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In `tutorial-define.text.asciidoc`, it is stated that the typical index name contains the date as `MM-DD-YYYY`, and then proceeds to give an example of how a log index from May, 2015 would look like: `logstash-2015.05*`, which doesn't match the typical pattern for dates stated above. This PR changes the date pattern, as to me `YYYY.MM.DD` is more accurate on a world-wide scale.
22 lines
1.5 KiB
Text
22 lines
1.5 KiB
Text
[[tutorial-define-index]]
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== Defining Your Index Patterns
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Each set of data loaded to Elasticsearch has an index pattern. In the previous section, the
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Shakespeare data set has an index named `shakespeare`, and the accounts data set has an index named `bank`. An _index
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pattern_ is a string with optional wildcards that can match multiple indices. For example, in the common logging use
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case, a typical index name contains the date in YYYY.MM.DD format, and an index pattern for May would look something
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like `logstash-2015.05*`.
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For this tutorial, any pattern that matches the name of an index we've loaded will work. Open a browser and
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navigate to `localhost:5601`. Click the *Settings* tab, then the *Indices* tab. Click *Add New* to define a new index
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pattern. Two of the sample data sets, the Shakespeare plays and the financial accounts, don't contain time-series data.
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Make sure the *Index contains time-based events* box is unchecked when you create index patterns for these data sets.
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Specify `shakes*` as the index pattern for the Shakespeare data set and click *Create* to define the index pattern, then
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define a second index pattern named `ba*`.
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The Logstash data set does contain time-series data, so after clicking *Add New* to define the index for this data
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set, make sure the *Index contains time-based events* box is checked and select the `@timestamp` field from the
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*Time-field name* drop-down.
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NOTE: When you define an index pattern, indices that match that pattern must exist in Elasticsearch. Those indices must
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contain data.
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