Singleton Command Line Interface
The curator_cli
command allows users to run a single, supported action from the command-line, without needing either the client or action YAML configuration file, though it does support using the client configuration file if you want. As an important bonus, the command-line options allow you to override the settings in the curator.yml
file!
While both the configuration file and the command-line arguments can be used together, it is important to note that command-line options will override file-based configuration of the same setting.
$ curator_cli --help
Usage: curator_cli [OPTIONS] COMMAND [ARGS]...
Curator CLI (Singleton Tool)
Run a single action from the command-line.
The default $HOME/.curator/curator.yml configuration file (--config) can be used but is not needed.
Command-line settings will always override YAML configuration settings.
Options:
--config PATH Path to configuration file.
--hosts TEXT Elasticsearch URL to connect to.
--cloud_id TEXT Elastic Cloud instance id
--api_token TEXT The base64 encoded API Key token
--id TEXT API Key "id" value
--api_key TEXT API Key "api_key" value
--username TEXT Elasticsearch username
--password TEXT Elasticsearch password
--bearer_auth TEXT Bearer authentication token
--opaque_id TEXT X-Opaque-Id HTTP header value
--request_timeout FLOAT Request timeout in seconds
--http_compress / --no-http_compress
Enable HTTP compression [default: no-http_compress]
--verify_certs / --no-verify_certs
Verify SSL/TLS certificate(s) [default: verify_certs]
--ca_certs TEXT Path to CA certificate file or directory
--client_cert TEXT Path to client certificate file
--client_key TEXT Path to client key file
--ssl_assert_hostname TEXT Hostname or IP address to verify on the node's certificate.
--ssl_assert_fingerprint TEXT SHA-256 fingerprint of the node's certificate. If this value is given then root-of-trust
verification isn't done and only the node's certificate fingerprint is verified.
--ssl_version TEXT Minimum acceptable TLS/SSL version
--master-only / --no-master-only
Only run if the single host provided is the elected master [default: no-master-only]
--skip_version_test / --no-skip_version_test
Elasticsearch version compatibility check [default: no-skip_version_test]
--dry-run Do not perform any changes.
--loglevel [DEBUG|INFO|WARNING|ERROR|CRITICAL]
Log level
--logfile TEXT Log file
--logformat [default|ecs] Log output format
-v, --version Show the version and exit.
-h, --help Show this message and exit.
Commands:
alias Add/Remove Indices to/from Alias
allocation Shard Routing Allocation
close Close Indices
delete-indices Delete Indices
delete-snapshots Delete Snapshots
forcemerge forceMerge Indices (reduce segment count)
open Open Indices
replicas Change Replica Count
restore Restore Indices
rollover Rollover Index associated with Alias
show-indices Show Indices
show-snapshots Show Snapshots
shrink Shrink Indices to --number_of_shards
snapshot Snapshot Indices
Learn more at https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/client/curator/8.0/singleton-cli.html
The option flags for the given commands match those used for the same actions. The only difference is how filtering is handled.
Running curator_cli
from the command-line using Docker requires only a few additional steps.
Should you desire to use them, Docker-based curator_cli
requires you to map a volume for your configuration and/or log files. Attempting to read a YAML configuration file if you have neglected to volume map your configuration directory to /.curator
will not work.
It looks like this:
docker run [-t] --rm --name myimagename \
--entrypoint /curator/curator_cli \
-v /PATH/TO/MY/CONFIGS:/.curator \
untergeek/curator:mytag \
--config /.curator/config.yml [OPTIONS] COMMAND [ARGS]...
While testing, adding the -t
flag will allocate a pseudo-tty, allowing you to see terminal output that would otherwise be hidden.
The config.yml
file should already exist in the path /PATH/TO/MY/CONFIGS
before run time.
The --rm
in the command means that the container (not the image) will be deleted after completing execution. You definitely want this as there is no reason to keep creating containers for each run. The eventual cleanup from this would be unpleasant.
