Elasticsearch: Five Things I was Doing Wrong
Elasticsearch: Five Things I was Doing Wrong
Update: Also check out my series on scaling Elasticsearch.
I’ve been working with Elasticsearch off and on for over a year, but recently I attended Elasticsearch.com’s training class (well worth the time and money) and discovered a few significant things that I was doing just plain wrong.
Before using Elasticsearch I used Lucene directly, and so a few of the errors I made were due to not understanding some of the things ES does for you behind the scenes.
As background, most of the data I’m indexing conforms to the WordPress database schema.
1. Use Arrays for Fields with Multiple Values
For some reason I had neglected to use arrays when creating fileds such as a list of tags attached to a document. At some point I started concatenating the tags together into a long string separated by semicolons and I used a custom analyzer to break them apart like this:
"analysis" : { "tokenizer" : { "semicolon_token" : { "type" => "pattern", "pattern" => ";" } }, "analyzer" : { "wp_tag_analyzer" : { "type" => "custom", "tokenizer" => "semicolon_token", } } }
Or, for fields that were lists of URLs I just separated them by spaces and used the whitespace analyzer. Both methods worked fine for the initial applications, but have some obvious drawbacks. Explicitly inserting a character sequence as a delimiter will almost always means you will hit an edge case somewhere down the road where it will break.
Using an array of items is a much easier way, but somehow, after initially reading about the array mapping, I completely forgot that it existed. I think I was thinking of ES too much as a text searching engine and not enough as a general JSON data store.
2. Don’t Use store=true
When Mapping Fields
If you are storing the full _source
of the document, then there is very little reason to store individual fields separately. You just inflate your index size. I originally started storing the content and titles of documents because I thought it might speed up the highlighting. In practice, I don’t think it did anything for me, and many of our queries don’t do any highlighting at all.
In the end this was a case of premature optimization. Maybe at some point if I find that 90% of the time we are just returning the post_id
and using that to lookup the original content in MySQL we’ll consider storing that separately to reduce network traffic and load caused by extracting the post_id
field from _source
, but that still feels premature at this point.
For debugging reasons I would never consider turning off storing _source
. It is far too useful to know exactly what data was entered, and you never know when you might want to use a different field for a new application.
3. Don’t Manually Flush, Optimize, or Refresh
Elasticsearch takes care of these core Lucene operations for me, there was never any good reason for me to issue one of these commands when the default ES settings would accomplish it within a few minutes.
The optimize command in particular is dangerous since it merges all segments in the Lucene index (a very time consuming operation). The code I wrote which at first was issuing innocuous optimize commands after doing some bulk indexing by hand eventually started getting called repeatedly in automated jobs. Fortunately it never rose to a level of causing real problems, but its easy for code you write to get unintentionally called.
Again, this was a case of premature optimization.
4. Set the Appropriate Production Flags
This is another case that didn’t cause a real issue, but could have in the future. The default settings for ES are set to ensure it works to quickly start development. This means that a few of the default settings are not what you want when in production. In particular:
- discovery.zen.minimum_master_nodes
- Should be set to something like N/2 + 1 where N is the number of available master nodes.
- action.disable_delete_all_indices
- Do you really want to allow a single command (that could be mistyped) to delete all of your indices? No, neither do I.
- gateway.recover_after_nodes
- How many nodes need to be up before the recovery process starts replicating data around the cluster.
- index.cache.field.type: soft (in 0.90 this field name changed to index.fielddata.cache. Thanks Olivier for the heads up.)
- I started setting my field cache to soft to ensure that it never created OutOfMemory errors. I think this was particularly helpful because we are doing a lot of faceting.
- Update 2014-01-09: the indices.fielddata.cache.size setting introduced in 0.90 is a better way to prevent running into OutOfMemory exceptions due to the field cache getting too big. I am no longer using the soft field data cache.
5. Do Not Use _type
as Another Field
The _type
field can entice you to use it as another field to indicate a category for your document. Don’t let it.
Here’s where I went wrong. WordPress posts can have different types (post_type
) which allow displaying the content of the post in different ways (e.g. image posts, video posts, quotes, a status message). This despite the different post types all using the same schema. This seemed to align pretty well with the _type
fields so I used an ES dynamic mapping to have post_type == _type
.
The biggest problem with this is how do you determine the document’s _type
after a post has been deleted from the database and you want to also delete it from your index. A document is uniquely identified both by its _id
and its _type
.
- If you delete from your RDBMS first (or NoSQL data store flavor of the month), then you may no longer have the
_type
available to delete the object. - If you delete from ES first then what if the RDBMS delete operation fails for some reason.
Making the _type
independent of any data within the document ensures that all you will need is the document id. This was one of those “Oh, that was dumb of me” bugs that I completely missed when building my index.
转自:https://greg.blog/2013/01/24/elasticsearch-five-things-i-was-doing-wrong/