Elastic Migrations
Elastic Migrations for Laravel allow you to easily modify and share indices schema across the application's environments.
Contents
- Compatibility
- Installation
- Configuration
- Writing Migrations
- Running Migrations
- Reverting Migrations
- Starting Over
- Migration Status
- Zero Downtime Migration
- Troubleshooting
Compatibility
The current version of Elastic Migrations has been tested with the following configuration:
- PHP 7.4-8.x
- Elasticsearch 8.x
- Laravel 6.x-10.x
Installation
The library can be installed via Composer:
composer require babenkoivan/elastic-migrations
If you want to use Elastic Migrations with Lumen framework check this guide.
Configuration
Elastic Migrations uses babenkoivan/elastic-client as a dependency. To change the client settings you need to publish the configuration file first:
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Elastic\Client\ServiceProvider"
In the newly created config/elastic.client.php
file you can define the default connection name and describe multiple
connections using configuration hashes. Please, refer to the elastic-client documentation for more details.
It is recommended to publish Elastic Migrations settings as well:
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Elastic\Migrations\ServiceProvider"
This will create the config/elastic.migrations.php
file, which allows you to configure the following options:
storage.default_path
- the default location of your migration filesdatabase.table
- the table name that holds executed migration namesdatabase.connection
- the database connection you wish to useprefixes.index
- the prefix of your indicesprefixes.alias
- the prefix of your aliases
If you store some migration files outside the default path and want them to be visible by the package, you may use
registerPaths
method to inform Elastic Migrations how to load them:
class MyAppServiceProvider extends Illuminate\Support\ServiceProvider
{
public function boot()
{
resolve(MigrationStorage::class)->registerPaths([
'/my_app/elastic/migrations1',
'/my_app/elastic/migrations2',
]);
}
}
Finally, don't forget to run Laravel database migrations to create Elastic Migrations table:
php artisan migrate
Writing Migrations
You can effortlessly create a new migration file using an Artisan console command:
// create a migration file with "create_my_index.php" name in the default directory
php artisan elastic:make:migration create_my_index
// create a migration file with "create_my_index.php" name in "/my_path" directory
// note, that you need to specify the full path to the file in this case
php artisan elastic:make:migration /my_path/create_my_index.php
Every migration has two methods: up
and down
. up
is used to alternate the index schema and down
is used to revert that action.
You can use Elastic\Migrations\Facades\Index
facade to perform basic operations over Elasticsearch indices:
Create Index
You can create an index with the default settings:
Index::create('my-index');
You can use a modifier to configure mapping and settings:
Index::create('my-index', function (Mapping $mapping, Settings $settings) {
// to add a new field to the mapping use method name as a field type (in Camel Case),
// first argument as a field name and optional second argument for additional field parameters
$mapping->text('title', ['boost' => 2]);
$mapping->float('price');
// you can define a dynamic template as follows
$mapping->dynamicTemplate('my_template_name', [
'match_mapping_type' => 'long',
'mapping' => [
'type' => 'integer',
],
]);
// you can also change the index settings and the analysis configuration
$settings->index([
'number_of_replicas' => 2,
'refresh_interval' => -1
]);
$settings->analysis([
'analyzer' => [
'title' => [
'type' => 'custom',
'tokenizer' => 'whitespace'
]
]
]);
});
There is also the createRaw
method in your disposal:
$mapping = [
'properties' => [
'title' => [
'type' => 'text'
]
]
];
$settings = [
'number_of_replicas' => 2
];
Index::createRaw('my-index', $mapping, $settings);
Finally, it is possible to create an index only if it doesn't exist:
// you can use a modifier as shown above
Index::createIfNotExists('my-index', $modifier);
// or you can use raw mapping and settings
Index::createIfNotExistsRaw('my-index', $mapping, $settings);
Update Mapping
You can use a modifier to adjust the mapping:
Index::putMapping('my-index', function (Mapping $mapping) {
