Installing
(local)
npm install elasticdump
./bin/elasticdump
(global)
npm install elasticdump -g
elasticdump
Use
Standard Install
Elasticdump works by sending an input to an output. Both can be either an elasticsearch URL or a File.
Elasticsearch/OpenSearch:
format: {protocol}/{host}:{port}/{index}
example: http://127.0.0.1:9200/my_index
File:
format: {FilePath}
example: /Users/evantahler/Desktop/dump.json
Stdio:
format: stdin / stdout
format: $
You can then do things like:
elasticdump
–input=http://production.es.com:9200/my_index
–output=http://staging.es.com:9200/my_index
–type=analyzer
elasticdump
–input=http://production.es.com:9200/my_index
–output=http://staging.es.com:9200/my_index
–type=mapping
elasticdump
–input=http://production.es.com:9200/my_index
–output=http://staging.es.com:9200/my_index
–type=data
elasticdump
–input=http://production.es.com:9200/my_index
–output=/data/my_index_mapping.json
–type=mapping
elasticdump
–input=http://production.es.com:9200/my_index
–output=/data/my_index.json
–type=data
elasticdump
–input=http://production.es.com:9200/my_index
–output=$
| gzip > /data/my_index.json.gz
elasticdump
–input=http://production.es.com:9200/my_index
–output=query.json
–searchBody=“{“query”:{“term”:{“username”: “admin”}}}”
elasticdump
–input=http://production.es.com:9200/my_index
–output=query.json
–searchBody=@/data/searchbody.json
elasticdump
–input=http://es.com:9200/api
–output=http://es.com:9200/api2
–input-params=“{“preference”:”_shards:0"}"
elasticdump
–input=http://es.com:9200/index-name/alias-filter
–output=alias.json
–type=alias
elasticdump
–input=./alias.json
–output=http://es.com:9200
–type=alias
elasticdump
–input=http://es.com:9200/template-filter
–output=templates.json
–type=template
elasticdump
–input=./templates.json
–output=http://es.com:9200
–type=template
elasticdump
–input=http://production.es.com:9200/my_index
–output=/data/my_index.json
–fileSize=10mb
elasticdump
–s3AccessKeyId “ a c c e s s k e y i d " − − s 3 S e c r e t A c c e s s K e y " {access_key_id}" \ --s3SecretAccessKey " accesskeyid" −−s3SecretAccessKey"{access_key_secret}”
–input “s3:// b u c k e t n a m e / {bucket_name}/ bucketname/{file_name}.json”
–output=http://production.es.com:9200/my_index
elasticdump
–s3AccessKeyId “ a c c e s s k e y i d " − − s 3 S e c r e t A c c e s s K e y " {access_key_id}" \ --s3SecretAccessKey " accesskeyid" −−s3SecretAccessKey"{access_key_secret}”
–input=http://production.es.com:9200/my_index
–output “s3:// b u c k e t n a m e / {bucket_name}/ bucketname/{file_name}.json”
elasticdump
–s3AccessKeyId “ a c c e s s k e y i d " − − s 3 S e c r e t A c c e s s K e y " {access_key_id}" \ --s3SecretAccessKey " accesskeyid" −−s3SecretAccessKey"{access_key_secret}”
–input “s3:// b u c k e t n a m e / {bucket_name}/ bucketname/{file_name}.json”
–output=http://production.es.com:9200/my_index
–s3ForcePathStyle true
–s3Endpoint https://production.minio.co
elasticdump
–s3AccessKeyId “ a c c e s s k e y i d " − − s 3 S e c r e t A c c e s s K e y " {access_key_id}" \ --s3SecretAccessKey " accesskeyid" −−s3SecretAccessKey"{access_key_secret}”
–input=http://production.es.com:9200/my_index
–output “s3:// b u c k e t n a m e / {bucket_name}/ bucketname/{file_name}.json”
–s3ForcePathStyle true
–s3Endpoint https://production.minio.co
elasticdump \
–input “csv:///data/cars.csv”
–output=http://production.es.com:9200/my_index
–csvSkipRows 1 # used to skip parsed rows (this does not include the headers row)
–csvDelimiter “;” # default csvDelimiter is ‘,’
Non-Standard Install
If Elasticsearch/OpenSearch is not being served from the root directory the --input-index and --output-index are required. If they are not provided, the additional sub-directories will be parsed for index and type.
