Have indices in Elasticsearch? This is the tool for you!
Like a museum curator manages the exhibits and collections on display, Elasticsearch Curator helps you curate, or manage your indices.
Curator API Documentation (External)
Since Curator 3.0, curator ships with both an API and wrapper scripts (which are actually defined as entry points). This allows you to write your own scripts to accomplish similar goals, or even new and different things with the Curator API, and the Elasticsearch Python API.
See the Documentation Wiki! Try the new asciidoc documentation for the CLI.
There are two branches for development - master
and 0.6
. Master branch is
used to track all the changes for Elasticsearch 1.0 and beyond whereas 0.6
tracks Elasticsearch 0.90 and the corresponding elasticsearch-py
version.
Releases with major versions greater than 1 (X.Y.Z, where X is > 1) are to be used with Elasticsearch 1.0 and later, 0.6 releases are meant to work with Elasticsearch 0.90.X.
Install using pip
pip install elasticsearch-curator
See curator --help
for usage specifics.
Try the new asciidoc documentation for the CLI. See the Curator Wiki on Github for more documentation
- fork the repo
- make changes in your fork
- run tests
- sign the CLA
- send a pull request!
To run from source, use the run_curator.py
and run_es_repo_mgr.py
scripts
in the root directory of the project.
To run the test suite just run python setup.py test
When changing code, contributing new code or fixing a bug please make sure you include tests in your PR (or mark it as without tests so that someone else can pick it up to add the tests). When fixing a bug please make sure the test actually tests the bug - it should fail without the code changes and pass after they're applied (it can still be one commit of course).
The tests will try to connect to your local elasticsearch instance and run
integration tests against it. This will delete all the data stored there! You
can use the env variable TEST_ES_SERVER
to point to a different instance (for
example 'otherhost:9203').
Curator was first called clearESindices.py
[1] and was almost immediately
renamed to logstash_index_cleaner.py
[1]. After a time it was migrated under
the logstash repository as
expire_logs
. Soon thereafter, Jordan Sissel was hired by Elasticsearch, as
was the original author of this tool. It became Elasticsearch Curator after
that and is now hosted at https://github.com/elasticsearch/curator