Run Enterprise Search server using Docker imagesedit

To use Enterprise Search features, you need an Elastic deployment. To use all Enterprise Search features, your deployment must include Enterprise Search server.

You can run an Elastic deployment, including Enterprise Search server, using Docker images provided by Elastic.

Elastic Docker imagesedit

The Elastic Docker registry provides Docker images for Enterprise Search. The images support both x86 and ARM platforms.

You can download images from the registry, or use docker pull:

docker pull docker.elastic.co/enterprise-search/enterprise-search:8.14.0

Optionally, you can use the Cosign application to verify the Enteprise Search Docker image signature:

wget https://artifacts.elastic.co/cosign.pub
cosign verify --key cosign.pub docker.elastic.co/enterprise-search/enterprise-search:8.14.0

The cosign command prints the check results and the signature payload in JSON format:

Verification for docker.elastic.co/enterprise-search/enterprise-search:8.14.0 --
The following checks were performed on each of these signatures:
  - The cosign claims were validated
  - Existence of the claims in the transparency log was verified offline
  - The signatures were verified against the specified public key

Configurationedit

When running in Docker, you will use environment variables to configure Enterprise Search, using fully-qualified setting names as environment variables. See Configuration for a list of configurable values.

You must configure the values that are required for a standard installation method. In most cases, these are allow_es_settings_modification and secret_management.encryption_keys.

Run Enterprise Search using docker runedit

Use docker run to manage Elastic containers imperatively.

Enterprise Search depends on Elasticsearch and Kibana. The following steps describe how to start all three services.

This configuration is appropriate for development and testing.

  1. Allocate at least 4GB of memory to Docker Engine:

    If you are using Docker Desktop with default settings, you need to increase the memory allocated to Docker Engine. Refer to the following documentation from Docker:

  2. Create a Docker network:

    docker network create elastic
  3. Create and start the Elasticsearch container interactively:

    docker run \
    --name "elasticsearch" \
    --network "elastic" \
    --publish "9200:9200" \
    --volume "es-config:/usr/share/elasticsearch/config:rw" \
    --interactive \
    --tty \
    --rm \
    "docker.elastic.co/elasticsearch/elasticsearch:8.14.0"

    The --volume argument mounts a volume within the container. Elasticsearch will write a certificate file to this volume on startup. The Enterprise Search container will mount the same volume in order to read the certificate file.

    To restart Elasticsearch later, you must first delete the volume so Elasticsearch can start with a fresh configuration:

    docker volume rm es-config

    If the container fails to start with a message about vm.max_map_count, refer to the following Elasticsearch documentation for platform-specific solutions: Using the Docker images in production.

  4. Save password, enrollment token, and Elasticsearch address:

    Within the Elasticsearch terminal output, locate the password for user elastic, and the enrollment token for Kibana.

    These are printed the first time Elasticsearch starts. The relevant output looks like this:

    -> Elasticsearch security features have been automatically configured!
    -> Authentication is enabled and cluster connections are encrypted.
    
    ->  Password for the elastic user (reset with `bin/elasticsearch-reset-password -u elastic`):
      ksk4kIAt0tQBWZ9qYz0p
    
    ->  HTTP CA certificate SHA-256 fingerprint:
      39e8552724167da188f7d1c4196e6335d32d0cd62115b34dd271f0519232bb7d
    
    ->  Configure Kibana to use this cluster:
    * Run Kibana and click the configuration link in the terminal when Kibana starts.
    * Copy the following enrollment token and paste it into Kibana in your browser (valid for the next 30 minutes):
      eyJ2ZXIiOiI4LjAuMCIsImFkciI6WyIxNzIuMTguMC4yOjkyMDAiXSwiZmdyIjoiMzllODU1MjcyNDE2N2RhMTg4ZjdkMWM0MTk2ZTYzMzVkMzJkMGNkNjIxMTViMzRkZDI3MWYwNTE5MjMyYmI3ZCIsImtleSI6IkpVMGJ3SDRCTDJqOWx6TVlTLWpyOlVoeHBSa1JFUXVlbnV3UEVGTUlub1EifQ==

    Also within the Elasticsearch output, locate the address at which Elasticsearch is running within the container. This may be easier to find by searching the logs for publish_address. For example, run the following in a separate terminal:

    docker logs elasticsearch | grep 'publish_address'

    The relevant information looks like this:

    "message":"publish_address {172.18.0.2:9200}, bound_addresses {0.0.0.0:9200}"

    Save the password, enrollment token, and Elasticsearch publish address for use in the following steps.

