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FileSystem River for Elasticsearch

Welcome to the FS River Plugin for Elasticsearch

This river plugin helps to index documents from your local file system and using SSH.

WARNING: If you use this river in a multinode mode on different servers without SSH, you need to ensure that the river can access files on the same mounting point. If not, when a node stop, the other node will think that your local dir is empty and will erase all your docs.

Versions

FS River Plugin elasticsearch Attachment Plugin Tika Release date
1.1.0-SNAPSHOT 1.0.0 Not used 1.4 XXXX-XX-XX
1.0.0 1.0.0 Not used 1.4 2014-03-10

Please read documentation relative to the version you are using:

Build Status

Thanks to cloudbees for the build status : build status

Test trends

Getting Started

Installation

Just type :

bin/plugin -install fr.pilato.elasticsearch.river/fsriver/1.0.0

Creating a Local FS river

We create first an index to store our documents :

curl -XPUT 'localhost:9200/mydocs/' -d '{}'

We create the river with the following properties :

  • FS URL: /tmp or c:\\tmp if you use Microsoft Windows OS
  • Update Rate: every 15 minutes (15 * 60 * 1000 = 900000 ms)
  • Get only docs like *.doc and *.pdf
  • Don't index resume*
curl -XPUT 'localhost:9200/_river/mydocs/_meta' -d '{
  "type": "fs",
  "fs": {
	"url": "/tmp",
	"update_rate": 900000,
	"includes": "*.doc,*.pdf",
	"excludes": "resume"
  }
}'

Adding another local FS river

We add another river with the following properties :

  • FS URL: /tmp2
  • Update Rate: every hour (60 * 60 * 1000 = 3600000 ms)
  • Get only docs like *.doc, *.xls and *.pdf

By the way, we define to index in the same index/type as the previous one (see Bulk settings for details):

  • index: docs
  • type: doc
curl -XPUT 'localhost:9200/_river/mynewriver/_meta' -d '{
  "type": "fs",
  "fs": {
	"url": "/tmp2",
	"update_rate": 3600000,
	"includes": [ "*.doc" , "*.xls", "*.pdf" ]
  },
  "index": {
  	"index": "mydocs",
  	"type": "doc",
  	"bulk_size": 50
  }
}'

Indexing using SSH

You can now index files remotely using SSH:

  • FS URL: /tmp3
  • Server: mynode.mydomain.com
  • Username: username
  • Password: password
  • Protocol: ssh (default to local)
  • Port: 22 (default to 22)
  • Update Rate: every hour (60 * 60 * 1000 = 3600000 ms)
  • Get only docs like *.doc, *.xls and *.pdf
curl -XPUT 'localhost:9200/_river/mysshriver/_meta' -d '{
  "type": "fs",
  "fs": {
	"url": "/tmp3",
	"server": "mynode.mydomain.com",
	"port": 22,
	"username": "username",
	"password": "password",
	"protocol": "ssh",
	"update_rate": 3600000,
	"includes": [ "*.doc" , "*.xls", "*.pdf" ]
  }
}'

Searching for docs

This is a common use case in elasticsearch, we want to search for something ;-)

curl -XGET http://localhost:9200/docs/doc/_search -d '{
  "query" : {
    "match" : {
        "_all" : "I am searching for something !"
    }
  }
}'

Indexing JSon docs

If you want to index JSon files directly without parsing them through the attachment mapper plugin, you can set json_support to true.

curl -XPUT 'localhost:9200/_river/mydocs/_meta' -d '{
  "type": "fs",
  "fs": {
	"url": "/tmp",
	"update_rate": 3600000,
	"json_support" : true
  }
}'

Of course, if you did not define a mapping prior creating the river, Elasticsearch will auto guess the mapping.

If you have more than one type, create as many rivers as types:

curl -XPUT 'localhost:9200/_river/mydocs1/_meta' -d '{
  "type": "fs",
  "fs": {
	"url": "/tmp/type1",
	"update_rate": 3600000,
	"json_support" : true
  },
  "index": {
    "index": "mydocs",
    "type": "type1"
  }
}'

curl -XPUT 'localhost:9200/_river/mydocs2/_meta' -d '{
  "type": "fs",
  "fs": {
	"url": "/tmp/type2",
	"update_rate": 3600000,
	"json_support" : true
  },
  "index": {
    "index": "mydocs",
    "type": "type2"
  }
}'

You can also index many types from one single dir using two rivers on the same dir and by setting includes parameter:

curl -XPUT 'localhost:9200/_river/mydocs1/_meta' -d '{
  "type": "fs",
  "fs": {
	"url": "/tmp",
	"update_rate": 3600000,
    "includes": [ "type1*.json" ],
	"json_support" : true
  },
  "index": {
    "index": "mydocs",
    "type": "type1"
  }
}'

curl -XPUT 'localhost:9200/_river/mydocs2/_meta' -d '{
  "type": "fs",
  "fs": {
	"url": "/tmp",
	"update_rate": 3600000,
    "includes": [ "type2*.json" ],
	"json_support" : true
  },
  "index": {
    "index": "mydocs",
    "type": "type2"
  }
}'

