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OpenSearch SDK for Java Developer Guide

Getting Started

In general, running and using an extension can be broken down into the following steps:

  1. Start the extension:
  2. Start OpenSearch:
  3. Use the extension:

Note: You need to first start the extension or extensions and then start OpenSearch.

This tutorial uses the sample Hello World extension included in the opensearch-sdk-java repository.

Start the Extension

To start the extension, you need to first clone the OpenSearch SDK for Java repository and then run the extension.

Clone the OpenSearch SDK for Java Repository

Fork the OpenSearch SDK for Java repository and clone it locally using the following command:

git clone https://github.com/<your username>/opensearch-sdk-java.git

Run the Sample Extension

Navigate to the directory to which you cloned the OpenSearch SDK for Java repository.

You can run the sample Hello World extension using the helloWorld task:

./gradlew helloWorld

Bound addresses will then be logged to the terminal:

[main] INFO  transportservice.TransportService - publish_address {127.0.0.1:3333}, bound_addresses {[::1]:3333}, {127.0.0.1:3333}
[main] INFO  transportservice.TransportService - profile [test]: publish_address {127.0.0.1:5555}, bound_addresses {[::1]:5555}, {127.0.0.1:5555}

Run the Sample Extension with Security

This is not required.

  1. Uncomment the SSL settings from resources/sample/helloworld-settings.yml:
ssl.transport.enabled: true
ssl.transport.pemcert_filepath: certs/extension-01.pem
ssl.transport.pemkey_filepath: certs/extension-01-key.pem
ssl.transport.pemtrustedcas_filepath: certs/root-ca.pem
ssl.transport.enforce_hostname_verification: false
path.home: <path/to/extension>
  1. Follow the instructions in CERTIFICATE_GENERATION to generate the certificates.
  2. Run the extension using ./gradlew run.

Start OpenSearch

Follow these steps to start OpenSearch:

Clone the OpenSearch Repository

Fork the OpenSearch repository and clone it locally using the following command:

git clone https://github.com/<your username>/OpenSearch.git

Enable the Extensions Feature Flag

Extensions are experimental since OpenSearch 2.9, so you must enable them either before or when you run OpenSearch. You can enable the feature flag using one of the following options.

Option 1

Add the experimental feature system property to gradle/run.gradle:

testClusters {
  runTask {
    testDistribution = 'archive'
    if (numZones > 1) numberOfZones = numZones
    if (numNodes > 1) numberOfNodes = numNodes
    systemProperty 'opensearch.experimental.feature.extensions.enabled', 'true'
  }
}
Option 2

Add the experimental feature flag as a command line argument:

  • ./bin/opensearch -E opensearch.experimental.feature.extensions.enabled=true when running from a local distribution
Option 3

Enable the experimental feature flag by setting it to true in opensearch.yml:

  • cd to your local distribution build for OpenSearch.
  • cd into the OpenSearch config folder and open opensearch.yml in your local editor.
  • Search for opensearch.experimental.feature.extensions.enabled, uncomment it, and set it to true.
  • Run OpenSearch using ./bin/opensearch when running from a local distribution.

Run OpenSearch

You can run OpenSearch either from a compiled binary or from source code.

Using Gradle

If you closed OpenSearch as above, use gradle to run it.

  • Run ./gradlew run to start OpenSearch.
  • Send the below sample REST API to initialize an extension using settings in hello.json.
curl -XPOST "localhost:9200/_extensions/initialize" -H "Content-Type:application/json" --data @src/main/java/org/opensearch/sdk/sample/helloworld/hello.json
From a Binary Distribution

You can also build OpenSearch with ./gradlew assemble or download a released version and start it using ./bin/opensearch.

Note: If the Security plugin is initialized in OpenSearch, use admin credentials to send extension initialization request.