Elasticsearch/OpenSearch:
format: {protocol}/{host}:{port}/{sub}/{directory…}
example: http://127.0.0.1:9200/api/search
elasticdump
–input=http://es.com:9200/api/search
–input-index=my_index
–output=http://es.com:9200/api/search
–output-index=my_index
–type=mapping
elasticdump
–input=http://es.com:9200/api/search
–input-index=my_index/my_type
–output=http://es.com:9200/api/search
–output-index=my_index
–type=mapping
Docker install
If you prefer using docker to use elasticdump, you can download this project from docker hub:
docker pull elasticdump/elasticsearch-dump
Then you can use it just by :
using docker run --rm -ti elasticdump/elasticsearch-dump
you’ll need to mount your file storage dir -v : to your docker container
Example:
docker run --rm -ti elasticdump/elasticsearch-dump
–input=http://production.es.com:9200/my_index
–output=http://staging.es.com:9200/my_index
–type=mapping
docker run --rm -ti elasticdump/elasticsearch-dump
–input=http://production.es.com:9200/my_index
–output=http://staging.es.com:9200/my_index
–type=data
docker run --rm -ti -v /data:/tmp elasticdump/elasticsearch-dump
–input=http://production.es.com:9200/my_index
–output=/tmp/my_index_mapping.json
–type=data
If you need to run using localhost as your ES host:
docker run --net=host --rm -ti elasticdump/elasticsearch-dump
–input=http://staging.es.com:9200/my_index
–output=http://localhost:9200/my_index
–type=data
Dump Format
The file format generated by this tool is line-delimited JSON files. The dump file itself is not valid JSON, but each line is. We do this so that dumpfiles can be streamed and appended without worrying about whole-file parser integrity.
For example, if you wanted to parse every line, you could do:
while read LINE; do jsonlint-py “${LINE}” ; done < dump.data.json
Options
elasticdump: Import and export tools for elasticsearch
version: %%version%%
Usage: elasticdump --input SOURCE --output DESTINATION [OPTIONS]
–input
Source location (required)
–input-index
Source index and type
(default: all, example: index/type)
–output
Destination location (required)
–output-index
Destination index and type
(default: all, example: index/type)
–overwrite
Overwrite output file if it exists
(default: false)
–limit
How many objects to move in batch per operation
limit is approximate for file streams
(default: 100)
–size
How many objects to retrieve
(default: -1 -> no limit)
–debug
Display the elasticsearch commands being used
(default: false)
–quiet
Suppress all messages except for errors
(default: false)
–type
What are we exporting?
(default: data, options: [index, settings, analyzer, data, mapping, policy, alias, template, component_template, index_template])
–filterSystemTemplates
Whether to remove metrics-- and logs-- system templates
(default: true])
–templateRegex
Regex used to filter templates before passing to the output transport
(default: ((metrics|logs|\…+)(-.+)?)
–delete
Delete documents one-by-one from the input as they are
moved. Will not delete the source index
(default: false)
–delete-with-routing
Passes the routing query-param to the delete function
used to route operations to a specific shard.
(default: false)
–skip-existing
Skips resource_already_exists_exception when enabled and exit with success
(default: false)
–searchBody
Preform a partial extract based on search results
when ES is the input, default values are
if ES > 5
'{"query": { "match_all": {} }, "stored_fields": ["*"], "_source": true }'
else
'{"query": { "match_all": {} }, "fields": ["*"], "_source": true }'
[As of 6.68.0] If the searchBody is preceded by a @ symbol, elasticdump will perform a file lookup
in the location specified. NB: File must contain valid JSON
–searchWithTemplate
Enable to use Search Template when using --searchBody
If using Search Template then searchBody has to consist of “id” field and “params” objects
If “size” field is defined within Search Template, it will be overridden by --size parameter
See https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/search-template.html for
further information
(default: false)
–searchBodyTemplate
A method/function which can be called to the searchBody
doc.searchBody = { query: { match_all: {} }, stored_fields: [], _source: true };
May be used multiple times.
Additionally, searchBodyTemplate may be performed by a module. See searchBody Template below.
–headers
Add custom headers to Elastisearch requests (helpful when
your Elasticsearch instance sits behind a proxy)
(default: ‘{“User-Agent”: “elasticdump”}’)
Type/direction based headers are supported .i.e. input-headers/output-headers
(these will only be added based on the current flow type input/output)
–esCompress
if true, add an Accept-Encoding header to request compressed content encodings from the server (if not already present)
and decode supported content encodings in the response.