  5. Create, start, and enroll Kibana:

    docker run \
    --name "kibana" \
    --network "elastic" \
    --publish "5601:5601" \
    --interactive \
    --tty \
    --rm \
    --env "ENTERPRISESEARCH_HOST=http://enterprise-search:3002" \
    "docker.elastic.co/kibana/kibana:8.14.0"

    Open the link printed to the terminal to navigate to Kibana (http://localhost:5601?code=). Follow the instructions within Kibana to complete the enrollment process. Use the enrollment token from step 4.

    When you see the login screen, move to the next step.

  6. Create and start the Enterprise Search container:

    Use the following command template:

    docker run \
    --name "enterprise-search" \
    --network "elastic" \
    --publish "3002:3002" \
    --volume "es-config:/usr/share/enterprise-search/es-config:ro" \
    --interactive \
    --tty \
    --rm \
    --env "secret_management.encryption_keys=[${ENCRYPTION_KEYS}]" \
    --env "allow_es_settings_modification=true" \
    --env "elasticsearch.host=https://${ELASTICSEARCH_ADDRESS}" \
    --env "elasticsearch.username=elastic" \
    --env "elasticsearch.password=${ELASTIC_PASSWORD}" \
    --env "elasticsearch.ssl.enabled=true" \
    --env "elasticsearch.ssl.certificate_authority=/usr/share/enterprise-search/es-config/certs/http_ca.crt" \
    --env "kibana.external_url=http://kibana:5601" \
    "docker.elastic.co/enterprise-search/enterprise-search:8.14.0"

    Replace ${ENCRYPTION_KEYS} with at least one encryption key (256-bit key recommended). For example: secret_management.encryption_keys=[c34d38b3a14956121ff2170e5030b471551370178f43e5626eec58b04a30fae2]

    Replace ${ELASTICSEARCH_ADDRESS} with the Elasticsearch address from step 4. For example: elasticsearch.host=https://172.18.0.2:9200.

    Replace ${ELASTIC_PASSWORD} with the password from step 4. For example: elasticsearch.password=ksk4kIAt0tQBWZ9qYz0p.

    Complete example:

    docker run \
    --name "enterprise-search" \
    --network "elastic" \
    --publish "3002:3002" \
    --volume "es-config:/usr/share/enterprise-search/es-config:ro" \
    --interactive \
    --tty \
    --rm \
    --env "secret_management.encryption_keys=[c34d38b3a14956121ff2170e5030b471551370178f43e5626eec58b04a30fae2]" \
    --env "allow_es_settings_modification=true" \
    --env "elasticsearch.host=https://172.18.0.2:9200" \
    --env "elasticsearch.username=elastic" \
    --env "elasticsearch.password=ksk4kIAt0tQBWZ9qYz0p" \
    --env "elasticsearch.ssl.enabled=true" \
    --env "elasticsearch.ssl.certificate_authority=/usr/share/enterprise-search/es-config/certs/http_ca.crt" \
    --env "kibana.external_url=http://kibana:5601" \
    "docker.elastic.co/enterprise-search/enterprise-search:8.14.0"
  7. Log in:

    Open Enterprise Search in Kibana at http://localhost:5601/app/enterprise_search/overview. Log in as user elastic. Use the password for this user from step 4.

Run Enterprise Search using docker-composeedit

Using Docker Compose is a much more convenient way of running the solution in a container. This method is often used in local development environments to try out the product before a full production deployment.

This example runs Enterprise Search with Elasticsearch and Kibana in Docker Compose.

  1. Create the following configuration files in a new, empty directory:

    1. Create a .env file to set environment variables which are used to run the docker-compose.yml configuration file. Include these environment variables:

      STACK_VERSION=8.14.0
      ELASTIC_PASSWORD=changeme
      KIBANA_PASSWORD=changeme
      ES_PORT=9200
      CLUSTER_NAME=es-cluster
      LICENSE=basic
      MEM_LIMIT=1073741824
      KIBANA_PORT=5601
      ENTERPRISE_SEARCH_PORT=3002
      ENCRYPTION_KEYS=secret

      Ensure that you specify a strong password for the elastic and kibana_system users with the ELASTIC_PASSWORD and KIBANA_PASSWORD variables. These variables are referenced by the docker-compose.yml file.

