-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 341
ServerConfig 6.x
First, you will need a Java Runtime Environment (JRE) because Elasticsearch is written in the Java programming language.
You can use the native OpenJDK package for the JRE. This JRE is free, well-supported, and automatically managed through most of installation managers (such as APT, YUM, DNF, etc...).
Use one of the following commands, according to your distribution :
- Debian/Ubuntu/Other APT based distros :
sudo apt-get install openjdk-8-jre
- CentOS and others YUM based distros :
su -c "yum install java-1.8.0-openjdk"
- DNF based distros :
sudo dnf install java-1.8.0-openjdk
You can install ElasticSearch via their official repositories.
ElasticSearch is available for YUM/DNF and APT based distros.
If you are on an APT based distro (Ubuntu, Debian, etc...), follow these instructions. If you are using a YUM or DNF based distro (CentOS, Fedora, Redhat, etc...), please refer to the Install via YUM / DNF section.
Download and install the Public Signing Key:
wget -qO - https://artifacts.elastic.co/GPG-KEY-elasticsearch | sudo apt-key add -
Save the repository definition :
sudo apt-get install apt-transport-https
echo "deb https://artifacts.elastic.co/packages/6.x/apt stable main" | sudo tee -a /etc/apt/sources.list.d/elastic-6.x.list
Run apt-get update and the repository is ready for use. You can then install ElasticSearch with:
sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install elasticsearch
Download and install the public signing key:
rpm --import https://artifacts.elastic.co/GPG-KEY-elasticsearch
Add the following in your /etc/yum.repos.d/
directory
in a file with a .repo
suffix, for example elasticsearch.repo
[elasticsearch-6.x]
name=Elasticsearch repository for 6.x packages
baseurl=https://artifacts.elastic.co/packages/6.x/yum
gpgcheck=1
gpgkey=https://artifacts.elastic.co/GPG-KEY-elasticsearch
enabled=1
autorefresh=1
type=rpm-md
And your repository is ready for use. You can install it with:
sudo yum install elasticsearch
Or, for newer versions of Fedora and Redhat:
sudo dnf install elasticsearch
Now you can try to start the ElasticSearch instance (depending on your distro, the install script may have not started it) :
sudo service elasticsearch start
You can then test that your ES instance is started by checking the response of the following command :
curl localhost:9200
This should produce something like the following output :
{
"name" : "uhh4jQc",
"cluster_name" : "elasticsearch",
"cluster_uuid" : "jX8k-OY0QeO27praAjmG7A",
"version" : {
"number" : "6.4.0",
"build_flavor" : "default",
"build_type" : "deb",
"build_hash" : "595516e",
"build_date" : "2018-08-17T23:18:47.308994Z",
"build_snapshot" : false,
"lucene_version" : "7.4.0",
"minimum_wire_compatibility_version" : "5.6.0",
"minimum_index_compatibility_version" : "5.0.0"
},
"tagline" : "You Know, for Search"
}
You have now to install some plugins that are required by Smile Elastic Suite.
Plugins can be installed with the bin/elasticsearch-plugin
tool of Elastic Search.
You have to go to your Elastic Search installation directory.
Locate your "Home" directory ( Look for Settings -> Path -> Home in the following command output for value ).
curl "localhost:9200/_nodes/settings?pretty=true"
...
"settings" : {
"pidfile" : "/var/run/elasticsearch/elasticsearch.pid",
"cluster" : {
"name" : "elasticsearch"
},
"path" : {
"conf" : "/etc/elasticsearch",
"data" : "/var/lib/elasticsearch",
"logs" : "/var/log/elasticsearch",
"home" : "/usr/share/elasticsearch"
},
...
Goto "Home" directory :
cd /usr/share/elasticsearch
Install plugins :
bin/elasticsearch-plugin install analysis-phonetic
bin/elasticsearch-plugin install analysis-icu
Restart ElasticSearch node in order to apply change :
sudo service elasticsearch restart
Note : If you are using an ElasticSearch cluster with several nodes you have to install the plugins on each nodes.
You can refer to the official documentation to have your ElasticSearch instance running as a service, according to your distro.
For instance if your distribution is using SysV init or systemd
- on a APT based distro (Ubuntu, Debian)
- or on a YUM/DNF based distro
Once you are done with this and you have a running ElasticSearch instance with all required plugins, you can go to the next step : Install and configure the Magento module.
-
User's Guide
-
Developer's Guide
-
Releases
- Magento 2.3.x
- Magento 2.2.x
- Magento 2.1.x
- ElasticSuite 2.5.15
- ElasticSuite 2.5.14
- ElasticSuite 2.5.13
- ElasticSuite 2.5.12
- ElasticSuite 2.5.11
- ElasticSuite 2.5.10
- ElasticSuite 2.5.9
- ElasticSuite 2.5.8
- ElasticSuite 2.5.7
- ElasticSuite 2.5.6
- ElasticSuite 2.5.5
- ElasticSuite 2.5.4
- ElasticSuite 2.5.3
- ElasticSuite 2.5.2
- ElasticSuite 2.5.1
- ElasticSuite 2.5.0
- ElasticSuite 2.4.6
- ElasticSuite 2.4.5
- ElasticSuite 2.4.4
- ElasticSuite 2.4.3
- ElasticSuite 2.4.2
- ElasticSuite 2.4.1
- ElasticSuite 2.4.0
- ElasticSuite 2.3.10
- ElasticSuite 2.3.9
- ElasticSuite 2.3.8
- ElasticSuite 2.3.7
- ElasticSuite 2.3.6
- ElasticSuite 2.3.5
- ElasticSuite 2.3.4
- ElasticSuite 2.3.3
- ElasticSuite 2.3.2
- ElasticSuite 2.3.1
- ElasticSuite 2.3.0
- Magento 2.0.x