Note: Automatic decoding of the response content is performed on the body data returned through request
(both through the request stream and passed to the callback function) but is not performed on the response stream
(available from the response event) which is the unmodified http.IncomingMessage object which may contain compressed data.
See example below.
–params
Add custom parameters to Elastisearch requests uri. Helpful when you for example
want to use elasticsearch preference
--input-params is a specific params extension that can be used when fetching data with the scroll api
--output-params is a specific params extension that can be used when indexing data with the bulk index api
NB : These were added to avoid param pollution problems which occur when an input param is used in an output source
(default: null)
–sourceOnly
Output only the json contained within the document _source
Normal: {“_index”:“”,“_type”:“”,“_id”:“”, “_source”:{SOURCE}}
sourceOnly: {SOURCE}
(default: false)
–ignore-errors
Will continue the read/write loop on write error
(default: false)
–ignore-es-write-errors
Will continue the read/write loop on a write error from elasticsearch
(default: true)
–scrollId
The last scroll Id returned from elasticsearch.
This will allow dumps to be resumed used the last scroll Id &
scrollTime
has not expired.
–scrollTime
Time the nodes will hold the requested search in order.
(default: 10m)
–scroll-with-post
Use a HTTP POST method to perform scrolling instead of the default GET
(default: false)
–maxSockets
How many simultaneous HTTP requests can the process make?
(default:
5 [node <= v0.10.x] /
Infinity [node >= v0.11.x] )
–timeout
Integer containing the number of milliseconds to wait for
a request to respond before aborting the request. Passed
directly to the request library. Mostly used when you don’t
care too much if you lose some data when importing
but would rather have speed.
–offset
Integer containing the number of rows you wish to skip
ahead from the input transport. When importing a large
index, things can go wrong, be it connectivity, crashes,
someone forgets to screen
, etc. This allows you
to start the dump again from the last known line written
(as logged by the offset
in the output). Please be
advised that since no sorting is specified when the
dump is initially created, there’s no real way to
guarantee that the skipped rows have already been
written/parsed. This is more of an option for when
you want to get as much data as possible in the index
without concern for losing some rows in the process,
similar to the timeout
option.
(default: 0)
–noRefresh
Disable input index refresh.
Positive:
1. Much increased index speed
2. Much less hardware requirements
Negative:
1. Recently added data may not be indexed
Recommended using with big data indexing,
where speed and system health is a higher priority
than recently added data.
–inputTransport
Provide a custom js file to use as the input transport
–outputTransport
Provide a custom js file to use as the output transport
–toLog
When using a custom outputTransport, should log lines
be appended to the output stream?
(default: true, except for $
)
–transform
A method/function which can be called to modify documents
before writing to a destination. A global variable ‘doc’
is available.
Example script for computing a new field ‘f2’ as doubled
value of field ‘f1’:
doc._source[“f2”] = doc._source.f1 * 2;
May be used multiple times.
Additionally, transform may be performed by a module. See Module Transform below.
–awsChain
Use standard
location and ordering for resolving credentials including environment variables,
config files, EC2 and ECS metadata locations Recommended option for use with AWS
–awsAccessKeyId
–awsSecretAccessKey
When using Amazon Elasticsearch Service protected by
AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM), provide
your Access Key ID and Secret Access Key.
–sessionToken can also be optionally provided if using temporary credentials
–awsIniFileProfile
Alternative to --awsAccessKeyId and --awsSecretAccessKey,
loads credentials from a specified profile in aws ini file.
For greater flexibility, consider using --awsChain
and setting AWS_PROFILE and AWS_CONFIG_FILE
environment variables to override defaults if needed
–awsIniFileName
Override the default aws ini file name when using --awsIniFileProfile
Filename is relative to ~/.aws/
(default: config)
–awsService
Sets the AWS service that the signature will be generated for
(default: calculated from hostname or host)
–awsRegion
Sets the AWS region that the signature will be generated for
(default: calculated from hostname or host)
–awsUrlRegex
Overrides the default regular expression that is used to validate AWS urls that should be signed
(default: ^https?/..amazonaws.com.$)
–support-big-int
Support big integer numbers
–big-int-fields
Specifies a comma-seperated list of fields that should be checked for big-int support
(default ‘’)
–retryAttempts
Integer indicating the number of times a request should be automatically re-attempted before failing
when a connection fails with one of the following errors `ECONNRESET`, `ENOTFOUND`, `ESOCKETTIMEDOUT`,
ETIMEDOUT`, `ECONNREFUSED`, `EHOSTUNREACH`, `EPIPE`, `EAI_AGAIN`
(default: 0)
–retryDelay
Integer indicating the back-off/break period between retry attempts (milliseconds)
(default : 5000)
–parseExtraFields
Comma-separated list of meta-fields to be parsed
–maxRows
supports file splitting. Files are split by the number of rows specified
–fileSize
supports file splitting. This value must be a string supported by the bytes module.
