The code in this repository bootstraps and configures a fully managed Elasticsearch installation on a EC2 instance with EBS-based local persistence.
Download or clone the files in this gist:
curl -# -L -k https://gist.github.com/2050769/download | tar xz --strip 1 -C .
First, in the downloaded node.json
file, replace the access_key
and secret_key
values with proper AWS credentials.
Second, create a dedicated security group
in the AWS console for ElasticSearch nodes. We will be using group named elasticsearch-test
.
Make sure the security groups allows connections on following ports:
- Port 22 for SSH is open for external access (the default
0.0.0.0/0
) - Port 8080 for the Nginx proxy is open for external access (the default
0.0.0.0/0
) - Port 9300 for in-cluster communication is open to the same security group (use the Group ID for this group,
available on the "Details" tab, such as
sg-1a23bcd
)
Third, launch a new instance in the AWS console:
- Use a meaningful name for the instance. We will use
elasticsearch-test-chef-1
. - Create a new "Key Pair" for the instance, and download it. We will be using a key named
elasticsearch-test
. - Use the Amazon Linux AMI (
ami-1b814f72
). Amazon Linux comes with Ruby and Java pre-installed. - Use the
m1.large
instance type. You may use the small or even micro instance type, but the process will take very long, due to AWS constraints (could be hours instead of minutes). - Use the security group created in the first step (
elasticsearch-test
).
Copy the SSH key downloaded from AWS console to the tmp/
directory of this project and change its permissions:
cp ~/Downloads/elasticsearch-test.pem ./tmp
chmod 600 ./tmp/elasticsearch-test.pem
Once the instance is ready, copy its "Public DNS" in the AWS console
(eg. ec2-123-40-123-50.compute-1.amazonaws.com
).
We can begin the "bootstrap and install" process now.
Let's setup the connection details, first:
HOST=<REPLACE WITH YOUR PUBLIC DNS>
SSH_OPTIONS="-o User=ec2-user -o IdentityFile=./tmp/elasticsearch-test.pem -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no -o UserKnownHostsFile=/dev/null"
Let's copy the files to the machine:
scp $SSH_OPTIONS bootstrap.sh patches.sh node.json solo.rb $HOST:/tmp
Let's bootstrap the machine (ie. install neccessary packages, download cookbooks, etc):
time ssh -t $SSH_OPTIONS $HOST "sudo bash /tmp/bootstrap.sh"
time ssh -t $SSH_OPTIONS $HOST "sudo bash /tmp/patches.sh"
Let's launch the Chef run with the chef-solo
command to provision the system:
time ssh -t $SSH_OPTIONS $HOST "sudo chef-solo -N elasticsearch-test-1 -j /tmp/node.json"
Once the Chef run successfully finishes, you can check whether ElasticSearch is running on the machine (leave couple of seconds for ElasticSearch to have a chance to start...):
ssh -t $SSH_OPTIONS $HOST "curl localhost:9200/_cluster/health?pretty"
You can also connect to the Nginx-based proxy:
curl http://USERNAME:PASSWORD@$HOST:8080
And use it for indexing some data:
curl -X POST "http://USERNAME:PASSWORD@$HOST:8080/test_chef_cookbook/document/1" -d '{"title" : "Test 1"}'
curl -X POST "http://USERNAME:PASSWORD@$HOST:8080/test_chef_cookbook/document/2" -d '{"title" : "Test 2"}'
curl -X POST "http://USERNAME:PASSWORD@$HOST:8080/test_chef_cookbook/document/3" -d '{"title" : "Test 3"}'
curl -X POST "http://USERNAME:PASSWORD@$HOST:8080/test_chef_cookbook/_refresh"
Or performing searches:
curl "http://USERNAME:PASSWORD@$HOST:8080/_search?pretty"
You can also use the provided service
to check ElasticSearch status:
ssh -t $SSH_OPTIONS $HOST "sudo service elasticsearch status -v"
Of course, you can check the ElasticSearch status with Monit:
ssh -t $SSH_OPTIONS $HOST "sudo monit reload && sudo monit status -v"
(If the Monit daemon is not running, start it with sudo service monit start
first. Notice the daemon has a startup delay of 2 minutes by default.)
The provisioning scripts will configure the following on the target instance:
- Install Nginx and Monit
- Install and configure Elasticsearch via the cookbook
- Create, attach, format and mount a new EBS disk
- Configure Nginx as a reverse proxy for Elasticsearch with HTTP authentication
- Configure Monit to check Elasticsearch process status and cluster health
This repository comes with a collection of Rake tasks which automatically create the server in Amazon EC2,
and perform all the provisioning steps. Install the required Rubygems with bundle install
and run:
time bundle exec rake create NAME=elasticsearch-test-from-cli
http://www.elasticsearch.org/tutorials/2012/03/21/deploying-elasticsearch-with-chef-solo.html
I can confirm that after using @webmat and @AbleCoder's fixes, the
Rakefile
ran for me and I have a nice two node cluster running.It would be best if the gist was updated.