    2. Create a docker-compose.yml file:

      version: "2.2"
      
      services:
        setup:
          image: docker.elastic.co/elasticsearch/elasticsearch:${STACK_VERSION}
          volumes:
            - certs:/usr/share/elasticsearch/config/certs
          user: "0"
          command: >
            bash -c '
              if [ x${ELASTIC_PASSWORD} == x ]; then
                echo "Set the ELASTIC_PASSWORD environment variable in the .env file";
                exit 1;
              elif [ x${KIBANA_PASSWORD} == x ]; then
                echo "Set the KIBANA_PASSWORD environment variable in the .env file";
                exit 1;
              fi;
              if [ ! -f certs/ca.zip ]; then
                echo "Creating CA";
                bin/elasticsearch-certutil ca --silent --pem -out config/certs/ca.zip;
                unzip config/certs/ca.zip -d config/certs;
              fi;
              if [ ! -f certs/certs.zip ]; then
                echo "Creating certs";
                echo -ne \
                "instances:\n"\
                "  - name: es01\n"\
                "    dns:\n"\
                "      - es01\n"\
                "      - localhost\n"\
                "    ip:\n"\
                "      - 127.0.0.1\n"\
                > config/certs/instances.yml;
                bin/elasticsearch-certutil cert --silent --pem -out config/certs/certs.zip --in config/certs/instances.yml --ca-cert config/certs/ca/ca.crt --ca-key config/certs/ca/ca.key;
                unzip config/certs/certs.zip -d config/certs;
              fi;
              echo "Setting file permissions"
              chown -R root:root config/certs;
              find . -type d -exec chmod 750 \{\} \;;
              find . -type f -exec chmod 640 \{\} \;;
              echo "Waiting for Elasticsearch availability";
              until curl -s --cacert config/certs/ca/ca.crt https://es01:9200 | grep -q "missing authentication credentials"; do sleep 30; done;
              echo "Setting kibana_system password";
              until curl -s -X POST --cacert config/certs/ca/ca.crt -u elastic:${ELASTIC_PASSWORD} -H "Content-Type: application/json" https://es01:9200/_security/user/kibana_system/_password -d "{\"password\":\"${KIBANA_PASSWORD}\"}" | grep -q "^{}"; do sleep 10; done;
              echo "All done!";
            '
          healthcheck:
            test: ["CMD-SHELL", "[ -f config/certs/es01/es01.crt ]"]
            interval: 1s
            timeout: 5s
            retries: 120
      
        es01:
          depends_on:
            setup:
              condition: service_healthy
          image: docker.elastic.co/elasticsearch/elasticsearch:${STACK_VERSION}
          volumes:
            - certs:/usr/share/elasticsearch/config/certs
            - esdata01:/usr/share/elasticsearch/data
          ports:
            - ${ES_PORT}:9200
          environment:
            - node.name=es01
            - cluster.name=${CLUSTER_NAME}
            - cluster.initial_master_nodes=es01
            - ELASTIC_PASSWORD=${ELASTIC_PASSWORD}
            - bootstrap.memory_lock=true
            - xpack.security.enabled=true
            - xpack.security.http.ssl.enabled=true
            - xpack.security.http.ssl.key=certs/es01/es01.key
            - xpack.security.http.ssl.certificate=certs/es01/es01.crt
            - xpack.security.http.ssl.certificate_authorities=certs/ca/ca.crt
            - xpack.security.http.ssl.verification_mode=certificate
            - xpack.security.transport.ssl.enabled=true
            - xpack.security.transport.ssl.key=certs/es01/es01.key
            - xpack.security.transport.ssl.certificate=certs/es01/es01.crt
            - xpack.security.transport.ssl.certificate_authorities=certs/ca/ca.crt
            - xpack.security.transport.ssl.verification_mode=certificate
            - xpack.license.self_generated.type=${LICENSE}
          mem_limit: ${MEM_LIMIT}
          ulimits:
            memlock:
              soft: -1
              hard: -1
          healthcheck:
            test:
              [
                  "CMD-SHELL",
                  "curl -s --cacert config/certs/ca/ca.crt https://localhost:9200 | grep -q 'missing authentication credentials'",
              ]
            interval: 10s
            timeout: 10s
            retries: 120
      