The following abbreviations must be used to signify size in terms of units
b for bytes
kb for kilobytes
mb for megabytes
gb for gigabytes
tb for terabytes
e.g. 10mb / 1gb / 1tb
Partitioning helps to alleviate overflow/out of memory exceptions by efficiently segmenting files
into smaller chunks that then can be merged if needs be.
–fsCompress
gzip data before sending output to file.
On import the command is used to inflate a gzipped file
–s3AccessKeyId
AWS access key ID
–s3SecretAccessKey
AWS secret access key
–s3Region
AWS region
–s3Endpoint
AWS endpoint that can be used for AWS compatible backends such as
OpenStack Swift and OpenStack Ceph
–s3SSLEnabled
Use SSL to connect to AWS [default true]
–s3ForcePathStyle Force path style URLs for S3 objects [default false]
–s3Compress
gzip data before sending to s3
–s3ServerSideEncryption
Enables encrypted uploads
–s3SSEKMSKeyId
KMS Id to be used with aws:kms uploads
–s3ACL
S3 ACL: private | public-read | public-read-write | authenticated-read | aws-exec-read |
bucket-owner-read | bucket-owner-full-control [default private]
–s3StorageClass
Set the Storage Class used for s3
(default: STANDARD)
–s3Options
Set all s3 parameters shown here https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSJavaScriptSDK/latest/AWS/S3.html#createMultipartUpload-property
A escaped JSON string or file can be supplied. File location must be prefixed with the @ symbol
(default: null)
–s3Configs
Set all s3 constructor configurations
A escaped JSON string or file can be supplied. File location must be prefixed with the @ symbol
(default: null)
–retryDelayBase
The base number of milliseconds to use in the exponential backoff for operation retries. (s3)
–customBackoff
Activate custom customBackoff function. (s3)
–tlsAuth
Enable TLS X509 client authentication
–cert, --input-cert, --output-cert
Client certificate file. Use --cert if source and destination are identical.
Otherwise, use the one prefixed with --input or --output as needed.
–key, --input-key, --output-key
Private key file. Use --key if source and destination are identical.
Otherwise, use the one prefixed with --input or --output as needed.
–pass, --input-pass, --output-pass
Pass phrase for the private key. Use --pass if source and destination are identical.
Otherwise, use the one prefixed with --input or --output as needed.
–ca, --input-ca, --output-ca
CA certificate. Use --ca if source and destination are identical.
Otherwise, use the one prefixed with --input or --output as needed.
–inputSocksProxy, --outputSocksProxy
Socks5 host address
–inputSocksPort, --outputSocksPort
Socks5 host port
–handleVersion
Tells elastisearch transport to handle the _version
field if present in the dataset
(default : false)
–versionType
Elasticsearch versioning types. Should be internal
, external
, external_gte
, force
.
NB : Type validation is handled by the bulk endpoint and not by elasticsearch-dump
–csvConfigs
Set all fast-csv configurations
A escaped JSON string or file can be supplied. File location must be prefixed with the @ symbol
(default: null)
–csvDelimiter
The delimiter that will separate columns.
(default : ‘,’)
–csvFirstRowAsHeaders
If set to true the first row will be treated as the headers.
(default : true)
–csvRenameHeaders
If you want the first line of the file to be removed and replaced by the one provided in the csvCustomHeaders
option
(default : true)
–csvCustomHeaders A comma-seperated listed of values that will be used as headers for your data. This param must
be used in conjunction with csvRenameHeaders
(default : null)
–csvWriteHeaders Determines if headers should be written to the csv file.
(default : true)
–csvIgnoreEmpty
Set to true to ignore empty rows.
(default : false)
–csvIgnoreAutoColumns
Set to true to prevent the following columns @id, @index, @type from being written to the output file
(default : false)
–csvSkipLines
If number is > 0 the specified number of lines will be skipped.
