GeoIP processor

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The geoip processor adds information about the geographical location of an IPv4 or IPv6 address.

By default, the processor uses the GeoLite2 City, GeoLite2 Country, and GeoLite2 ASN IP geolocation databases from MaxMind, shared under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license. It automatically downloads these databases if your nodes can connect to storage.googleapis.com domain and either:

  • ingest.geoip.downloader.eager.download is set to true
  • your cluster has at least one pipeline with a geoip or ip_location processor

Elasticsearch automatically downloads updates for these databases from the Elastic GeoIP endpoint: https://geoip.elastic.co/v1/database. To get download statistics for these updates, use the GeoIP stats API.

If your cluster can’t connect to the Elastic GeoIP endpoint or you want to manage your own updates, see Manage your own IP geolocation database updates.

If you would like to have Elasticsearch download database files directly from Maxmind using your own provided license key, see Create or update IP geolocation database configuration.

If Elasticsearch can’t connect to the endpoint for 30 days all updated databases will become invalid. Elasticsearch will stop enriching documents with ip geolocation data and will add tags: ["_geoip_expired_database"] field instead.

Using the geoip Processor in a Pipeline

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Table 22. geoip options

Name Required Default Description

field

yes

-

The field to get the IP address from for the geographical lookup.

target_field

no

geoip

The field that will hold the geographical information looked up from the database.

database_file

no

GeoLite2-City.mmdb

The database filename referring to one of the automatically downloaded GeoLite2 databases (GeoLite2-City.mmdb, GeoLite2-Country.mmdb, or GeoLite2-ASN.mmdb), or the name of a supported database file in the ingest-geoip config directory, or the name of a configured database (with the .mmdb suffix appended).

properties

no

[continent_name, country_iso_code, country_name, region_iso_code, region_name, city_name, location] *

Controls what properties are added to the target_field based on the ip geolocation lookup.

ignore_missing

no

false

If true and field does not exist, the processor quietly exits without modifying the document

first_only

no

true

If true only first found ip geolocation data, will be returned, even if field contains array

download_database_on_pipeline_creation

no

true

If true (and if ingest.geoip.downloader.eager.download is false), the missing database is downloaded when the pipeline is created. Else, the download is triggered by when the pipeline is used as the default_pipeline or final_pipeline in an index.

*Depends on what is available in database_file:

  • If a GeoLite2 City or GeoIP2 City database is used, then the following fields may be added under the target_field: ip, country_iso_code, country_name, country_in_european_union, registered_country_iso_code, registered_country_name, registered_country_in_european_union, continent_code, continent_name, region_iso_code, region_name, city_name, postal_code, timezone, location, and accuracy_radius. The fields actually added depend on what has been found and which properties were configured in properties.
  • If a GeoLite2 Country or GeoIP2 Country database is used, then the following fields may be added under the target_field: ip, country_iso_code, country_name, country_in_european_union, registered_country_iso_code, registered_country_name, registered_country_in_european_union, continent_code, and continent_name. The fields actually added depend on what has been found and which properties were configured in properties.
  • If the GeoLite2 ASN database is used, then the following fields may be added under the target_field: ip, asn, organization_name and network. The fields actually added depend on what has been found and which properties were configured in properties.
  • If the GeoIP2 Anonymous IP database is used, then the following fields may be added under the target_field: ip, hosting_provider, tor_exit_node, anonymous_vpn, anonymous, public_proxy, and residential_proxy. The fields actually added depend on what has been found and which properties were configured in properties.
  • If the GeoIP2 Connection Type database is used, then the following fields may be added under the target_field: ip, and connection_type. The fields actually added depend on what has been found and which properties were configured in properties.
  • If the GeoIP2 Domain database is used, then the following fields may be added under the target_field: ip, and domain. The fields actually added depend on what has been found and which properties were configured in properties.
  • If the GeoIP2 ISP database is used, then the following fields may be added under the target_field: ip, asn, organization_name, network, isp, isp_organization_name, mobile_country_code, and mobile_network_code. The fields actually added depend on what has been found and which properties were configured in properties.
  • If the GeoIP2 Enterprise database is used, then the following fields may be added under the target_field: ip, country_iso_code, country_name, country_in_european_union, registered_country_iso_code, registered_country_name, registered_country_in_european_union, continent_code, continent_name, region_iso_code, region_name, city_name, postal_code, timezone, location, accuracy_radius, country_confidence, city_confidence, postal_confidence, asn, organization_name, network, hosting_provider, tor_exit_node, anonymous_vpn, anonymous, public_proxy, residential_proxy, domain, isp, isp_organization_name, mobile_country_code, mobile_network_code, user_type, and connection_type. The fields actually added depend on what has been found and which properties were configured in properties.

