- Elastic Cloud Enterprise - Elastic Cloud on your Infrastructure: other versions:
- Introducing Elastic Cloud Enterprise
- Preparing your installation
- Installing Elastic Cloud Enterprise
- Identify the deployment scenario
- Install ECE on a public cloud
- Install ECE on your own premises
- Alternative: Install ECE with Ansible
- Log into the Cloud UI
- Install ECE on additional hosts
- Migrate ECE to Podman hosts
- Post-installation steps
- Configuring your installation
- System deployments configuration
- Configure deployment templates
- Tag your allocators
- Edit instance configurations
- Create instance configurations
- Create deployment templates
- Configure system deployment templates
- Configure index management for templates
- Updating custom templates to support
node_roles
and autoscaling - Updating custom templates to support Integrations Server
- Default instance configurations
- Include additional Kibana plugins
- Manage snapshot repositories
- Manage licenses
- Change the ECE API URL
- Change endpoint URLs
- Enable custom endpoint aliases
- Configure allocator affinity
- Change allocator disconnect timeout
- Migrate ECE on Podman hosts to SELinux in
enforcing
mode
- Securing your installation
- Monitoring your installation
- Administering your installation
- Working with deployments
- Create a deployment
- Access Kibana
- Adding data to Elasticsearch
- Migrating data
- Ingesting data from your application
- Ingest data with Node.js on Elastic Cloud Enterprise
- Ingest data with Python on Elastic Cloud Enterprise
- Ingest data from Beats to Elastic Cloud Enterprise with Logstash as a proxy
- Ingest data from a relational database into Elastic Cloud Enterprise
- Ingest logs from a Python application using Filebeat
- Ingest logs from a Node.js web application using Filebeat
- Manage data from the command line
- Administering deployments
- Change your deployment configuration
- Maintenance mode
- Terminate a deployment
- Restart a deployment
- Restore a deployment
- Delete a deployment
- Migrate to index lifecycle management
- Disable an Elasticsearch data tier
- Access the Elasticsearch API console
- Work with snapshots
- Restore a snapshot across clusters
- Upgrade versions
- Editing your user settings
- Deployment autoscaling
- Configure Beats and Logstash with Cloud ID
- Keep your clusters healthy
- Keep track of deployment activity
- Secure your clusters
- Deployment heap dumps
- Deployment thread dumps
- Traffic Filtering
- Connect to your cluster
- Manage your Kibana instance
- Manage your APM & Fleet Server (7.13+)
- Manage your APM Server (versions before 7.13)
- Manage your Integrations Server
- Switch from APM to Integrations Server payload
- Enable logging and monitoring
- Enable cross-cluster search and cross-cluster replication
- Access other deployments of the same Elastic Cloud Enterprise environment
- Access deployments of another Elastic Cloud Enterprise environment
- Access deployments of an Elasticsearch Service organization
- Access clusters of a self-managed environment
- Enabling CCS/R between Elastic Cloud Enterprise and ECK
- Edit or remove a trusted environment
- Migrate the cross-cluster search deployment template
- Enable App Search
- Enable Enterprise Search
- Enable Graph (versions before 5.0)
- Troubleshooting
- RESTful API
- Authentication
- API calls
- How to access the API
- API examples
- Setting up your environment
- A first API call: What deployments are there?