Recent improvements in Curator include schema and setting validation. With these improvements, it is possible to validate filters and their many permutations if passed in a way that Curator can easily digest.
--filter_list TEXT JSON string representing an array of filters.
This means that filters need to be passed as a single object, or an array of objects in JSON format.
Single:
--filter_list '{"filtertype":"none"}'
Multiple:
--filter_list '[{"filtertype":"age","source":"creation_date","direction":"older","unit":"days","unit_count":13},{"filtertype":"pattern","kind":"prefix","value":"logstash"}]'
This preserves the power of chained filters, making them available on the command line.
You may need to escape all of the double quotes on some platforms, or shells like PowerShell, for instance.
Caveats to this approach:
- Only one action can be taken at a time.
- Not all actions have singleton analogs. For example, Alias and
Restore do not have singleton actions.
One feature that the singleton command offers that the other cannot is to show which indices and snapshots are in the system. It’s a great way to visually test your filters without causing any harm to the system.
$ curator_cli show-indices --help
Usage: curator_cli show-indices [OPTIONS]
Show indices
Options:
--verbose Show verbose output.
--header Print header if --verbose
--epoch Print time as epoch if --verbose
--filter_list TEXT JSON string representing an array of filters.
[required]
--help Show this message and exit.
Learn more at https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/client/curator/8.0/singleton-cli.html#_show_indicessnapshots
$ curator_cli show-snapshots --help
Usage: curator_cli show-snapshots [OPTIONS]
Show snapshots
Options:
--repository TEXT Snapshot repository name [required]
--filter_list TEXT JSON string representing an array of filters.
[required]
--help Show this message and exit.
Learn more at https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/client/curator/8.0/singleton-cli.html#_show_indicessnapshots
The show-snapshots
command will only show snapshots matching the provided filters. The show-indices
command will also do this, but also offers a few extra features.
--verbose
adds state, total size of primary and all replicas, the document count, the number of primary and replica shards, and the creation date in ISO8601 format.--header
adds a header that shows the column names. This only occurs if--verbose
is also selected.--epoch
changes the date format from ISO8601 to epoch time. If--header
is also selected, the column header title will change tocreation_date
There are no extra columns or --verbose
output for the show-snapshots
command.
Without --epoch
Index State Size Docs Pri Rep Creation Timestamp
logstash-2016.10.20 close 0.0B 0 5 1 2016-10-20T00:00:03Z
logstash-2016.10.21 open 763.3MB 5860016 5 1 2016-10-21T00:00:03Z
logstash-2016.10.22 open 759.1MB 5858450 5 1 2016-10-22T00:00:04Z
logstash-2016.10.23 open 757.8MB 5857456 5 1 2016-10-23T00:00:04Z
logstash-2016.10.24 open 771.5MB 5859720 5 1 2016-10-24T00:00:00Z
logstash-2016.10.25 open 771.0MB 5860112 5 1 2016-10-25T00:00:01Z
logstash-2016.10.27 open 658.3MB 4872830 5 1 2016-10-27T00:00:03Z
logstash-2016.10.28 open 655.1MB 5237250 5 1 2016-10-28T00:00:00Z
With --epoch
Index State Size Docs Pri Rep creation_date
logstash-2016.10.20 close 0.0B 0 5 1 1476921603
logstash-2016.10.21 open 763.3MB 5860016 5 1 1477008003
logstash-2016.10.22 open 759.1MB 5858450 5 1 1477094404
logstash-2016.10.23 open 757.8MB 5857456 5 1 1477180804
logstash-2016.10.24 open 771.5MB 5859720 5 1 1477267200
logstash-2016.10.25 open 771.0MB 5860112 5 1 1477353601
logstash-2016.10.27 open 658.3MB 4872830 5 1 1477526403
logstash-2016.10.28 open 655.1MB 5237250 5 1 1477612800