Here is an example that uses the default city database and adds the geographical information to the geoip field based on the ip field:

resp = client.ingest.put_pipeline(
    id="geoip",
    description="Add ip geolocation info",
    processors=[
        {
            "geoip": {
                "field": "ip"
            }
        }
    ],
)
print(resp)

resp1 = client.index(
    index="my-index-000001",
    id="my_id",
    pipeline="geoip",
    document={
        "ip": "89.160.20.128"
    },
)
print(resp1)

resp2 = client.get(
    index="my-index-000001",
    id="my_id",
)
print(resp2)
PUT _ingest/pipeline/geoip
{
  "description" : "Add ip geolocation info",
  "processors" : [
    {
      "geoip" : {
        "field" : "ip"
      }
    }
  ]
}
PUT my-index-000001/_doc/my_id?pipeline=geoip
{
  "ip": "89.160.20.128"
}
GET my-index-000001/_doc/my_id

Which returns:

{
  "found": true,
  "_index": "my-index-000001",
  "_id": "my_id",
  "_version": 1,
  "_seq_no": 55,
  "_primary_term": 1,
  "_source": {
    "ip": "89.160.20.128",
    "geoip": {
      "continent_name": "Europe",
      "country_name": "Sweden",
      "country_iso_code": "SE",
      "city_name" : "Linköping",
      "region_iso_code" : "SE-E",
      "region_name" : "Östergötland County",
      "location": { "lat": 58.4167, "lon": 15.6167 }
    }
  }
}

Here is an example that uses the default country database and adds the geographical information to the geo field based on the ip field. Note that this database is downloaded automatically. So this:

resp = client.ingest.put_pipeline(
    id="geoip",
    description="Add ip geolocation info",
    processors=[
        {
            "geoip": {
                "field": "ip",
                "target_field": "geo",
                "database_file": "GeoLite2-Country.mmdb"
            }
        }
    ],
)
print(resp)

resp1 = client.index(
    index="my-index-000001",
    id="my_id",
    pipeline="geoip",
    document={
        "ip": "89.160.20.128"
    },
)
print(resp1)

resp2 = client.get(
    index="my-index-000001",
    id="my_id",
)
print(resp2)
PUT _ingest/pipeline/geoip
{
  "description" : "Add ip geolocation info",
  "processors" : [
    {
      "geoip" : {
        "field" : "ip",
        "target_field" : "geo",
        "database_file" : "GeoLite2-Country.mmdb"
      }
    }
  ]
}
PUT my-index-000001/_doc/my_id?pipeline=geoip
{
  "ip": "89.160.20.128"
}
GET my-index-000001/_doc/my_id

returns this:

{
  "found": true,
  "_index": "my-index-000001",
  "_id": "my_id",
  "_version": 1,
  "_seq_no": 65,
  "_primary_term": 1,
  "_source": {
    "ip": "89.160.20.128",
    "geo": {
      "continent_name": "Europe",
      "country_name": "Sweden",
      "country_iso_code": "SE"
    }
  }
}

Not all IP addresses find geo information from the database, When this occurs, no target_field is inserted into the document.

Here is an example of what documents will be indexed as when information for "80.231.5.0" cannot be found:

resp = client.ingest.put_pipeline(
    id="geoip",
    description="Add ip geolocation info",
    processors=[
        {
            "geoip": {
                "field": "ip"
            }
        }
    ],
)
print(resp)

resp1 = client.index(
    index="my-index-000001",
    id="my_id",
    pipeline="geoip",
    document={
        "ip": "80.231.5.0"
    },
)
print(resp1)

resp2 = client.get(
    index="my-index-000001",
    id="my_id",
)
print(resp2)
PUT _ingest/pipeline/geoip
{
  "description" : "Add ip geolocation info",
  "processors" : [
    {
      "geoip" : {
        "field" : "ip"
      }
    }
  ]
}

PUT my-index-000001/_doc/my_id?pipeline=geoip
{
  "ip": "80.231.5.0"
}

GET my-index-000001/_doc/my_id

Which returns:

{
  "_index" : "my-index-000001",
  "_id" : "my_id",
  "_version" : 1,
  "_seq_no" : 71,
  "_primary_term": 1,
  "found" : true,
  "_source" : {
    "ip" : "80.231.5.0"
  }
}

Recognizing Location as a Geopoint

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Although this processor enriches your document with a location field containing the estimated latitude and longitude of the IP address, this field will not be indexed as a geo_point type in Elasticsearch without explicitly defining it as such in the mapping.

