Rollover API

edit

Creates a new index for a data stream or index alias.

POST my-data-stream/_rollover

Request

edit

POST /<rollover-target>/_rollover/

POST /<rollover-target>/_rollover/<target-index>

Prerequisites

edit
  • If the Elasticsearch security features are enabled, you must have the manage index privilege for the rollover target.

Description

edit

We recommend using ILM’s rollover action to automate rollovers. See Index lifecycle.

The rollover API creates a new index for a data stream or index alias. The API’s behavior depends on the rollover target.

Roll over a data stream

If you roll over a data stream, the API creates a new write index for the stream. The stream’s previous write index becomes a regular backing index. A rollover also increments the data stream’s generation. See Rollover.

Roll over an index alias with a write index

Prior to Elasticsearch 7.9, you’d typically use an index alias with a write index to manage time series data. Data streams replace this functionality, require less maintenance, and automatically integrate with data tiers.

See Convert an index alias to a data stream.

If an index alias points to multiple indices, one of the indices must be a write index. The rollover API creates a new write index for the alias with is_write_index set to true. The API also sets is_write_index to false for the previous write index.

Roll over an index alias with one index

If you roll over an index alias that points to only one index, the API creates a new index for the alias and removes the original index from the alias.

Increment index names for an alias

edit

When you roll over an index alias, you can specify a name for the new index. If you don’t specify a name and the current index ends with - and a number, such as my-index-000001 or my-index-3, the new index name increments that number. For example, if you roll over an alias with a current index of my-index-000001, the rollover creates a new index named my-index-000002. This number is always 6 characters and zero-padded, regardless of the previous index’s name.

Wait for active shards

edit

A rollover creates a new index and is subject to the wait_for_active_shards setting.

Path parameters

edit
<rollover-target>
(Required, string) Name of the data stream or index alias to roll over.
<target-index>

(Optional, string) Name of the index to create. Supports date math. Data streams do not support this parameter.

If the name of the alias’s current write index does not end with - and a number, such as my-index-000001 or my-index-3, this parameter is required.

Index names must meet the following criteria:

  • Lowercase only
  • Cannot include \, /, *, ?, ", <, >, |, ` ` (space character), ,, #
  • Indices prior to 7.0 could contain a colon (:), but that’s been deprecated and won’t be supported in 7.0+
  • Cannot start with -, _, +
  • Cannot be . or ..
  • Cannot be longer than 255 bytes (note it is bytes, so multi-byte characters will count towards the 255 limit faster)
  • Names starting with . are deprecated, except for hidden indices and internal indices managed by plugins

Query parameters

edit
dry_run
(Optional, Boolean) If true, checks whether the current index matches one or more specified conditions but does not perform a rollover. Defaults to false.
include_type_name
[7.0.0] Deprecated in 7.0.0. Mapping types have been deprecated. See Removal of mapping types. (Optional, boolean) If true, a mapping type is expected in the body of mappings. Defaults to false.
wait_for_active_shards

(Optional, string) The number of shard copies that must be active before proceeding with the operation. Set to all or any positive integer up to the total number of shards in the index (number_of_replicas+1). Default: 1, the primary shard.

See Active shards.

master_timeout
(Optional, time units) Period to wait for a connection to the master node. If no response is received before the timeout expires, the request fails and returns an error. Defaults to 30s.
timeout
(Optional, time units) Period to wait for a response. If no response is received before the timeout expires, the request fails and returns an error. Defaults to 30s.

Request body

edit
aliases

(Optional, object of objects) Aliases for the target index. Data streams do not support this parameter.

Properties of aliases objects
<alias>

(Required, object) The key is the alias name. Index alias names support date math.

The object body contains options for the alias. Supports an empty object.

Properties of <alias>
filter
(Optional, Query DSL object) Query used to limit documents the alias can access.
index_routing
(Optional, string) Value used to route indexing operations to a specific shard. If specified, this overwrites the routing value for indexing operations.
is_hidden
(Optional, Boolean) If true, the alias is hidden. Defaults to false. All indices for the alias must have the same is_hidden value.
is_write_index
(Optional, Boolean) If true, the index is the write index for the alias. Defaults to false.
routing
(Optional, string) Value used to route indexing and search operations to a specific shard.
search_routing
(Optional, string) Value used to route search operations to a specific shard. If specified, this overwrites the routing value for search operations.
conditions

(Optional, object) Conditions for the rollover. If specified, Elasticsearch only performs the rollover if the current index meets one or more of these conditions. If this parameter is not specified, Elasticsearch performs the rollover unconditionally.

To trigger a rollover, the current index must meet these conditions at the time of the request. Elasticsearch does not monitor the index after the API response. To automate rollover, use ILM’s rollover instead.

Properties of conditions
max_age
(Optional, time units) Triggers rollover after the maximum elapsed time from index creation is reached. The elapsed time is always calculated since the index creation time, even if the index origination date is configured to a custom date, such as when using the index.lifecycle.parse_origination_date or index.lifecycle.origination_date settings.
max_docs
(Optional, integer) Triggers rollover after the specified maximum number of documents is reached. Documents added since the last refresh are not included in the document count. The document count does not include documents in replica shards.
max_size

(Optional, byte units) Triggers rollover when the index reaches a certain size. This is the total size of all primary shards in the index. Replicas are not counted toward the maximum index size.