Please note that the document _id is always generated (hash value) from the JSon filename to avoid issues with special characters in filename. You can force to use the _id to be the filename using filename_as_id attribute:

curl -XPUT 'localhost:9200/_river/mydocs/_meta' -d '{
  "type": "fs",
  "fs": {
	"url": "/tmp",
	"update_rate": 3600000,
	"json_support": true,
	"filename_as_id": true
  }
}'

Disabling file size field

By default, FSRiver will create a field to store the original file size in octet. You can disable it using `add_filesize' option:

curl -XPUT 'localhost:9200/_river/mydocs/_meta' -d '{
  "type": "fs",
  "fs": {
	"url": "/tmp",
	"add_filesize": false
  }
}'

Ignore deleted files

If you don't want to remove indexed documents when you remove a file or a directory, you can set remove_deleted to false (default to true):

curl -XPUT 'localhost:9200/_river/mydocs/_meta' -d '{
  "type": "fs",
  "fs": {
	"url": "/tmp",
	"remove_deleted": false
  }
}'

Advanced

Suspend or restart a file river

If you need to stop a river, you can call the `_stop' endpoint:

curl 'localhost:9200/_river/mydocs/_stop'

To restart the river from the previous point, just call _start end point:

curl 'localhost:9200/_river/mydocs/_start'

Autogenerated mapping

When the FSRiver detect a new type, it creates automatically a mapping for this type.

{
  "doc" : {
    "properties" : {
      "content" : {
        "type" : "string",
        "store" : "yes"
      },
      "meta" : {
        "properties" : {
          "author" : {
              "type" : "string",
              "store" : "yes"
          },
          "title" : {
              "type" : "string",
              "store" : "yes"
          },
          "date" : {
              "type" : "date",
              "format" : "dateOptionalTime",
              "store" : "yes"
          },
          "keywords" : {
              "type" : "string",
              "store" : "yes"
          }
        }
      },
      "file" : {
        "properties" : {
          "content_type" : {
              "type" : "string",
              "analyzer" : "not_analyzed",
              "store" : "yes"
          },
          "last_modified" : {
              "type" : "date",
              "format" : "dateOptionalTime",
              "store" : "yes"
          },
          "indexing_date" : {
              "type" : "date",
              "format" : "dateOptionalTime",
              "store" : "yes"
          },
          "filesize" : {
              "type" : "long",
              "store" : "yes"
          },
          "indexed_chars" : {
              "type" : "long",
              "store" : "yes"
          },
          "filename" : {
              "type" : "string",
              "analyzer" : "not_analyzed",
              "store" : "yes"
          },
          "url" : {
              "type" : "string",
              "store" : "yes",
              "index" : "no"
          }
        }
      },
      "path" : {
        "properties" : {
          "encoded" : {
              "type" : "string",
              "store" : "yes",
              "index" : "not_analyzed"
          },
          "virtual" : {
              "type" : "string",
              "store" : "yes",
              "index" : "not_analyzed"
          },
          "root" : {
              "type" : "string",
              "store" : "yes",
              "index" : "not_analyzed"
          },
          "real" : {
              "type" : "string",
              "store" : "yes",
              "index" : "not_analyzed"
          }
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

Creating your own mapping (analyzers)

If you want to define your own mapping to set analyzers for example, you can push the mapping before starting the FS River.

# Create index
$ curl -XPUT "http://localhost:9200/docs/"

# Create the mapping
$ curl -XPUT "http://localhost:9200/docs/doc/_mapping" -d '{
  "doc" : {
    "properties" : {
      "content" : {
        "type" : "string",
        "store" : "yes",
        "analyzer" : "french"
      },
      "meta" : {
        "properties" : {
          "author" : {
              "type" : "string",
              "store" : "yes"
          },
          "title" : {
              "type" : "string",
              "store" : "yes"
          },
          "date" : {
              "type" : "date",
              "format" : "dateOptionalTime",
              "store" : "yes"
          },
          "keywords" : {
              "type" : "string",
              "store" : "yes"
          }
        }
      },
      "file" : {
        "properties" : {
          "content_type" : {
              "type" : "string",
              "analyzer" : "not_analyzed",
              "store" : "yes"
          },
          "last_modified" : {
              "type" : "date",
              "format" : "dateOptionalTime",
              "store" : "yes"
          },
          "indexing_date" : {
              "type" : "date",
              "format" : "dateOptionalTime",
              "store" : "yes"
          },
          "filesize" : {
              "type" : "long",
              "store" : "yes"
          },
          "indexed_chars" : {
              "type" : "long",
              "store" : "yes"
          },
          "filename" : {
              "type" : "string",
              "analyzer" : "not_analyzed",
              "store" : "yes"
          },
          "url" : {
              "type" : "string",
              "store" : "yes",
              "index" : "no"
          }
        }
      },
      "path" : {
        "properties" : {
          "encoded" : {
              "type" : "string",
              "store" : "yes",
              "index" : "not_analyzed"
          },
          "virtual" : {
              "type" : "string",
              "store" : "yes",
              "index" : "not_analyzed"
          },
          "root" : {
              "type" : "string",
              "store" : "yes",
              "index" : "not_analyzed"
          },
          "real" : {
              "type" : "string",
              "store" : "yes",
              "index" : "not_analyzed"
          }
        }
      }
    }
  }
}'

