition1st Edition
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Abhishek Andhavarapu
Abhishek Andhavarapu
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Abhishek Andhavarapu

Abhishek Andhavarapu is a software engineer at eBay who enjoys working on highly scalable distributed systems. He has a master's degree in Distributed Computing and has worked on multiple enterprise Elasticsearch applications, which are currently serving hundreds of millions of requests per day. He began his journey with Elasticsearch in 2012 to build an analytics engine to power dashboards and quickly realized that Elasticsearch is like nothing out there for search and analytics. He has been a strong advocate since then and wrote this book to share the practical knowledge he gained along the way.
Read more about Abhishek Andhavarapu

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How nodes discover each other

Zen discovery is the discovery module used by Elasticsearch. Since Elasticsearch is a distributed system, you can think of this module as a glue that keeps the cluster together. Cluster management and failure detection are handled automatically by Elasticsearch.

In the configuration file, there is a discovery section dedicated to zen discovery. One of the settings in the discovery section is discovery.zen.ping.unicast.hosts. This setting is a list of other hosts Elasticsearch is running, so that the node can join the existing nodes to form a cluster. When we start the elasticsearch2 instance, this instance will first try to ping the hosts in discovery.zen.ping.unicast.hosts. It will scan the ports 9300 to 9305 and find elasticsearch1 running at 192.168.0.1:9300. (Note that 9300 is the port for internal communication, 9200 is the HTTP server.) To join...

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Learning Elasticsearch
Published in: Jun 2017Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781787128453

Author (1)

author image
Abhishek Andhavarapu

Abhishek Andhavarapu is a software engineer at eBay who enjoys working on highly scalable distributed systems. He has a master's degree in Distributed Computing and has worked on multiple enterprise Elasticsearch applications, which are currently serving hundreds of millions of requests per day. He began his journey with Elasticsearch in 2012 to build an analytics engine to power dashboards and quickly realized that Elasticsearch is like nothing out there for search and analytics. He has been a strong advocate since then and wrote this book to share the practical knowledge he gained along the way.
Read more about Abhishek Andhavarapu