To see the current index size, use the _cat indices API. The pri.store.size value shows the combined size of all primary shards.

max_primary_shard_size

(Optional, byte units) Triggers rollover when the largest primary shard in the index reaches a certain size. This is the maximum size of the primary shards in the index. As with max_size, replicas are ignored.

To see the current shard size, use the _cat shards API. The store value shows the size each shard, and prirep indicates whether a shard is a primary (p) or a replica (r).

mappings

(Optional, mapping object) Mapping for fields in the index. If specified, this mapping can include:

See Mapping.

Data streams do not support this parameter.

settings

(Optional, index setting object) Configuration options for the index. See Index Settings.

Data streams do not support this parameter.

Response body

edit
acknowledged
(Boolean) If true, the request received a response from the master node within the timeout period.
shards_acknowledged
(Boolean) If true, the request received a response from active shards within the master_timeout period.
old_index
(string) Previous index for the data stream or index alias. For data streams and index aliases with a write index, this is the previous write index.
new_index
(string) Index created by the rollover. For data streams and index aliases with a write index, this is the current write index.
rolled_over
(Boolean) If true, the data stream or index alias rolled over.
dry_run
(Boolean) If true, Elasticsearch did not perform the rollover.
condition

(object) Result of each condition specified in the request’s conditions. If no conditions were specified, this is an empty object.

Properties of condition
<condition>
(Boolean) The key is each condition. The value is its result. If true, the index met the condition at rollover.

Examples

edit

Roll over a data stream

edit

The following request rolls over a data stream unconditionally.

POST my-data-stream/_rollover

The following request only rolls over the data stream if the current write index meets one or more of the following conditions:

  • The index was created 7 or more days ago.
  • The index contains 1,000 or more documents.
  • The index’s largest primary shard is 50GB or larger.
POST my-data-stream/_rollover
{
  "conditions": {
    "max_age": "7d",
    "max_docs": 1000,
    "max_primary_shard_size": "50gb"
  }
}

The API returns:

{
  "acknowledged": true,
  "shards_acknowledged": true,
  "old_index": ".ds-my-data-stream-2099.05.06-000001",
  "new_index": ".ds-my-data-stream-2099.05.07-000002",
  "rolled_over": true,
  "dry_run": false,
  "conditions": {
    "[max_age: 7d]": false,
    "[max_docs: 1000]": true,
    "[max_primary_shard_size: 50gb]": false
  }
}

Roll over an index alias with a write index

edit

The following request creates <my-index-{now/d}-000001> and sets it as the write index for my-alias.

# PUT <my-index-{now/d}-000001>
PUT %3Cmy-index-%7Bnow%2Fd%7D-000001%3E
{
  "aliases": {
    "my-alias": {
      "is_write_index": true
    }
  }
}

The following request only rolls over the alias if the current write index meets one or more of the following conditions:

  • The index was created 7 or more days ago.
  • The index contains 1,000 or more documents.
  • The index’s largest primary shard is 50GB or larger.
POST my-alias/_rollover
{
  "conditions": {
    "max_age": "7d",
    "max_docs": 1000,
    "max_primary_shard_size": "50gb"
  }
}

The API returns:

{
  "acknowledged": true,
  "shards_acknowledged": true,
  "old_index": "my-index-2099.05.06-000001",
  "new_index": "my-index-2099.05.07-000002",
  "rolled_over": true,
  "dry_run": false,
  "conditions": {
    "[max_age: 7d]": false,
    "[max_docs: 1000]": true,
    "[max_primary_shard_size: 50gb]": false
  }
}

If the alias’s index names use date math and you roll over indices at a regular interval, you can use date math to narrow your searches. For example, the following search targets indices created in the last three days.

# GET /<my-index-{now/d}-*>,<my-index-{now/d-1d}-*>,<my-index-{now/d-2d}-*>/_search
GET /%3Cmy-index-%7Bnow%2Fd%7D-*%3E%2C%3Cmy-index-%7Bnow%2Fd-1d%7D-*%3E%2C%3Cmy-index-%7Bnow%2Fd-2d%7D-*%3E/_search

Roll over an index alias with one index

edit

The following request creates <my-index-{now/d}-000001> and its alias, my-write-alias.

# PUT <my-index-{now/d}-000001>
PUT %3Cmy-index-%7Bnow%2Fd%7D-000001%3E
{
  "aliases": {
    "my-write-alias": { }
  }
}

The following request only rolls over the alias if the current index meets one or more of the following conditions:

  • The index was created 7 or more days ago.
  • The index contains 1,000 or more documents.
  • The index’s largest primary shard is 50GB or larger.
POST my-write-alias/_rollover
{
  "conditions": {
    "max_age": "7d",
    "max_docs": 1000,
    "max_primary_shard_size": "50gb"
  }
}

The API returns:

{
  "acknowledged": true,
  "shards_acknowledged": true,
  "old_index": "my-index-2099.05.06-000001",
  "new_index": "my-index-2099.05.07-000002",
  "rolled_over": true,
  "dry_run": false,
  "conditions": {
    "[max_age: 7d]": false,
    "[max_docs: 1000]": true,
    "[max_primary_shard_size: 50gb]": false
  }
}

Specify settings during a rollover

edit

Typically, you use an index template to automatically configure indices created during a rollover. If you roll over an index alias, you use the rollover API to add additional index settings or overwrite settings in the template. Data streams do not support the settings parameter.

POST my-alias/_rollover
{
  "settings": {
    "index.number_of_shards": 2
  }
}