(default : 0)
–csvSkipRows
If number is > 0 then the specified number of parsed rows will be skipped
NB: (If the first row is treated as headers, they aren’t a part of the count)
(default : 0)
–csvMaxRows
If number is > 0 then only the specified number of rows will be parsed.(e.g. 100 would return the first 100 rows of data)
(default : 0)
–csvTrim
Set to true to trim all white space from columns.
(default : false)
–csvRTrim
Set to true to right trim all columns.
(default : false)
–csvLTrim
Set to true to left trim all columns.
(default : false)
–csvHandleNestedData
Set to true to handle nested JSON/CSV data.
NB : This is a very opinionated implementaton !
(default : false)
–csvIdColumn
Name of the column to extract the record identifier (id) from
When exporting to CSV this column can be used to override the default id (@id) column name
(default : null)
–csvIndexColumn
Name of the column to extract the record index from
When exporting to CSV this column can be used to override the default index (@index) column name
(default : null)
–csvTypeColumn
Name of the column to extract the record type from
When exporting to CSV this column can be used to override the default type (@type) column name
(default : null)
–csvIncludeEndRowDelimiter
Set to true to include a row delimiter at the end of the csv
(default : false)
–force-os-version
Forces the OpenSearch version used by elasticsearch-dump.
(default: 7.10.2)
–help
This page
Elasticsearch’s Scroll API
Elasticsearch provides a scroll API to fetch all documents of an index starting from (and keeping) a consistent snapshot in time, which we use under the hood. This method is safe to use for large exports since it will maintain the result set in cache for the given period of time.
NOTE: only works for --output
Bypassing self-sign certificate errors
Set the environment NODE_TLS_REJECT_UNAUTHORIZED=0 before running elasticdump
NODE_TLS_REJECT_UNAUTHORIZED=0 elasticdump --input=“https://localhost:9200” --output myfile
MultiElasticDump
This package also ships with a second binary, multielasticdump. This is a wrapper for the normal elasticdump binary, which provides a limited option set, but will run elasticdump in parallel across many indexes at once. It runs a process which forks into n (default your running host’s # of CPUs) subprocesses running elasticdump.
The limited option set includes:
parallel: os.cpus(),
match: ‘^.*$’,
order: ‘asc’,
input: null,
output: null,
scrollTime: ‘10m’,
timeout: null,
limit: 100,
offset: 0,
size: -1,
direction: dump,
ignoreType: ``
includeType: ``
prefix: ‘’’
suffix: ‘’
interval: 1000
searchBody: null
transform: null
support-big-int: false
big-int-fields: ``
ignoreChildError: false
If the --direction is dump, which is the default, --input MUST be a URL for the base location of an ElasticSearch server (i.e. http://localhost:9200) and --output MUST be a directory. Each index that does match will have a data, mapping, and analyzer file created.
For loading files that you have dumped from multi-elasticsearch, --direction should be set to load, --input MUST be a directory of a multielasticsearch dump and --output MUST be a Elasticsearch server URL.
–parallel is how many forks should be run simultaneously and --match is used to filter which indexes should be dumped/loaded (regex).
–ignoreType allows a type to be ignored from the dump/load. Six options are supported. data,mapping,analyzer,alias,settings,template. Multi-type support is available, when used each type must be comma(,)-separated and interval allows control over the interval for spawning a dump/load for a new index. For small indices this can be set to 0 to reduce delays and optimize performance i.e analyzer,alias types are ignored by default
–includeType allows a type to be included in the dump/load. Six options are supported - data,mapping,analyzer,alias,settings,template.
–ignoreChildError allows multi-elasticdump to continue if a child throws an error.
New options, --suffix allows you to add a suffix to the index name being created e.g. es6-${index} and --prefix allows you to add a prefix to the index name e.g. ${index}-backup-2018-03-13. --order accepts asc or desc and allows the indexes/aliases to be sorted before processing is performed
Usage Examples
multielasticdump
–direction=dump
–match=‘^.*$’
–input=http://production.es.com:9200
–output=/tmp/es_backup
-index
(match regex).multielasticdump
–direction=dump
–match=‘^.*-index$’
–input=http://production.es.com:9200
–ignoreType=‘mapping,settings,template’
–output=/tmp/es_backup
Module Transform
When specifying the transform option, prefix the value with @ (a curl convention) to load the top-level function which is called with the document and the parsed arguments to the module.