Extension Registration

In response to the REST /initialize request, ExtensionsManager discovers the extension listening on a predefined port and executes the TCP handshake protocol to establish a data transfer connection. Then OpenSearch sends a request to the OpenSearch SDK for Java and, upon acknowledgment, the extension responds with its name. This name is logged in the terminal where OpenSearch is running:

[2022-06-16T21:30:18,857][INFO ][o.o.t.TransportService   ] [runTask-0] publish_address {127.0.0.1:9300}, bound_addresses {[::1]:9300}, {127.0.0.1:9300}
[2022-06-16T21:30:18,978][INFO ][o.o.t.TransportService   ] [runTask-0] Action: internal:transport/handshake
[2022-06-16T21:30:18,989][INFO ][o.o.t.TransportService   ] [runTask-0] TransportService:sendRequest action=internal:discovery/extensions
[2022-06-16T21:30:18,989][INFO ][o.o.t.TransportService   ] [runTask-0] Action: internal:discovery/extensions
[2022-06-16T21:30:19,000][INFO ][o.o.e.ExtensionsManager] [runTask-0] received PluginResponse{examplepluginname}

The OpenSearch SDK terminal also logs all requests and responses it receives from OpenSearch:

  • TCP handshake request:
21:30:18.943 [opensearch[extension][transport_worker][T#7]] TRACE org.opensearch.latencytester.transportservice.netty4.OpenSearchLoggingHandler - [id: 0x37b22600, L:/127.0.0.1:4532 - R:/127.0.0.1:47766] READ: 55B
         +-------------------------------------------------+
         |  0  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9  a  b  c  d  e  f |
+--------+-------------------------------------------------+----------------+
|00000000| 45 53 00 00 00 31 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 01 08 08 |ES...1..........|
|00000010| 1e ab f3 00 00 00 1a 00 00 00 16 69 6e 74 65 72 |...........inter|
|00000020| 6e 61 6c 3a 74 63 70 2f 68 61 6e 64 73 68 61 6b |nal:tcp/handshak|
|00000030| 65 00 04 a3 8e b7 41                            |e.....A         |
+--------+-------------------------------------------------+----------------+
MESSAGE RECEIVED:E«󀀀internal:tcp/handshake£·A
  • Extension name request/response:
21:30:18.992 [opensearch[extension][transport_worker][T#6]] TRACE org.opensearch.latencytester.transportservice.netty4.OpenSearchLoggingHandler - [id: 0xb2be651b, L:/127.0.0.1:4532 - R:/127.0.0.1:47782] READ: 204B
         +-------------------------------------------------+
         |  0  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9  a  b  c  d  e  f |
+--------+-------------------------------------------------+----------------+
|00000000| 45 53 00 00 00 c6 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 03 00 08 |ES..............|
|00000010| 2d c7 23 00 00 00 21 00 00 00 1d 69 6e 74 65 72 |-.#...!....inter|
|00000020| 6e 61 6c 3a 64 69 73 63 6f 76 65 72 79 2f 65 78 |nal:discovery/ex|
|00000030| 74 65 6e 73 69 6f 6e 73 00 00 0e 6e 6f 64 65 5f |tensions...node_|
|00000040| 65 78 74 65 6e 73 69 6f 6e 16 51 53 74 39 6f 4b |extension.QSt9oK|
|00000050| 58 46 54 53 57 71 67 58 34 62 6b 56 6a 47 2d 51 |XFTSWqgX4bkVjG-Q|
|00000060| 09 31 32 37 2e 30 2e 30 2e 31 09 31 32 37 2e 30 |.127.0.0.1.127.0|
|00000070| 2e 30 2e 31 04 7f 00 00 01 09 31 32 37 2e 30 2e |.0.1......127.0.|
|00000080| 30 2e 31 00 00 11 b4 00 04 0f 63 6c 75 73 74 65 |0.1.......cluste|
|00000090| 72 5f 6d 61 6e 61 67 65 72 01 6d 00 04 64 61 74 |r_manager.m..dat|
|000000a0| 61 01 64 01 06 69 6e 67 65 73 74 01 69 00 15 72 |a.d..ingest.i..r|
|000000b0| 65 6d 6f 74 65 5f 63 6c 75 73 74 65 72 5f 63 6c |emote_cluster_cl|
|000000c0| 69 65 6e 74 01 72 00 a3 8e b7 41 00             |ient.r....A.    |
+--------+-------------------------------------------------+----------------+
MESSAGE RECEIVED:ES-ǣ!internal:discovery/extensionsnode_extensionQSt9oKXFTSWqgX4bkVjG-Q 127.0.0.1       127.0.0.1  127.0.0.1´cluster_managermdatadingestiremote_cluster_clientr£·A
21:30:18.993 [opensearch[extension][transport_worker][T#6]] TRACE org.opensearch.transport.TransportLogger - Netty4TcpChannel{localAddress=/127.0.0.1:4532, remoteAddress=/127.0.0.1:47782} [length: 204, request id: 3, type: request, version: 3.0.0, action: internal:discovery/extensions] READ: 204B
21:30:18.993 [opensearch[extension][transport_worker][T#6]] TRACE org.opensearch.transport.TransportService.tracer - [3][internal:discovery/extensions] received request
21:30:18.996 [opensearch[extension][generic][T#1]] TRACE org.opensearch.tasks.TaskManager - register 2 [transport] [internal:discovery/extensions] []
21:30:18.997 [opensearch[extension][generic][T#1]] TRACE org.opensearch.tasks.TaskManager - unregister task for id: 2
21:30:18.997 [opensearch[extension][generic][T#1]] TRACE org.opensearch.transport.TransportLogger - Netty4TcpChannel{localAddress=/127.0.0.1:4532, remoteAddress=/127.0.0.1:47782} [length: 48, request id: 3, type: response, version: 3.0.0, header size: 2B] WRITE: 48B
21:30:18.998 [opensearch[extension][transport_worker][T#6]] TRACE org.opensearch.latencytester.transportservice.netty4.OpenSearchLoggingHandler - [id: 0xb2be651b, L:/127.0.0.1:4532 - R:/127.0.0.1:47782] WRITE: 48B
         +-------------------------------------------------+
         |  0  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9  a  b  c  d  e  f |
+--------+-------------------------------------------------+----------------+
|00000000| 45 53 00 00 00 2a 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 03 01 08 |ES...*..........|
|00000010| 2d c7 23 00 00 00 02 00 00 16 4e 61 6d 65 64 57 |-.#.......exampl|
|00000020| 72 69 74 65 61 62 6c 65 52 65 67 69 73 74 72 79 |epluginname     |
+--------+-------------------------------------------------+----------------+
21:30:18.999 [opensearch[extension][transport_worker][T#6]] TRACE org.opensearch.latencytester.transportservice.netty4.OpenSearchLoggingHandler - [id: 0xb2be651b, L:/127.0.0.1:4532 - R:/127.0.0.1:47782] FLUSH
21:30:18.999 [opensearch[extension][transport_worker][T#6]] TRACE org.opensearch.transport.TransportService.tracer - [3][internal:discovery/extensions] sent response