        kibana:
          depends_on:
            es01:
              condition: service_healthy
          image: docker.elastic.co/kibana/kibana:${STACK_VERSION}
          volumes:
            - certs:/usr/share/kibana/config/certs
            - kibanadata:/usr/share/kibana/data
          ports:
            - ${KIBANA_PORT}:5601
          environment:
            - SERVERNAME=kibana
            - ELASTICSEARCH_HOSTS=https://es01:9200
            - ELASTICSEARCH_USERNAME=kibana_system
            - ELASTICSEARCH_PASSWORD=${KIBANA_PASSWORD}
            - ELASTICSEARCH_SSL_CERTIFICATEAUTHORITIES=config/certs/ca/ca.crt
            - ENTERPRISESEARCH_HOST=http://enterprisesearch:${ENTERPRISE_SEARCH_PORT}
          mem_limit: ${MEM_LIMIT}
          healthcheck:
            test:
              [
                  "CMD-SHELL",
                  "curl -s -I http://localhost:5601 | grep -q 'HTTP/1.1 302 Found'",
              ]
            interval: 10s
            timeout: 10s
            retries: 120
      
        enterprisesearch:
          depends_on:
            es01:
              condition: service_healthy
            kibana:
              condition: service_healthy
          image: docker.elastic.co/enterprise-search/enterprise-search:${STACK_VERSION}
          volumes:
            - certs:/usr/share/enterprise-search/config/certs
            - enterprisesearchdata:/usr/share/enterprise-search/config
          ports:
            - ${ENTERPRISE_SEARCH_PORT}:3002
          environment:
            - SERVERNAME=enterprisesearch
            - secret_management.encryption_keys=[${ENCRYPTION_KEYS}]
            - allow_es_settings_modification=true
            - elasticsearch.host=https://es01:9200
            - elasticsearch.username=elastic
            - elasticsearch.password=${ELASTIC_PASSWORD}
            - elasticsearch.ssl.enabled=true
            - elasticsearch.ssl.certificate_authority=/usr/share/enterprise-search/config/certs/ca/ca.crt
            - kibana.external_url=http://kibana:5601
          mem_limit: ${MEM_LIMIT}
          healthcheck:
            test:
              [
                  "CMD-SHELL",
                  "curl -s -I http://localhost:3002 | grep -q 'HTTP/1.1 302 Found'",
              ]
            interval: 10s
            timeout: 10s
            retries: 120
      
      volumes:
        certs:
          driver: local
        enterprisesearchdata:
          driver: local
        esdata01:
          driver: local
        kibanadata:
          driver: local

      This sample Docker Compose file brings up a single-node Elasticsearch cluster, then starts an Enterprise Search instance on it and configures a Kibana instance as the main way of interacting with the solution.

      All components running in Docker compose are attached to a dedicated Docker network called elastic and are exposed via a set of local ports accessible only from the local machine. If you want to open up the service to other computers on your network, you will need to change port mappings for the services you want to share (e.g. change 127.0.0.1:5601:5601 to 5601:5601 for Kibana).

      The --volume argument mounts a volume within the container. Elasticsearch will write a certificate file to this volume on startup. The Enterprise Search container will mount the same volume in order to read the certificate file.

      The data in the Docker volumes is preserved and loaded when you restart the cluster with docker-compose up. To restart Elasticsearch later, you must first delete the volume so Elasticsearch can start with a fresh configuration:

      docker volume rm es-config
  2. Make sure Docker Engine is allotted at least 4GiB of memory. In Docker Desktop, configure resource usage using the Advanced tab in Preferences (macOS) or Settings (Windows).

    Docker Compose is not pre-installed with Docker on Linux. See docs.docker.com for installation instructions: Install Compose on Linux

  3. Run docker-compose up to bring up the cluster:

    docker-compose up --remove-orphans
  4. If the solution starts without errors, your deployment is ready to use:

    Access Kibana at http://localhost:5601. Log in with user elastic. The password is the value you provided for ELASTIC_PASSWORD in your .env file.

    Access Elasticsearch at http://localhost:9200.

    Alternatively, if the solution does not start successfully, check the container logs for more information.

    Try: docker logs <container_id>, where container_id is the ID of the unhealthy container (for example f6de943335cf).

    If the container fails to start with a message about vm.max_map_count, refer to the following Elasticsearch documentation for platform-specific solutions: Using the Docker images in production.

To stop the cluster, run docker-compose down or press Ctrl+C in your terminal.

To delete the data volumes when you bring down the cluster, specify the -v option: docker-compose down -v.