Desi ==== [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/AF83/desi.png)](http://travis-ci.org/AF83/desi) [![Gem Version](https://badge.fury.io/rb/desi.png)](http://badge.fury.io/rb/desi) Desi (Developper Elasticsearch Installer) is very simple tool to quickly set up an [Elastic Search](http://www.elasticsearch.org/) local install for development purposes. It can: * download and install Elasticsearch (the latest release by default) * start/stop/restart it. * do basic indices management (list, delete, empty a given set of indices) It can be used both as a command-line tool and as a library. ## Usage (command-line) $ desi list # List locally installed Elasticsearch releases $ desi releases # List all upstream Elastic Search releases (latest 5 by default) $ desi install [VERSION] # Install a specific version (latest by default) $ desi start # Start a local 1-node cluster (noop if active) $ desi restart # (Re)start cluster (even if active) $ desi stop # Stop cluster $ desi status [--host HOST] # Show running cluster info $ desi tail # Show tail output from Elastic Search's log file $ desi indices "^foo" # List all indices whose name match /^foo/ $ desi indices "^foo" --delete # Delete all matching indices $ desi indices "bar$" --empty # Remove all records from the matching indices ## Examples (command-line and Ruby) ### Installing Elastic Search ```bash $ # The latest version will be installed by default $ desi install * No release specified, will fetch latest. * fetching release elasticsearch-0.19.9.tar.gz […] $ # You can also give a specific release name $ desi install 0.19.6 # ("v0.19.6" or "elasticsearch-0.19.6" would also work) * fetching release elasticsearch-0.19.6.tar.gz […] ``` ### Get the list of locally installed releases The current version is the one symlinked to `$HOME/elasticsearch/current`, that will be spun up by (`desi start`) * command-line ```shell $ desi list Local ES installs in /home/me/elasticsearch (current one is tagged with '*'): * elasticsearch-0.19.9 (/home/me/elasticsearch/elasticsearch-0.19.9) - elasticsearch-0.19.8 (/home/me/elasticsearch/elasticsearch-0.19.8) ``` * library ```ruby Desi::LocalInstall.new.releases.map(&:name) #=> ["elasticsearch-0.19.8", "elasticsearch-0.19.9"] Desi::LocalInstall.new.releases.detect(&:current?).version #=> "0.19.9" ``` ### Start a node instance and get the cluster's status * command-line ```shell $ desi start * Elastic Search 0.19.9 started $ desi status OK. Elastic Search cluster 'elasticsearch' (v0.19.9) is running on 1 node(s) with status yellow # Start Elastic Search in the foreground $ desi start -f # or --foreground ES will be launched in the foreground ^C # Manual stop with Control-C Elastic Search interrupted! ``` * library ```ruby Desi::ProcessManager.new.start.status #=> "OK. Elastic Search cluster 'elasticsearch' (v0.19.9) is running on 1 node(s) with status green" ``` ### List and delete some indices * command-line ```shell $ # List all local indices $ desi indices Indices from host http://127.0.0.1:9200 matching the pattern /.*/ foo bar baz $ # List all indices with "foo" in their name on remote cluster 129.168.1.42, port 9800 $ desi indices --host 129.168.1.42:9800 foo Indices from host http://192.168.1.42:9800 matching the pattern /foo/ remotefoo1 remotefoo2 $ # Remove all indices whose name starts with "ba" $ desi indices --delete "^ba" The following indices from host http://127.0.0.1:9200 are now deleted * bar * baz ``` * library ```ruby # All local indices Desi::IndexManager.new.list #=> ["foo", "bar", "baz"] # All local indices whose name starts with "b" Desi::IndexManager.new.list("^b") #=> ["bar", "baz"] # All indices from distant cluster Desi::IndexManager.new(host: "192.168.1.42:9800").list #=> ["remotefoo1", "remotefoo2"] # Delete all local indices whose name starts with "ba" Desi::IndexManager.new.delete!("^ba") #=> nil # The indices actually disappeared! \o/ Desi::IndexManager.new.list #=> ["foo"] ``` ## Change setting(s) There are two settings at the moment: location of the installation directory (`directory`, default: `~/elasticsearch`) and ES host address (`server`, default: `localhost:9200`). Desi will look for files `/etc/desi.yml` or `~/.desi.yml` (the options found in the former will be overriden by the ones found in the latter). * command-line `echo -e "---\n directory: ~/foobar" > ~/.desi.yml` for instance * library ```ruby Desi.configure do |c| c.directory = "~/local/foo" c.server = "192.168.1.42:9200" end ``` ## Installation Add this line to your application's Gemfile: gem 'desi' And then execute: $ bundle Or install it yourself as: $ gem install desi ## TODO * add more tests * `desi upgrade` (Upgrade to latest version and migrate data) * `desi switch VERSION` (Switch currently active ES version to VERSION) * plugin management ? (list, install, remove ES plugins) ## Contributing 1. Fork it 2. Create your feature branch (`git checkout -b my-new-feature`) 3. Commit your changes (`git commit -am 'Added some feature'`) 4. Push to the branch (`git push origin my-new-feature`) 5. Create new Pull Request