EC2 Discovery

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ec2 discovery allows to use the ec2 APIs to perform automatic discovery (similar to multicast in non hostile multicast environments). Here is a simple sample configuration:

discovery:
    type: ec2

You must also set cloud.aws.region if you are not using default AWS region. See Region for details.

The ec2 discovery is using the same credentials as the rest of the AWS services provided by this plugin (repositories). See Getting started with AWS for details.

The following are a list of settings (prefixed with discovery.ec2) that can further control the discovery:

groups
Either a comma separated list or array based list of (security) groups. Only instances with the provided security groups will be used in the cluster discovery. (NOTE: You could provide either group NAME or group ID.)
host_type
The type of host type to use to communicate with other instances. Can be one of private_ip, public_ip, private_dns, public_dns. Defaults to private_ip.
availability_zones
Either a comma separated list or array based list of availability zones. Only instances within the provided availability zones will be used in the cluster discovery.
any_group
If set to false, will require all security groups to be present for the instance to be used for the discovery. Defaults to true.
ping_timeout
How long to wait for existing EC2 nodes to reply during discovery. Defaults to 3s. If no unit like ms, s or m is specified, milliseconds are used.

Binding the network host

It’s important to define network.host as by default it’s bound to localhost.

You can use core network host settings or ec2 specific host settings:

EC2 Network Host

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When the cloud-aws plugin is installed, the following are also allowed as valid network host settings:

EC2 Host Value Description

_ec2:privateIpv4_

The private IP address (ipv4) of the machine.

_ec2:privateDns_

The private host of the machine.

_ec2:publicIpv4_

The public IP address (ipv4) of the machine.

_ec2:publicDns_

The public host of the machine.

_ec2:privateIp_

equivalent to _ec2:privateIpv4_.

_ec2:publicIp_

equivalent to _ec2:publicIpv4_.

_ec2_

equivalent to _ec2:privateIpv4_.

Recommended EC2 Permissions

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EC2 discovery requires making a call to the EC2 service. You’ll want to setup an IAM policy to allow this. You can create a custom policy via the IAM Management Console. It should look similar to this.

{
  "Statement": [
    {
      "Action": [
        "ec2:DescribeInstances"
      ],
      "Effect": "Allow",
      "Resource": [
        "*"
      ]
    }
  ],
  "Version": "2012-10-17"
}

Filtering by Tags

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The ec2 discovery can also filter machines to include in the cluster based on tags (and not just groups). The settings to use include the discovery.ec2.tag. prefix. For example, setting discovery.ec2.tag.stage to dev will only filter instances with a tag key set to stage, and a value of dev. Several tags set will require all of those tags to be set for the instance to be included.

One practical use for tag filtering is when an ec2 cluster contains many nodes that are not running elasticsearch. In this case (particularly with high ping_timeout values) there is a risk that a new node’s discovery phase will end before it has found the cluster (which will result in it declaring itself master of a new cluster with the same name - highly undesirable). Tagging elasticsearch ec2 nodes and then filtering by that tag will resolve this issue.

Automatic Node Attributes

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Though not dependent on actually using ec2 as discovery (but still requires the cloud aws plugin installed), the plugin can automatically add node attributes relating to ec2 (for example, availability zone, that can be used with the awareness allocation feature). In order to enable it, set cloud.node.auto_attributes to true in the settings.

Using other EC2 endpoint

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If you are using any EC2 api compatible service, you can set the endpoint you want to use by setting cloud.aws.ec2.endpoint to your URL provider.