Task management API

edit

The task management API is new and should still be considered a beta feature. The API may change in ways that are not backwards compatible. For feature status, see #51628.

Returns information about the tasks currently executing in the cluster.

Request

edit

GET /_tasks/<task_id>

GET /_tasks

Prerequisites

edit
  • If the Elasticsearch security features are enabled, you must have the monitor or manage cluster privilege to use this API.

Description

edit

The task management API returns information about tasks currently executing on one or more nodes in the cluster.

Path parameters

edit
<task_id>
(Optional, string) ID of the task to return (node_id:task_number).

Query parameters

edit
actions

(Optional, string) Comma-separated list or wildcard expression of actions used to limit the request.

Omit this parameter to return all actions.

detailed
(Optional, Boolean) If true, the response includes detailed information about shard recoveries. Defaults to false.
group_by

(Optional, string) Key used to group tasks in the response.

Possible values are:

nodes
(Default) Node ID
parents
Parent task ID
none
Do not group tasks.
nodes
(Optional, string) Comma-separated list of node IDs or names used to limit returned information.
parent_task_id

(Optional, string) Parent task ID used to limit returned information.

To return all tasks, omit this parameter or use a value of -1.

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.
wait_for_completion
(Optional, Boolean) If true, the request blocks until the operation is complete. Defaults to false.

Response codes

edit
404 (Missing resources)
If <task_id> is specified but not found, this code indicates that there are no resources that match the request.

Examples

edit
response = client.tasks.list
puts response

response = client.tasks.list(
  nodes: 'nodeId1,nodeId2'
)
puts response

response = client.tasks.list(
  nodes: 'nodeId1,nodeId2',
  actions: 'cluster:*'
)
puts response
GET _tasks 
GET _tasks?nodes=nodeId1,nodeId2 
GET _tasks?nodes=nodeId1,nodeId2&actions=cluster:* 

Retrieves all tasks currently running on all nodes in the cluster.

Retrieves all tasks running on nodes nodeId1 and nodeId2. See Node specification for more info about how to select individual nodes.

Retrieves all cluster-related tasks running on nodes nodeId1 and nodeId2.

The API returns the following result:

{
  "nodes" : {
    "oTUltX4IQMOUUVeiohTt8A" : {
      "name" : "H5dfFeA",
      "transport_address" : "127.0.0.1:9300",
      "host" : "127.0.0.1",
      "ip" : "127.0.0.1:9300",
      "tasks" : {
        "oTUltX4IQMOUUVeiohTt8A:124" : {
          "node" : "oTUltX4IQMOUUVeiohTt8A",
          "id" : 124,
          "type" : "direct",
          "action" : "cluster:monitor/tasks/lists[n]",
          "start_time_in_millis" : 1458585884904,
          "running_time_in_nanos" : 47402,
          "cancellable" : false,
          "parent_task_id" : "oTUltX4IQMOUUVeiohTt8A:123"
        },
        "oTUltX4IQMOUUVeiohTt8A:123" : {
          "node" : "oTUltX4IQMOUUVeiohTt8A",
          "id" : 123,
          "type" : "transport",
          "action" : "cluster:monitor/tasks/lists",
          "start_time_in_millis" : 1458585884904,
          "running_time_in_nanos" : 236042,
          "cancellable" : false
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

Retrieve information from a particular task

edit

It is also possible to retrieve information for a particular task. The following example retrieves information about task oTUltX4IQMOUUVeiohTt8A:124:

GET _tasks/oTUltX4IQMOUUVeiohTt8A:124

If the task isn’t found, the API returns a 404.

To retrieve all children of a particular task:

response = client.tasks.list(
  parent_task_id: 'oTUltX4IQMOUUVeiohTt8A:123'
)
puts response
GET _tasks?parent_task_id=oTUltX4IQMOUUVeiohTt8A:123

If the parent isn’t found, the API does not return a 404.

Get more information about tasks

edit

You can also use the detailed request parameter to get more information about the running tasks. This is useful to distinguish tasks from each other but is more costly to execute. For example, fetching all searches using the detailed request parameter:

response = client.tasks.list(
  actions: '*search',
  detailed: true
)
puts response
GET _tasks?actions=*search&detailed

The API returns the following result:

{
  "nodes" : {
    "oTUltX4IQMOUUVeiohTt8A" : {
      "name" : "H5dfFeA",
      "transport_address" : "127.0.0.1:9300",
      "host" : "127.0.0.1",
      "ip" : "127.0.0.1:9300",
      "tasks" : {
        "oTUltX4IQMOUUVeiohTt8A:464" : {
          "node" : "oTUltX4IQMOUUVeiohTt8A",
          "id" : 464,
          "type" : "transport",
          "action" : "indices:data/read/search",
          "description" : "indices[test], types[test], search_type[QUERY_THEN_FETCH], source[{\"query\":...}]",
          "start_time_in_millis" : 1483478610008,
          "running_time_in_nanos" : 13991383,
          "cancellable" : true,
          "cancelled" : false
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

The new description field contains human readable text that identifies the particular request that the task is performing such as identifying the search request being performed by a search task like the example above. Other kinds of tasks have different descriptions, like _reindex which has the source and the destination, or _bulk which just has the number of requests and the destination indices. Many requests will only have an empty description because more detailed information about the request is not easily available or particularly helpful in identifying the request.