Generated fields

FS River creates the following fields :

Field (>= 0.4.0) Field (< 0.4.0) Description Example
content file.file Extracted content "This is my text!"
attachment file BASE64 encoded binary file BASE64 Encoded document
meta.author file.author Author if any in document metadata "David Pilato"
meta.title file.title Title if any in document metadata "My document title"
meta.date Document date if any in document metadata "2013-04-04T15:21:35"
meta.keywords Keywords if any in document metadata ["river","fs","elasticsearch"]
file.content_type file.content_type Content Type "application/vnd.oasis.opendocument.text"
file.last_modified Last modification date 1386855978000
file.indexing_date postDate Indexing date "2013-12-12T13:50:58.758Z"
file.filesize filesize File size in bytes 1256362
file.indexed_chars file.indexed_chars Extracted chars if fs.indexed_chars > 0 100000
file.filename name Original file name "mydocument.pdf"
file.url Original file url "file://tmp/mydir/otherdir/mydocument.pdf"
path.encoded pathEncoded BASE64 encoded file path (for internal use) "112aed83738239dbfe4485f024cd4ce1"
path.virtual virtualpath Relative path from root path "mydir/otherdir"
path.root rootpath BASE64 encoded root path (for internal use) "112aed83738239dbfe4485f024cd4ce1"
path.real Actual real path name "/tmp/mydir/otherdir/mydocument.pdf"

Here is a typical JSON document generated by the river:

{
   "file":{
      "filename":"test.odt",
      "last_modified":1386855978000,
      "indexing_date":"2013-12-12T13:50:58.758Z",
      "content_type":"application/vnd.oasis.opendocument.text",
      "url":"file:///tmp/testfs_metadata/test.odt",
      "indexed_chars":100000,
      "filesize":8355
   },
   "path":{
      "encoded":"bceb3913f6d793e915beb70a4735592",
      "root":"bceb3913f6d793e915beb70a4735592",
      "virtual":"",
      "real":"/tmp/testfs_metadata/test.odt"
   },
   "meta":{
      "author":"David Pilato",
      "title":"Mon titre",
      "date":"2013-04-04T15:21:35",
      "keywords":[
         "fs",
         "elasticsearch",
         "river"
      ]
   },
   "content":"Bonjour David\n\n\n"
}

Advanced search

You can use meta fields to perform search on.

curl -XGET http://localhost:9200/docs/doc/_search -d '{
  "query" : {
    "term" : {
        "file.filename" : "mydocument.pdf"
    }
  }
}'

Disabling _source

If you don't need to highlight your search responses nor need to get back the original file from Elasticsearch, you can think about disabling _source field.

In that case, you need to store file.filename field. Otherwise, FSRiver won't be able to remove documents when they disappear from your hard drive.

{
  "doc" : {
    "_source" : { "enabled" : false },
    "properties" : {
      "content" : {
        "type" : "string",
        "store" : "yes"
      },
      "meta" : {
        "properties" : {
          "author" : {
              "type" : "string",
              "store" : "yes"
          },
          "title" : {
              "type" : "string",
              "store" : "yes"
          },
          "date" : {
              "type" : "date",
              "format" : "dateOptionalTime",
              "store" : "yes"
          },
          "keywords" : {
              "type" : "string",
              "store" : "yes"
          }
        }
      },
      "file" : {
        "properties" : {
          "content_type" : {
              "type" : "string",
              "analyzer" : "not_analyzed",
              "store" : "yes"
          },
          "last_modified" : {
              "type" : "date",
              "format" : "dateOptionalTime",
              "store" : "yes"
          },
          "indexing_date" : {
              "type" : "date",
              "format" : "dateOptionalTime",
              "store" : "yes"
          },
          "filesize" : {
              "type" : "long",
              "store" : "yes"
          },
          "indexed_chars" : {
              "type" : "long",
              "store" : "yes"
          },
          "filename" : {
              "type" : "string",
              "analyzer" : "not_analyzed",
              "store" : "yes"
          },
          "url" : {
              "type" : "string",
              "store" : "yes",
              "index" : "no"
          }
        }
      },
      "path" : {
        "properties" : {
          "encoded" : {
              "type" : "string",
              "store" : "yes",
              "index" : "not_analyzed"
          },
          "virtual" : {
              "type" : "string",
              "store" : "yes",
              "index" : "not_analyzed"
          },
          "root" : {
              "type" : "string",
              "store" : "yes",
              "index" : "not_analyzed"
          },
          "real" : {
              "type" : "string",
              "store" : "yes",
              "index" : "not_analyzed"
          }
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

