WARNING: Version 2.0 of Elasticsearch has passed its EOL date.
This documentation is no longer being maintained and may be removed. If you are running this version, we strongly advise you to upgrade. For the latest information, see the current release documentation.
Setup
editSetup
editThis section includes information on how to setup elasticsearch and get it running. If you haven’t already, download it, and then check the installation docs.
Elasticsearch can also be installed from our repositories using apt
or yum
.
See Repositories.
Supported platforms
editThe matrix of officially supported operating systems and JVMs is available here: Support Matrix. Elasticsearch is tested on the listed platforms, but it is possible that it will work on other platforms too.
Installation
editAfter downloading the latest release and extracting it, elasticsearch can be started using:
$ bin/elasticsearch
On *nix systems, the command will start the process in the foreground.
Running as a daemon
editTo run it in the background, add the -d
switch to it:
$ bin/elasticsearch -d
PID
editThe Elasticsearch process can write its PID to a specified file on startup, making it easy to shut down the process later on:
The PID is written to a file called |
|
The |
Java (JVM) version
editElasticsearch is built using Java, and requires at least Java 7 in order to run. Only Oracle’s Java and the OpenJDK are supported. The same JVM version should be used on all Elasticsearch nodes and clients.
We recommend installing the Java 8 update 20 or later, or Java 7 update 55 or later. Previous versions of Java 7 are known to have bugs that can cause index corruption and data loss. Elasticsearch will refuse to start if a known-bad version of Java is used.
The version of Java to use can be configured by setting the JAVA_HOME
environment variable.