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An easy way to define schemas for Elasticsearch documents, so you can painlessly update/migrate your current structure/data to something else.

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Description

A declarative way to approach Elasticsearch document mappings and data migrations/reindexing.

The idea is to provide an easy and versionable way to register the mappings of your Elasticsearch indices and types. Once any of the mappings and/or settings suffers any change by a developer, this tool kit will provide you means to keep your running elastic search server up-to-date regarding the recent changes.

The default strategy adopted by this tool is to create a new index with temporary name in order to create a whole new mapping that reflects the up-to-date mapping in the codebase. Once it's done it'll try (by default) to reindex all the data present in old index to the new one and once it's done it'll remove the old index and rename the new one.

Usage

Go to your Ruby project where you Gemfile is located:

$ cd ~/projects/my-ruby-project
$ vim Gemfile

Add the following line to your Gemfile

gem "elastic-schema", :git => "git://github.com/leandro/elastic-schema.git"

Choose a directory where you're going to put your Elasticsearch schemas. Or create one for yourself:

$ mkdir -p db/es/

In order to see a working example, create the following file in the given your chosen directory:

vim ./db/es/default.analysis.rb
ElasticSchema::Schema::Analysis.new do
  name :default

  filter :word_filter, { type: :word_delimiter }
  analyzer :lowcase_word_delimiter, {
    type:      :custom,
    tokenizer: :standard,
    filter:    %i(lowercase asciifolding word_filter)
  }
end

And also:

vim ./db/es/articles.schema.rb
ElasticSchema::Schema::Definition.new do
  index    :articles
  analysis :default

  type :article do
    field :title, :string, analyzer: :lowcase_word_delimiter
    field :content, :string, analyzer: :lowcase_word_delimiter
    field :author do
      field :name do
        field :first_name, :string
        field :last_name, :string
      end
      field :email, :string, index: :not_analyzed
    end
    field :indexed_at, :date, index: :not_analyzed
  end

  type :comment do
    field :article_id, :integer
    field :content, :string, analyzer: :lowcase_word_delimiter
    field :author do
      field :name do
        field :first_name, :string
        field :last_name, :string
      end
      field :email, :string, index: :not_analyzed
    end
    field :indexed_at, :date, index: :not_analyzed
  end
end

Then, run bundle install in your app root directory and run:

$ bundle exec eschema -h 127.0.0.1:9200 -d db/es/ create
Initiating schema updates: 1 out of 1 will be updated.
Creating index 'articles_v1436452769'
Creating type 'article' in index 'articles_v1436452769'
Creating type 'comment' in index 'articles_v1436452769'
Creating alias 'articles' to index 'articles_v1436452769'

And lets say you have some documents inside the index later on:

curl -XPUT http://127.0.0.1:9200/articles/article/1 -d '{"title": "Article A", "author": {"name": {"first_name": "Leandro", "last_name": "Camargo"}}, "indexed_at": "2015-07-08"}'
curl -XPUT http://127.0.0.1:9200/articles/article/2 -d '{"title": "Article B", "author": {"name": {"first_name": "Leandro", "last_name": "Camargo"}}, "indexed_at": "2015-07-08"}'
curl -XPUT http://127.0.0.1:9200/articles/article/3 -d '{"title": "Article C", "author": {"name": {"first_name": "Leandro", "last_name": "Camargo"}}, "indexed_at": "2015-07-08"}'
curl -XPUT http://127.0.0.1:9200/articles/comment/1 -d '{"article_id": 1, "content": "First comment.", "author": {"name": {"first_name": "Leandro", "last_name": "Camargo"}}, "indexed_at": "2015-07-08"}'
curl -XPUT http://127.0.0.1:9200/articles/comment/2 -d '{"article_id": 1, "content": "Second comment.", "author": {"name": {"first_name": "Leandro", "last_name": "Camargo"}}, "indexed_at": "2015-07-08"}'

Now, for instance, you change the analyzer for the 'content' field in your 'comment' type schema:

# ...
field :content, :string, analyzer: :snowball
# ...

And then runs again the command. And you'll have this nice output:

$ bundle exec eschema -h 127.0.0.1:9200 -d db/es/ create
Initiating schema updates: 1 out of 1 will be updated.
Creating index 'articles_v1436453128'
Creating type 'article' in index 'articles_v1436453128'
Creating type 'comment' in index 'articles_v1436453128'
Migrating 3 documents from type 'article' in index 'articles' to index 'articles_v1436453128'
Migrating 2 documents from type 'comment' in index 'articles' to index 'articles_v1436453128'
Creating alias 'articles' to index 'articles_v1436453128'
Deleting index 'articles_v1436452769'

In case you want to specify one schema file at a time you can use -f (for schema file) and -a (for analysis file) instead of using -d. For further information just run:

bundle exec eschema --help

Important observations

  • All index schema you create, its file name must match the '*.schema.rb' pattern.
  • The same goes for analysis settings, where it must match the '*.analysis.rb' or just naming it as 'analysis.rb' will also work.
  • If you have indices with multiple types in it, make sure your index schema definition has all the types definitions in it, otherwise the missing types will be lost during the migration, given in most cases a new index will be created and the old one will be deleted.

Missing parts

  • Allow to make old index deletion to be something optional
  • Handle multi-tenant indices arrangements
  • Add tests

Contribute

If you want to contribute, please fork this project, make the changes and create a Pull Request mentioning me.

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An easy way to define schemas for Elasticsearch documents, so you can painlessly update/migrate your current structure/data to something else.

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