Add Elasticsearch Guide (#564)

* Add initial elasticsearch guide

* Add elasticsearch guide link to README.md

* Add chewy:deploy
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NCLS 2018-03-10 01:15:17 +09:00 committed by Eugen Rochko
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@ -41,6 +41,7 @@ Mastodon is a free, open-source social network server based on open web protocol
- Advanced:
- [Serving Mastodon from a subdomain](Running-Mastodon/Serving_a_different_domain.md)
- [Scaling up with PgBouncer](Running-Mastodon/PgBouncer-guide.md)
- [Elasticsearch Guide](Running-Mastodon/Elasticsearch-guide.md)
The aforementioned guides presume using certain software, like Nginx. But using alternatives is possible: [Alternative system configurations](Running-Mastodon/Alternatives.md)

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Elasticsearch Guide
====
The following guide explains how to use [Elasticsearch](https://www.elastic.co/products/elasticsearch).
Why you might need Elasticsearch
----
If you want to use Full-text search, you should setup Elasticsearch.
#### Note: If your VPS has not much memory, Elasticsearch can't be able to start. This guide also explains how to start with this case.
Installing Pre-required dependency
----
Elasticsearch is built using Java, and requires at least Java 8 in order to run.
Install Java 8:
```
sudo apt install openjdk-8-jre
```
> The openjdk-8-jre package contains just the Java Runtime Environment. If you want to develop Java programs then please install the openjdk-8-jdk package.
You need to install the `apt-transport-https`.
```bash
sudo apt install apt-transport-https
```
Installing Elasticsearch
-----
### Import the Elasticsearch PGP Keyedit
Download and install the public signing key:
```bash
wget -qO - https://artifacts.elastic.co/GPG-KEY-elasticsearch | sudo apt-key add -
```
### Installing from the APT repository
```bash
sudo echo "deb https://artifacts.elastic.co/packages/6.x/apt stable main" | sudo tee -a /etc/apt/sources.list.d/elastic-6.x.list
```
```bash
sudo apt update && sudo apt install elasticsearch
```
### Running Elasticsearch with systemd
To configure Elasticsearch to start automatically when the system boots up, run the following commands:
```bash
sudo /bin/systemctl daemon-reload
sudo /bin/systemctl enable elasticsearch.service
```
Start Elasticsearch:
```bash
sudo systemctl start elasticsearch
```
If you want to check Elasticsearch status, run the following commands:
```bash
sudo systemctl status elasticsearch
```
***If you can't start Elasticsearch, It's probably memory is insufficient.***
|RAM 1GB|RAM 4GB|
|:--:|:--:|
|![Elasticsearch-Guide-1GB](../images/Elasticsearch-Guide-1GB-status.png)|![Elasticsearch-Guide-4GB](../images/Elasticsearch-Guide-4GB-status.png)|
### Configuring Elasticsearch (Optional)
This guide may be useful if you can't start Elasticsearch, or if Elasticsearch uses too much memory.
First, Elasticsearch needs a lot of memory.
You should check [this page](https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/guide/current/hardware.html).
But, as far as I can recollect, Mastodon does not require much memory for Elasticsearch.
When building Elasticsearch server on low memory VPS, It's necessary to change the configuration.
Change these lines in `/etc/elasticsearch/jvm.options`:
```
# Xms represents the initial size of total heap space
# Xmx represents the maximum size of total heap space
-Xms1g
-Xmx1g
```
#### Note: Are you worried about how much memory configuration need on your VPS? This list may be useful! In my opinion, It would be better to set it from 35% to 50% of the total memory.
|Memory|Xms|Xmx|
|:--:|:--:|:--:|
|1GB|256m|256m|
|2GB|512m|512m|
|3GB|1g|1g|
|4GB|2g|2g|
|RAM 1GB|RAM 4GB|
|:--:|:--:|
|![Elasticsearch-Guide-1GB](../images/Elasticsearch-Guide-1GB-htop.png)|![Elasticsearch-Guide-4GB](../images/Elasticsearch-Guide-4GB-htop.png)|
***Please don't forget! This isn't necessarily the best configuration.***
#### Warning: The memory in this list, It's for Elasticsearch. It's not total memory of VPS.
Probably you could start Elasticsearch.
After changing these lines, Start Elasticsearch:
```bash
sudo systemctl start elasticsearch
```
And check Elasticsearch status:
```bash
sudo systemctl status elasticsearch
```
### Configuring Mastodon for Elasticsearch
Change Elasticsearch configuration in `.env.production` to:
```
# Optional ElasticSearch configuration
ES_ENABLED=true
ES_HOST=localhost
ES_PORT=9200
```
#### Note: You can configure the mastodon to use an Elasticsearch on the different server.
If you want to use an Elasticsearch on the different server, You should change these.
Change these line in `/etc/elasticsearch/elasticsearch.yml`:
```
# Set the bind address to a specific IP (IPv4 or IPv6):
#
network.host: 0.0.0.0
#
# Set a custom port for HTTP:
#
http.port: 9200
```
Restart Elasticsearch:
```bash
sudo systemctl restart elasticsearch
```
`.env.production` also need to be change.
```
# Optional ElasticSearch configuration
ES_ENABLED=true
ES_HOST=Put the IP of Elasticsearch server here.
ES_PORT=9200
```
### Run chewy:deploy to create & populate index
```bash
su - mastodon
cd live
RAILS_ENV=production bundle exec rails chewy:deploy
```
You need restart mastodon.
Resources
-----
- [Install Elasticsearch with Debian Package](https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/deb.html)
- [Elasticsearch - Hardware](https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/guide/current/hardware.html)
- [How to download and install prebuilt OpenJDK packages](http://openjdk.java.net/install/index.html)

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