Storing binary source document (BASE64 encoded)

You can store in elasticsearch itself the binary document using store_source option:

curl -XPUT 'localhost:9200/_river/mydocs/_meta' -d '{
  "type": "fs",
  "fs": {
	"url": "/tmp",
	"update_rate": 3600000,
	"store_source": true
  }
}'

In that case, a new stored field named attachment is added to the generated JSon document. If you let FSRiver generates the mapping, FSRiver will exclude attachment field from _source to save some disk space.

That means you need to ask for field attachment when querying:

curl -XPOST http://localhost:9200/mydocs/doc/_search -d '{
  "fields" : ["attachment", "_source"],
  "query":{
    "match_all" : {}
  }
}'

Default generated mapping in this case is:

{
  "doc" : {
    "_source" : {
      "excludes" : [ "attachment" ]
    },
    "properties" : {
      "attachment" : {
        "type" : "binary"
      },
      ... // Other properties here
    }
  }
}

You can force not to store attachment field and keep attachment in _source:

# Create index
$ curl -XPUT "http://localhost:9200/docs/"

# Create the mapping
$ curl -XPUT "http://localhost:9200/docs/doc/_mapping" -d '{
  "doc" : {
    "properties" : {
      "attachment" : {
        "type" : "binary",
        "store" : "no"
      },
      ... // Other properties here
    }
  }
}

Extracted characters

By default FSRiver will extract only a limited size of characters (100000). But, you can set indexed_chars to 1 in FSRiver definition.

curl -XPUT 'localhost:9200/_river/mydocs/_meta' -d '{
  "type": "fs",
  "fs": {
    "url": "/tmp",
    "indexed_chars": 1
  }
}'

That option will add a special field _indexed_chars to the document. It will be set to the filesize. This field is used by mapper attachment plugin to define the number of extracted characters.

Setting indexed_chars : x will compute file size, multiply it with x and pass it to Tika using _indexed_chars field.

That means that a value of 0.8 will extract 20% less characters than the file size. A value of 1.5 will extract 50% more characters than the filesize (think compressed files). A value of 1, will extract exactly the filesize.

Note that Tika requires to allocate in memory a data structure to extract text. Setting indexed_chars to a high number will require more memory!

Bulk settings

You can change some indexing settings:

  • index.index sets the index name where your documents will be indexed (default to river name)
  • index.type sets the type name for your documents (default to doc)
  • index.bulk_size set the maximum number of documents per bulk before a bulk is sent to elasticsearch (default to 100)
  • index.flush_interval set the bulk flush interval frequency (default to 5s). It will be use to process bulk even if bulk is not fill with bulk_size documents.

For example:

curl -XPUT 'localhost:9200/_river/myriver/_meta' -d '{
  "type": "fs",
  "fs": {
	"url": "/sales"
  },
  "index": {
  	"index": "acme",
  	"type": "sales",
  	"bulk_size": 10,
  	"flush_interval": "30s"
  }
}'

Migrating from version < 0.4.0

Some important changes have been done in FSRiver 0.4.0:

  • You don't have to add attachment plugin anymore as we directly rely on Apache Tika.
  • Fields have changed. You should look at Generated Fields section to know how the old fields have been renamed.

Settings list

Here is a full list of existing settings:

Name Documentation
fs.url Creating a Local FS river
fs.update_rate Creating a Local FS river
fs.includes Creating a Local FS river
fs.excludes Creating a Local FS river
fs.server Indexing using SSH
fs.port Indexing using SSH
fs.username Indexing using SSH
fs.password Indexing using SSH
fs.protocol Indexing using SSH
fs.json_support Indexing JSon docs
fs.filename_as_id Indexing JSon docs
fs.add_filesize Disabling file size field
fs.remove_deleted Ignore deleted files
fs.indexed_chars Extracted characters
fs.store_source Storing binary source document
index.index Bulk settings
index.type Bulk settings
index.bulk_size Bulk settings
index.flush_interval Bulk settings

License

This software is licensed under the Apache 2 license, quoted below.

Copyright 2011-2014 David Pilato

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not
use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of
the License at

    http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT
WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under
the License.

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