_tasks requests with detailed may also return a status. This is a report of the internal status of the task. As such its format varies from task to task. While we try to keep the status for a particular task consistent from version to version this isn’t always possible because we sometimes change the implementation. In that case we might remove fields from the status for a particular request so any parsing you do of the status might break in minor releases.

Wait for completion

edit

The task API can also be used to wait for completion of a particular task. The following call will block for 10 seconds or until the task with id oTUltX4IQMOUUVeiohTt8A:12345 is completed.

GET _tasks/oTUltX4IQMOUUVeiohTt8A:12345?wait_for_completion=true&timeout=10s

You can also wait for all tasks for certain action types to finish. This command will wait for all reindex tasks to finish:

response = client.tasks.list(
  actions: '*reindex',
  wait_for_completion: true,
  timeout: '10s'
)
puts response
GET _tasks?actions=*reindex&wait_for_completion=true&timeout=10s

Task Cancellation

edit

If a long-running task supports cancellation, it can be cancelled with the cancel tasks API. The following example cancels task oTUltX4IQMOUUVeiohTt8A:12345:

response = client.tasks.cancel(
  task_id: 'oTUltX4IQMOUUVeiohTt8A:12345'
)
puts response
POST _tasks/oTUltX4IQMOUUVeiohTt8A:12345/_cancel

The task cancellation command supports the same task selection parameters as the list tasks command, so multiple tasks can be cancelled at the same time. For example, the following command will cancel all reindex tasks running on the nodes nodeId1 and nodeId2.

response = client.tasks.cancel(
  nodes: 'nodeId1,nodeId2',
  actions: '*reindex'
)
puts response
POST _tasks/_cancel?nodes=nodeId1,nodeId2&actions=*reindex

A task may continue to run for some time after it has been cancelled because it may not be able to safely stop its current activity straight away. The list tasks API will continue to list these cancelled tasks until they complete. The cancelled flag in the response to the list tasks API indicates that the cancellation command has been processed and the task will stop as soon as possible.

Task Grouping

edit

The task lists returned by task API commands can be grouped either by nodes (default) or by parent tasks using the group_by parameter. The following command will change the grouping to parent tasks:

response = client.tasks.list(
  group_by: 'parents'
)
puts response
GET _tasks?group_by=parents

The grouping can be disabled by specifying none as a group_by parameter:

response = client.tasks.list(
  group_by: 'none'
)
puts response
GET _tasks?group_by=none

Identifying running tasks

edit

The X-Opaque-Id header, when provided on the HTTP request header, is going to be returned as a header in the response as well as in the headers field for in the task information. This allows to track certain calls, or associate certain tasks with the client that started them:

curl -i -H "X-Opaque-Id: 123456" "http://localhost:9200/_tasks?group_by=parents"

The API returns the following result:

HTTP/1.1 200 OK
X-Opaque-Id: 123456 
content-type: application/json; charset=UTF-8
content-length: 831

{
  "tasks" : {
    "u5lcZHqcQhu-rUoFaqDphA:45" : {
      "node" : "u5lcZHqcQhu-rUoFaqDphA",
      "id" : 45,
      "type" : "transport",
      "action" : "cluster:monitor/tasks/lists",
      "start_time_in_millis" : 1513823752749,
      "running_time_in_nanos" : 293139,
      "cancellable" : false,
      "headers" : {
        "X-Opaque-Id" : "123456" 
      },
      "children" : [
        {
          "node" : "u5lcZHqcQhu-rUoFaqDphA",
          "id" : 46,
          "type" : "direct",
          "action" : "cluster:monitor/tasks/lists[n]",
          "start_time_in_millis" : 1513823752750,
          "running_time_in_nanos" : 92133,
          "cancellable" : false,
          "parent_task_id" : "u5lcZHqcQhu-rUoFaqDphA:45",
          "headers" : {
            "X-Opaque-Id" : "123456" 
          }
        }
      ]
    }
  }
}

id as a part of the response header

id for the tasks that was initiated by the REST request

the child task of the task initiated by the REST request