You can use the following mapping for the example index above:

resp = client.indices.create(
    index="my_ip_locations",
    mappings={
        "properties": {
            "geoip": {
                "properties": {
                    "location": {
                        "type": "geo_point"
                    }
                }
            }
        }
    },
)
print(resp)
response = client.indices.create(
  index: 'my_ip_locations',
  body: {
    mappings: {
      properties: {
        geoip: {
          properties: {
            location: {
              type: 'geo_point'
            }
          }
        }
      }
    }
  }
)
puts response
const response = await client.indices.create({
  index: "my_ip_locations",
  mappings: {
    properties: {
      geoip: {
        properties: {
          location: {
            type: "geo_point",
          },
        },
      },
    },
  },
});
console.log(response);
PUT my_ip_locations
{
  "mappings": {
    "properties": {
      "geoip": {
        "properties": {
          "location": { "type": "geo_point" }
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

Manage your own IP geolocation database updates

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If you can’t automatically update your IP geolocation databases from the Elastic endpoint, you have a few other options:

Use a proxy endpoint

If you can’t connect directly to the Elastic GeoIP endpoint, consider setting up a secure proxy. You can then specify the proxy endpoint URL in the ingest.geoip.downloader.endpoint setting of each node’s elasticsearch.yml file.

In a strict setup the following domains may need to be added to the allowed domains list:

  • geoip.elastic.co
  • storage.googleapis.com

Use a custom endpoint

You can create a service that mimics the Elastic GeoIP endpoint. You can then get automatic updates from this service.

  1. Download your .mmdb database files from the MaxMind site.
  2. Copy your database files to a single directory.
  3. From your Elasticsearch directory, run:

    ./bin/elasticsearch-geoip -s my/source/dir [-t target/directory]
  4. Serve the static database files from your directory. For example, you can use Docker to serve the files from an nginx server:

    docker run -v my/source/dir:/usr/share/nginx/html:ro nginx
  5. Specify the service’s endpoint URL in the ingest.geoip.downloader.endpoint setting of each node’s elasticsearch.yml file.

    By default, Elasticsearch checks the endpoint for updates every three days. To use another polling interval, use the cluster update settings API to set ingest.geoip.downloader.poll.interval.

Manually update your IP geolocation databases

  1. Use the cluster update settings API to set ingest.geoip.downloader.enabled to false. This disables automatic updates that may overwrite your database changes. This also deletes all downloaded databases.
  2. Download your .mmdb database files from the MaxMind site.

    You can also use custom city, country, and ASN .mmdb files. These files must be uncompressed. The type (city, country, or ASN) will be pulled from the file metadata, so the filename does not matter.

  3. On Elasticsearch Service deployments upload database using a custom bundle.
  4. On self-managed deployments copy the database files to $ES_CONFIG/ingest-geoip.
  5. In your geoip processors, configure the database_file parameter to use a custom database file.

Node Settings

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The geoip processor supports the following setting:

ingest.geoip.cache_size
The maximum number of results that should be cached. Defaults to 1000.

Note that these settings are node settings and apply to all geoip and ip_location processors, i.e. there is a single cache for all such processors.

Cluster settings

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ingest.geoip.downloader.enabled
(Dynamic, Boolean) If true, Elasticsearch automatically downloads and manages updates for IP geolocation databases from the ingest.geoip.downloader.endpoint. If false, Elasticsearch does not download updates and deletes all downloaded databases. Defaults to true.
ingest.geoip.downloader.eager.download
(Dynamic, Boolean) If true, Elasticsearch downloads IP geolocation databases immediately, regardless of whether a pipeline exists with a geoip processor. If false, Elasticsearch only begins downloading the databases if a pipeline with a geoip processor exists or is added. Defaults to false.
ingest.geoip.downloader.endpoint
(Static, string) Endpoint URL used to download updates for IP geolocation databases. For example, https://myDomain.com/overview.json. Defaults to https://geoip.elastic.co/v1/database. Elasticsearch stores downloaded database files in each node’s temporary directory at $ES_TMPDIR/geoip-databases/<node_id>. Note that Elasticsearch will make a GET request to ${ingest.geoip.downloader.endpoint}?elastic_geoip_service_tos=agree, expecting the list of metadata about databases typically found in overview.json.

The downloader uses the JDK’s builtin cacerts. If you’re using a custom endpoint, add the custom https endpoint cacert(s) to the JDK’s truststore.

ingest.geoip.downloader.poll.interval
(Dynamic, time value) How often Elasticsearch checks for IP geolocation database updates at the ingest.geoip.downloader.endpoint. Must be greater than 1d (one day). Defaults to 3d (three days).