- Elastic Cloud on Kubernetes:
- Overview
- Quickstart
- Operating ECK
- Orchestrating Elastic Stack applications
- Run Elasticsearch on ECK
- Node configuration
- Volume claim templates
- Storage recommendations
- Transport settings
- Virtual memory
- Settings managed by ECK
- Secure settings
- Custom configuration files and plugins
- Init containers for plugin downloads
- Update strategy
- Pod disruption budget
- Nodes orchestration
- Advanced Elasticsearch node scheduling
- Create automated snapshots
- Remote clusters
- Readiness probe
- Pod PreStop hook
- Elasticsearch autoscaling
- JVM heap dumps
- Security Context
- Run Kibana on ECK
- Run APM Server on ECK
- Run standalone Elastic Agent on ECK
- Run Fleet-managed Elastic Agent on ECK
- Run Elastic Maps Server on ECK
- Run Enterprise Search on ECK
- Run Beats on ECK
- Secure the Elastic Stack
- Access Elastic Stack services
- Customize Pods
- Manage compute resources
- Autoscaling stateless applications
- Upgrade the Elastic Stack version
- Run Elasticsearch on ECK
- Advanced topics
- Reference
- API Reference
- agent.k8s.elastic.co/v1alpha1
- apm.k8s.elastic.co/v1
- apm.k8s.elastic.co/v1beta1
- beat.k8s.elastic.co/v1beta1
- common.k8s.elastic.co/v1
- common.k8s.elastic.co/v1beta1
- elasticsearch.k8s.elastic.co/v1
- elasticsearch.k8s.elastic.co/v1beta1
- enterprisesearch.k8s.elastic.co/v1
- enterprisesearch.k8s.elastic.co/v1beta1
- kibana.k8s.elastic.co/v1
- kibana.k8s.elastic.co/v1beta1
- maps.k8s.elastic.co/v1alpha1
- Glossary
- Third-party dependencies
- API Reference
- Release highlights
- 2.2.0 release highlights
- 2.1.0 release highlights
- 2.0.0 release highlights
- 1.9.1 release highlights
- 1.9.0 release highlights
- 1.8.0 release highlights
- 1.7.1 release highlights
- 1.7.0 release highlights
- 1.6.0 release highlights
- 1.5.0 release highlights
- 1.4.1 release highlights
- 1.4.0 release highlights
- 1.3.2 release highlights
- 1.3.1 release highlights
- 1.3.0 release highlights
- 1.2.2 release highlights
- 1.2.1 release highlights
- 1.2.0 release highlights
- 1.1.2 release highlights
- 1.1.1 release highlights
- 1.1.0 release highlights
- 1.0.1 release highlights
- 1.0.0 release highlights
- 1.0.0-beta1 release highlights
- Release notes
- Elastic Cloud on Kubernetes version 2.2.0
- Elastic Cloud on Kubernetes version 2.1.0
- Elastic Cloud on Kubernetes version 2.0.0
- Elastic Cloud on Kubernetes version 1.9.1
- Elastic Cloud on Kubernetes version 1.9.0
- Elastic Cloud on Kubernetes version 1.8.0
- Elastic Cloud on Kubernetes version 1.7.1
- Elastic Cloud on Kubernetes version 1.7.0
- Elastic Cloud on Kubernetes version 1.6.0
- Elastic Cloud on Kubernetes version 1.5.0
- Elastic Cloud on Kubernetes version 1.4.1
- Elastic Cloud on Kubernetes version 1.4.0
- Elastic Cloud on Kubernetes version 1.3.2
- Elastic Cloud on Kubernetes version 1.3.1
- Elastic Cloud on Kubernetes version 1.3.0
- Elastic Cloud on Kubernetes version 1.2.2
- Elastic Cloud on Kubernetes version 1.2.1
- Elastic Cloud on Kubernetes version 1.2.0
- Elastic Cloud on Kubernetes version 1.1.2
- Elastic Cloud on Kubernetes version 1.1.1
- Elastic Cloud on Kubernetes version 1.1.0
- Elastic Cloud on Kubernetes version 1.0.1
- Elastic Cloud on Kubernetes version 1.0.0
- Elastic Cloud on Kubernetes version 1.0.0-beta1
2.1.0 release highlights
edit2.1.0 release highlights
editNew and notable
editNew and notable changes in version 2.1.0 of Elastic Cloud on Kubernetes. Check Elastic Cloud on Kubernetes version 2.1.0 for the full list of changes.
Improved Elasticsearch status sub-resource
editAdditional information was added to the Elasticsearch status sub-resource, which provides rich details concerning the in-progress operations during upgrades, upscale, and downscale operations. New conditions fields include ReconciliationComplete
, RunningDesiredVersion
, and ElasticsearchIsReachable
which gives information explaining why each condition is either True, or False. Also included is a new parent field inProgressOperations
, which provides topology information for upgrades, upscale, and downscale operations.
Improved Elasticsearch and Kibana generation status
editAn additional field observedGeneration
is now maintained within Elasticsearch and Kibana’s status sub-resource. This new field represents the current generation of the specification that the ECK operator is working to reconcile, and is intended to allow tools to deterministically monitor the rollout of custom resources.
Allowing upgrade predicates to be selectively disabled
editStarting with ECK 2.1, the Elasticsearch clusters can have certain upgrade predicates (rules) disabled on a case-by-case basis using annotations on the Elasticsearch custom resource, which allow full control over what rules are considered during the Elasticsearch upgrade process. Selectively disabling the predicates is extremely risky, and carries a high chance of either data loss, or causing a cluster to become completely unavailable. This feature is therefore intended exclusively as a troubleshooting mechanism of last resort. Check the documentation for more details.
Known issues
edit- Under certain circumstances the operator will keep terminating and restarting Elasticsearch Pods seemingly at random. The underlying issue is fixed in ECK 2.4.0 and an upgrade is highly recommended.
On this page