$mapping->text('title', ['boost' => 2]);
$mapping->float('price');
});
Alternatively, you can use the putMappingRaw
method as follows:
Index::putMappingRaw('my-index', [
'properties' => [
'title' => [
'type' => 'text',
'boost' => 2
],
'price' => [
'price' => 'float'
]
]
]);
Update Settings
You can use a modifier to change an index configuration:
Index::putSettings('my-index', function (Settings $settings) {
$settings->index([
'number_of_replicas' => 2,
'refresh_interval' => -1
]);
});
The same result can be achieved with the putSettingsRaw
method:
Index::putSettingsRaw('my-index', [
'index' => [
'number_of_replicas' => 2,
'refresh_interval' => -1
]
]);
It is possible to update analysis settings only on closed indices. The pushSettings
method closes the index,
updates the configuration and opens the index again:
Index::pushSettings('my-index', function (Settings $settings) {
$settings->analysis([
'analyzer' => [
'title' => [
'type' => 'custom',
'tokenizer' => 'whitespace'
]
]
]);
});
The same can be done with the pushSettingsRaw
method:
Index::pushSettingsRaw('my-index', [
'analysis' => [
'analyzer' => [
'title' => [
'type' => 'custom',
'tokenizer' => 'whitespace'
]
]
]
]);
Drop Index
You can unconditionally delete the index:
Index::drop('my-index');
or delete it only if it exists:
Index::dropIfExists('my-index');
Create Alias
You can create an alias with optional filter query:
Index::putAlias('my-index', 'my-alias', [
'is_write_index' => true,
'filter' => [
'term' => [
'user_id' => 1,
],
],
]);
Delete Alias
You can delete an alias by its name:
Index::deleteAlias('my-index', 'my-alias');
Multiple Connections
You can configure multiple connections to Elasticsearch in the client's configuration file, and then use a different connection for every operation:
Index::connection('my-connection')->drop('my-index');
More
Finally, you are free to inject Elastic\Elasticsearch\Client
in the migration constructor and execute any supported by client actions.
Running Migrations
You can either run all migrations:
php artisan elastic:migrate
or run a specific one:
// execute a migration located in one of the registered paths
php artisan elastic:migrate 2018_12_01_081000_create_my_index
// execute a migration located in "/my_path" directory
// note, that you need to specify the full path to the file in this case
php artisan elastic:migrate /my_path/2018_12_01_081000_create_my_index.php
Use the --force
option if you want to execute migrations on production environment:
php artisan elastic:migrate --force
Reverting Migrations
You can either revert the last executed migrations:
php artisan elastic:migrate:rollback
or rollback a specific one:
// rollback a migration located in one of the registered paths
php artisan elastic:migrate:rollback 2018_12_01_081000_create_my_index
// rollback a migration located in "/my_path" directory
// note, that you need to specify the full path to the file in this case
php artisan elastic:migrate:rollback /my_path/2018_12_01_081000_create_my_index
Use the elastic:migrate:reset
command if you want to revert all previously migrated files:
php artisan elastic:migrate:reset
Starting Over
Sometimes you just want to start over, rollback all the changes and apply them again:
php artisan elastic:migrate:refresh
Alternatively you can also drop all existing indices and rerun the migrations:
php artisan elastic:migrate:fresh
Note that this command uses wildcards to delete indices. This requires setting action.destructive_requires_name to false
.
Migration Status
You can always check which files have been already migrated and what can be reverted by the elastic:migrate:rollback
command (the last batch):
php artisan elastic:migrate:status
Zero Downtime Migration
Changing an index mapping with zero downtime is not a trivial process and might vary from one project to another. Elastic Migrations library doesn't include such feature out of the box, but you can implement it in your project by following this guide.
Troubleshooting
If you see one of the messages below, follow the instructions:
Migration table is not yet created
- run thephp artisan migrate
commandMigration directory is not yet created
- create a migration file using theelastic:make:migration
command or createmigrations
directory manually
In case one of the commands doesn't work as expected, try to publish configuration:
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Elastic\Migrations\ServiceProvider"