- Create a first Deployment: Elasticsearch and Kibana
- Applying a new plan: Resize and add high availability
- Updating a deployment: Checking on progress
- Applying a new deployment configuration: Upgrade
- Enable more stack features: Add Enterprise Search to a deployment
- Dipping a toe into platform automation: Generate a roles token
- Customize your deployment
- Remove unwanted deployment templates and instance configurations
- Secure your settings
- API reference
- Changes to index allocation and API
- Script reference
- Release notes
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 3.7.3
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 3.7.2
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 3.7.1
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 3.7.0
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 3.6.2
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 3.6.1
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 3.6.0
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 3.5.1
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 3.5.0
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 3.4.1
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 3.4.0
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 3.3.0
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 3.2.1
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 3.2.0
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 3.1.1
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 3.1.0
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 3.0.0
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.13.4
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.13.3
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.13.2
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.13.1
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.13.0
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.12.4
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.12.3
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.12.2
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.12.1
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.12.0
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.11.2
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.11.1
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.11.0
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.10.1
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.10.0
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.9.2
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.9.1
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.9.0
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.8.1
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.8.0
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.7.2
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.7.1
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.7.0
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.6.2
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.6.1
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.6.0
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.5.1
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.5.0
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.4.3
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.4.2
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.4.1
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.4.0
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.3.2
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.3.1
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.3.0
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.2.3
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.2.2
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.2.1
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.2.0
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.1.1
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.1.0
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.0.1
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.0.0
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 1.1.5
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 1.1.4
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 1.1.3
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 1.1.2
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 1.1.1
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 1.1.0
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 1.0.2
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 1.0.1
- Elastic Cloud Enterprise 1.0.0
- What’s new with the Elastic Stack
- About this product
Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.5.0
editElastic Cloud Enterprise 2.5.0
editNew for Elastic Cloud Enterprise 2.5.0:
- Dedicated coordinating nodes. Your Elasticsearch cluster now supports nodes that take care solely of the coordination of incoming read and write requests. These coordinating nodes relieve master and data nodes, improving the resilience of your Elasticsearch cluster.
- Snapshot lifecycle management (SLM). Beginning with Elastic Stack version 7.6, you now use Kibana to manage your snapshots. In Kibana, you can set up additional repositories where the snapshots are stored, other than the one currently managed by Elastic Cloud Enterprise. You can view and delete snapshots, and configure a snapshot lifecycle management (SLM) policy to automate when snapshots are created and deleted. Check Snapshot and Restore.
- Index curation to index lifecycle management (ILM) migration. If you are using index curation with the Elastic Stack version 6.7 and later, you can now migrate to index lifecycle management very quickly. During the migration, we create your ILM policies and associate the required index templates for you. Since index curation is deprecated and will be removed in the next major Elastic Stack version, you should migrate and take advantage of the robust feature set of ILM. Check Migrate to index lifecycle management.
-
Custom Kibana plugins. If you’d like to leverage Kibana’s extension points to use a custom visualization or build a new Kibana app, you can now write your own custom plugin or use one of the existing plugins.
As part of this release, we published a step-by-step guide about how to add your custom Kibana plugins in ECE stack packs, giving you control over which plugins are installed. You’ll need to verify that the plugin is compatible with the stack pack version. Then, you can add the plugin to the stack pack, repackage the stack pack, and upload it to make it available to your users and teams. The plugin will be installed automatically in deployments created using that stack pack.
This functionality is supported starting for ECE 2.0 and later with the Elastic Stack 6.8 and later. Check Include additional Kibana plugins.
If you’re ready to start using our latest version of ECE, upgrade your installation. For more information about the benefits of this release, check this release blog post.
Bug fixes
editElastic Cloud Enterprise 2.5.0 includes the following bug fix:
- Upgrade Elasticsearch in deployments with App Search to versions 7.7+. You can now upgrade your Elasticsearch cluster in a deployment that contains App Search even though App Search is no longer present in stack versions 7.7 and higher. Check the ECE 2.5 known problems.
Known problems
editThis version of ECE has a known problem when you upgrade Elasticsearch to stack versions 7.7 and higher in a deployment with App Search. App Search is no longer present in those stack versions and will be replaced by Enterprise Search, which will be available in an upcoming minor version of Elastic Cloud Enterprise. After you upgrade, the deployment will continue to work as expected but the App Search navigation tab might disappear. To access App Search, modify the deployment URL in your browser to add appsearch
to it.
For example, to use App Search change the URL https://cloud.elastic.co/deployments/b0b1a680a9334113a2fee3fbd67b7ce5
to https://cloud.elastic.co/deployments/b0b1a680a9334113a2fee3fbd67b7ce5/appsearch
ECE versions 2.5 are affected.
All App Search versions from 7.5 to 7.6 have a bug in which the system.log
file is not rotated.
Release date: April 14, 2020
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