Elasticsearch Nodes

By Opster Team

Updated: Jan 28, 2024

| 1 min read

Overview

To put it simply, a node is a single server that is part of a cluster. Each node is assigned one or more roles, which describe the node’s responsibility and operations. Data nodes store the data, and participate in the cluster’s indexing and search capabilities, while master nodes are responsible for managing the cluster’s activities and storing the cluster state, including the metadata.

While it is possible to run several node instances of Elasticsearch on the same hardware, it’s considered a best practice to limit a server to a single running instance of Elasticsearch.

Nodes connect to each other and form a cluster by using a discovery method. 

Roles

Master node

Master nodes are in charge of cluster-wide settings and changes – deleting or creating indices and fields, adding or removing nodes and allocating shards to nodes. Each cluster has a single master node that is elected from the master eligible nodes using a distributed consensus algorithm and is reelected if the current master node fails.

Coordinating (client) node

There is some confusion in the use of coordinating node terminology. Client nodes were removed from Elasticsearch after version 2.4 and became coordinating nodes.

Coordinating nodes are nodes that do not hold any configured role. They don’t hold data and are not part of the master eligible group nor execute ingest pipelines. Coordinating nodes serve incoming search requests and act as the query coordinator running query and fetch phases, sending requests to every node that holds a shard being queried. The coordinating node also distributes bulk indexing operations and route queries to shards based on the node’s responsiveness.


Related log errors to this ES concept


Waiting for elected master node to setup local exporter does it have x-pack installed
Skipping cluster bootstrapping as local node does not match bootstrap requirements
Master node failed restarting discovery
No published hash for the consistent secure setting but it exists on the local node
The consistent secure setting does not exist on the local node but there is a published hash for it
Node name node ID cluster name
Failed to connect to seed node
Node did not return any filesystem stats
Failed to retrieve stats for node failure nodeId
Failed to retrieve node stats
PublishResponseHandler discoveryNode failed
Unexpected failure when failing node %s with reason %s

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