Uses a pseudo-URL format to specify arguments to the module as follows. Given:
elasticdump --transform=‘@./transforms/my-transform?param1=value¶m2=another-value’
with a module at ./transforms/my-transform.js with the following:
module.exports = function(doc, options) {
// do something to doc
};
will load module ./transforms/my-transform.js’, and execute the function with docandoptions={“param1”: “value”, “param2”: “another-value”}`.
An example transform for anonymizing data on-the-fly can be found in the transforms folder.
searchBody Template
When specifying the searchBodyTemplate option, prefix the value with @ (a curl convention) to load the top-level function which is called with the document and the parsed arguments to the module.
Uses a pseudo-URL format to specify arguments to the module as follows. Given:
elasticdump --searchBodyTemplate=‘@./temapltes/my-teamplate?param1=value¶m2=another-value’
with a module at ./transforms/my-transform.js with the following:
module.exports = function(doc, options) {
// result must be added to doc.searchBody
doc.searchBody = {}
};
will load module ./temapltes/my-teamplate.js’, and execute the function with docandoptions={“param1”: “value”, “param2”: “another-value”}`.
An example template for modifying dates using a simple templating engine is available in the templates folder.
How Elasticdump handles Nested Data in CSV
Elasticdump is capable of reading/writing nested data, but in an _opinionated way. This is to reduce complexity while parsing/saving CSVs The format flattens all nesting to a single level (an example of this is shown below)
{
“elasticdump”:{
“version”:“6.51.0”,
“formats”:[
“json”,
“csv”
]
},
“contributors”:[
{
“name”:“ferron”,
“id”:3
}
],
“year”:112
}
Output format
{
“elasticdump”:“{“version”:“6.51.0”,“formats”:[“json”,“csv”]}”,
“contributors”:“{“contributors”:[{“name”:“ferron”,“id”:3}]}”,
“year”:2020
}
Notice that the data is flattened to 1 level. Object keys are used for headers and values as row data. This might not work with existing nested data formats, but that’s the format that was chosen for elasticdump because of its simplicity. This detection is disabled by default, to enable use the --csvHandleNestedData flag
Notes
This tool is likely to require Elasticsearch version 1.0.0 or higher
Elasticdump (and Elasticsearch in general) will create indices if they don’t exist upon import
When exporting from elasticsearch, you can export an entire index (–input=“http://localhost:9200/index”) or a type of object from that index (–input=“http://localhost:9200/index/type”). This requires ElasticSearch 1.2.0 or higher
If the path to our elasticsearch installation is in a sub-directory, the index and type must be provided with a separate argument (–input=“http://localhost:9200/sub/directory --input-index=index/type”).Using --input-index=/ will include all indices and types.
We can use the put method to write objects. This means new objects will be created and old objects with the same ID be updated
The file transport will not overwrite any existing files by default, it will throw an exception if the file already exists. You can make use of --overwrite instead.
If you need basic http auth, you can use it like this: --input=http://name:[email protected]:9200/my_index
If you choose a stdio output (–output= ) , y o u c a n a l s o r e q u e s t a m o r e h u m a n − r e a d a b l e o u t p u t w i t h − − f o r m a t = h u m a n I f y o u c h o o s e a s t d i o o u t p u t ( − − o u t p u t = ), you can also request a more human-readable output with --format=human If you choose a stdio output (--output= ),youcanalsorequestamorehuman−readableoutputwith−−format=humanIfyouchooseastdiooutput(−−output=), all logging output will be suppressed
If you are using Elasticsearch version 6.0.0 or higher the offset parameter is no longer allowed in the scrollContext
ES 6.x.x & higher no longer support the template property for _template. All templates prior to ES 6.0 has to be upgraded to use index_patterns
ES 7.x.x & higher no longer supports type property. All templates prior to ES 6.0 has to be upgraded to remove the type property
ES 5.x.x ignores offset (from) parameter in the search body. All records will be returned
ES 6.x.x from parameter can no longer be used in the search request body when initiating a scroll
Index templates has been deprecated and will be replaced by the composable templates introduced in Elasticsearch 7.8.
Ensure JSON in the searchBody properly escaped to avoid parsing issues : https://www.freeformatter.com/json-escape.html
Dropped support for Node.JS 8 in Elasticdump v6.32.0. Node.JS 10+ is now required.
Elasticdump v6.42.0 added support for CSV import/export using the fast-csv library
Elasticdump v6.68.0 added support for specifying a file containing the searchBody
Elasticdump v6.85.0 added support for ignoring auto columns in CSV
Elasticdump v6.86.0 added support for searchBodyTemplate which allows the searchBody to be transformed