Restore
actions:
1:
action: restore
description: >-
Restore all indices in the most recent snapshot with state SUCCESS. Wait
for the restore to complete before continuing. Do not skip the repository
filesystem access check. Use the other options to define the index/shard
settings for the restore.
options:
repository:
# If name is blank, the most recent snapshot by age will be selected
name:
# If indices is blank, all indices in the snapshot will be restored
indices:
wait_for_completion: True
max_wait: 3600
wait_interval: 10
filters:
- filtertype: state
state: SUCCESS
exclude:
- filtertype: ...
Empty values and commented lines will result in the default value, if any, being selected. If a setting is set, but not used by a given action, it will be ignored.
This action will restore indices from the indicated repository, from the most recent snapshot identified by the applied filters, or the snapshot identified by name.
You can cause indices to be renamed at restore with the rename_pattern and rename_replacement options:
actions:
1:
action: restore
description: >-
Restore all indices in the most recent snapshot with state SUCCESS. Wait
for the restore to complete before continuing. Do not skip the repository
filesystem access check. Use the other options to define the index/shard
settings for the restore.
options:
repository:
# If name is blank, the most recent snapshot by age will be selected
name:
# If indices is blank, all indices in the snapshot will be restored
indices:
rename_pattern: 'index(.+)'
rename_replacement: 'restored_index$1'
wait_for_completion: True
max_wait: 3600
wait_interval: 10
filters:
- filtertype: state
state: SUCCESS
exclude:
- filtertype: ...
In this configuration, Elasticsearch will capture whatever appears after index
and put it after restored_index
. For example, if I was restoring index-2017.03.01
, the resulting index would be renamed to restored_index-2017.03.01
.
The extra_settings option allows the addition of extra settings, such as index settings. An example of how these settings can be used to change settings for an index being restored might be:
actions:
1:
action: restore
description: >-
Restore all indices in the most recent snapshot with state SUCCESS. Wait
for the restore to complete before continuing. Do not skip the repository
filesystem access check. Use the other options to define the index/shard
settings for the restore.
options:
repository:
# If name is blank, the most recent snapshot by age will be selected
name:
# If indices is blank, all indices in the snapshot will be restored
indices:
extra_settings:
index_settings:
number_of_replicas: 0
wait_for_completion: True
max_wait: 3600
wait_interval: 10
filters:
- filtertype: state
state: SUCCESS
exclude:
- filtertype: ...
In this case, the number of replicas will be applied to the restored indices.
For more information see the official Elasticsearch Documentation.
- name
- include_aliases
- indices
- ignore_unavailable
- include_global_state
- partial
- rename_pattern
- rename_replacement
- extra_settings
- wait_for_completion
- max_wait
- wait_interval
- skip_repo_fs_check
- ignore_empty_list
- timeout_override
- continue_if_exception
- disable_action
See an example of this action in an actionfile here.