Doing a thorough job of deleting all indexes got my installation back to
status yellow, apparently fully functional when I re-established my test
index with a new name. Sledgehammer, but I didn't need to sow the ground
with salt.
On Friday, November 21, 2014 11:21:26 AM UTC-8, Pitaga wrote
for a pointer
to a clear and concise description of Elasticsearch shard management.
Thanks.
On Friday, November 21, 2014 11:21:26 AM UTC-8, Pitaga wrote:
When I shutdown and restart Elasticsearch on my Ubuntu laptop, the status
is yellow until I attempt to open an index, at which time the status
it, Elasticsearch gets stuck while trying to initialize 5
residual shards.
I'm utterly confused. I'm also motivated to learn more about node
management. I'd really like to do this with a working installation. How can
I untangle myself?
Thanks.
On Friday, November 21, 2014 11:21:26 AM UTC-8, Pitaga wrote
When I shutdown and restart Elasticsearch on my Ubuntu laptop, the status
is yellow until I attempt to open an index, at which time the status
changes to red. The output for
curl http://localhost:9200/_cluster/health?pretty=true;
is
{
cluster_name : elasticsearch,
status
I'm running Elasticsearch 1.0 as a service on an Ubuntu 13.10 laptop,
strictly locally. To install the Index Termlist Plugin, I followed the
instructions at https://github.com/jprante/elasticsearch-index-termlist. I
issued the command
./bin/plugin -install index-termlist -url
? Marvel should tell you
this, but if you can't open it then install something like ElasticHQ or
kopf.
Regards,
Mark Walkom
Infrastructure Engineer
Campaign Monitor
email: ma...@campaignmonitor.com javascript:
web: www.campaignmonitor.com
On 8 October 2014 02:02, Pitaga ach...@blarg.net
I'm running Elasticsearch 1.0 on an Ubuntu 13.10, laptop, strictly locally,
as part of a development platform. Through my neglect of administrative
hygiene, my Elasticsearch installation is in a state where when I start it
up it's sometimes slow and sometimes completely unresponsive. Sometimes