An Ansible Role that installs Elasticsearch on RedHat/CentOS or Debian/Ubuntu.
Requires at least Java 8. You can use the geerlingguy.java
to easilly install Java.
Available variables are listed below, along with default values (see defaults/main.yml
for default role variables, vars/RedHat.yml
and vars/Debian.yml
for distribution specific variables):
elasticsearch_version: '7.x'
The major version to use when installing Elasticsearch.
elasticsearch_package: elasticsearch
If you want to follow the latest release in the elasticsearch_version
major release cycle, keep the default here. Otherwise you can add -7.13.2
(for RHEL-based systems) or =7.13.2
(for Debian-based systems) to lock in a specific version, e.g. 7.13.2
.
elasticsearch_package_state: present
The elasticsearch
package state; set to latest
to upgrade or change versions.
elasticsearch_service_state: started
elasticsearch_service_enabled: true
Controls the Elasticsearch service options.
elasticsearch_network_host: localhost
Network host to listen for incoming connections on. By default we only listen on the localhost interface. Change this to the IP address to listen on a specific interface, or "0.0.0.0"
to listen on all interfaces.
When listening on multiple interfaces, if you're setting up a single Elasticsearch server (not a cluster), you should also add discovery.type: single-node
to elasticsearch_extra_options
.
elasticsearch_http_port: 9200
The port to listen for HTTP connections on.
elasticsearch_heap_size_min: 1g
The minimum jvm heap size.
elasticsearch_heap_size_max: 2g
The maximum jvm heap size.
elasticsearch_extra_options: ''
A placeholder for arbitrary configuration options not exposed by the role. This will be appended as-is to the end of the elasticsearch.yml
file, as long as your variable preserves formatting with a |
. For example:
elasticsearch_extra_options: | # Dont forget the pipe!
some.option: true
another.option: false
None.
- hosts: search
roles:
- geerlingguy.java
- geerlingguy.elasticsearch
MIT / BSD
This role was created in 2014 by Jeff Geerling, author of Ansible for DevOps.