[[reindex-upgrade]] === Reindex to upgrade Elasticsearch is able to use indices created in the previous major version only. For instance, Elasticsearch 6.x can use indices created in Elasticsearch 5.x, but not those created in Elasticsearch 2.x or before. NOTE: Elasticsearch 6.x nodes will fail to start in the presence of too old indices. If you are running an Elasticsearch 5.x cluster which contains indices that were created before 5.x, you will either need to delete those old indices or to reindex them before upgrading to 6.x. See <>. If you are running an Elasticsearch 2.x cluster or older, you have two options: * First upgrade to Elasticsearch 5.x, reindex the old indices, then upgrade to 6.x. See <>. * Create a new 6.x cluster and use reindex-from-remote to import indices directly from the 2.x cluster. See <>. .Time-based indices and retention periods ******************************************* For many use cases with time-based indices, you will not need to worry about carrying old 2.x indices with you to 6.x. Data in time-based indices usually becomes less interesting as time passes. Old indices can be deleted once they fall outside of your retention period. Users in this position can continue to use 5.x until all old 2.x indices have been deleted, then upgrade to 6.x directly. ******************************************* [[reindex-upgrade-inplace]] ==== Reindex in place If you are running a 5.x cluster which contains indices created in Elasticsearch 2.x, you will need to reindex (or delete) those indices before upgrading to Elasticsearch 6.x. The reindex process works as follows: * Create a new index, copying the mappings and settings from the old index. Set the `refresh_interval` to `-1` and the `number_of_replicas` to `0` for efficient reindexing. * Reindex all documents from the old index to the new index using the <>. * Reset the `refresh_interval` and `number_of_replicas` to the values used in the old index, and wait for the index to become green. * In a single <> request: * Delete the old index. * Add an alias with the old index name to the new index. * Add any aliases that existed on the old index to the new index. At the end of this process, you will have a new 5.x index which can be used by an Elasticsearch 6.x cluster. [[reindex-upgrade-remote]] ==== Upgrading with reindex-from-remote If you are running a 1.x or 2.x cluster and would like to migrate directly to 6.x without first migrating to 5.x, you can do so using <>. [WARNING] ============================================= Elasticsearch includes backwards compatibility code that allows indices from the previous major version to be upgraded to the current major version. By moving directly from Elasticsearch 2.x or before to 6.x, you will have to solve any backwards compatibility issues yourself. ============================================= You will need to set up a 6.x cluster alongside your existing old cluster. The 6.x cluster needs to have access to the REST API of the old cluster. For each old index that you want to transfer to the 6.x cluster, you will need to: * Create a new index in 6.x with the appropriate mappings and settings. Set the `refresh_interval` to `-1` and set `number_of_replicas` to `0` for faster reindexing. * Use <> to pull documents from the old index into the new 6.x index. * If you run the reindex job in the background (with `wait_for_completion` set to `false`), the reindex request will return a `task_id` which can be used to monitor progress of the reindex job in the <>: `GET _tasks/TASK_ID`. * Once reindex has completed, set the `refresh_interval` and `number_of_replicas` to the desired values (the defaults are `30s` and `1` respectively). * Once the new index has finished replication, you can delete the old index. The 6.x cluster can start out small, and you can gradually move nodes from the old cluster to the 6.x cluster as you migrate indices across.