Send a REST Request to the Extension

The following request is configured to be handled by the sample HelloWorldExtension (note that its matching uniqueId is hello-world-java):

curl -X GET localhost:9200/_extensions/_hello-world-java/hello

Developing Your Own Extension

Before you write your own extension, read through the design documentation to learn about extension architecture and class hierarchy. Then follow this guide to develop your own extension. For an example, see the sample Hello World extension in the org.opensearch.sdk.sample.helloworld package.

Refer to the following sections for information about post-development tasks.

Running a Custom Extension

To run an extension that uses the SDK, use ./gradlew run on that extension.

Publishing the OpenSearch SDK for Java Repo to Maven Local

Until we publish this repo to the Maven Central Repository, publishing to the Maven local repository is how extensions (outside of sample packages) import the artifacts:

./gradlew publishToMavenLocal

Running Tests

Use the following command to run tests:

./gradlew clean build integTest

Launching and Debugging from an IDE

For information about launching and debugging from an IDE in OpenSearch, see this document

Generating an Artifact

In opensearch-sdk-java, navigate to build/distributions. Look for the tarball in the form opensearch-sdk-java-1.0.0-SNAPSHOT.tar. If there is no such tarball, use the following command to create one:

./gradlew clean && ./gradlew build

Once the tarball is generated, navigate to /src/test/resources/sample and look for extension-settings.yml. If the file is not present, create it. The tarball is generated in /build/distributions. To run the artifact (the tarball), use the following command:

tar -xvf opensearch-sdk-java-1.0.0-SNAPSHOT.tar

The artifact will include extension settings for the sample Hello World extension on the class path under the path /sample/extension-settings.yml:

  extensionName: hello-world
  hostAddress: 127.0.0.1
  hostPort: 4532
  opensearchAddress: 127.0.0.1
  opensearchPort: 9200

You can optionally add routeNamePrefix: as a value to the yml. This setting allows you to prefix all your registered NamedRoute names. The value must be alphanumeric and can contain _ in the name.

Start the sample extension with ./bin/opensearch-sdk-java

Contributing Changes

To learn how to submit your changes, see CONTRIBUTING.