Can not be imported as a dangling index as index with same name already exists in cluster metadata – How to solve this Elasticsearch error

Opster Team

Aug-23, Version: 6.8-7.15

Briefly, this error occurs when you’re trying to import an index that has the same name as an existing index in the Elasticsearch cluster. Elasticsearch doesn’t allow duplicate index names. To resolve this issue, you can either delete the existing index if it’s no longer needed, or rename the index you’re trying to import. Alternatively, you can use an alias to point to the new index, allowing you to switch between the old and new index without changing your application code.

To understand why an index cannot be important as a dangling index because another with the same name already exisits in the cluster metadata, we commend you run this Elasticsearch Error Check-Up which can help you resolve the issue and prevent others from occuring.

This guide will help you check for common problems that cause the log “Cannot be imported as a dangling index, as index with same name already exists in cluster metadata” to appear. It’s important to understand the issues related to the log, so to get started, read the general overview on common issues and tips related to the Elasticsearch concepts: cluster, dangling, index, indices and metadata.


quick Overview

When you get this log it means that a cluster is trying to import a stale index.
How to solve:

1. Call GET _cat/indices?v and find UUID column. These UUIDs should match directory names inside node data path under “nodes/0/indices”. Otherwise, these directories are dangling indices. That the node is trying to import.

2. For every dangling index, you can move them out of this nodes/0/indices into the same directory structure of a new Elasticsearch node installation. This will result in having two nodes. You can decide which node you want to keep.

Log Context

Log “[{}] can not be imported as a dangling index; as index with same name already exists in cluster metadata” classname is DanglingIndicesState.java.
We extracted the following from Elasticsearch source code for those seeking an in-depth context :

    List filterDanglingIndices(Metadata metadata; Map allIndices) {
        List filteredIndices = new ArrayList(allIndices.size());

        allIndices.forEach((index; indexMetadata) -> {
            if (metadata.hasIndex(indexMetadata.getIndex().getName())) {
                logger.warn("[{}] can not be imported as a dangling index; as index with same name already exists in cluster metadata";
                    indexMetadata.getIndex());
            } else {
                logger.info(
                    "[{}] dangling index exists on local file system; but not in cluster metadata; auto import to cluster state";
                    indexMetadata.getIndex()

 

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