Restoring Search and Graph Indices from Local Database
If search or graph services go down or you have made changes to them that require reindexing, you can restore them from the aspects stored in the local database.
When a new version of the aspect gets ingested, GMS initiates an MAE event for the aspect which is consumed to update the search and graph indices. As such, we can fetch the latest version of each aspect in the local database and produce MAE events corresponding to the aspects to restore the search and graph indices.
By default, restoring the indices from the local database will not remove any existing documents in the search and graph indices that no longer exist in the local database, potentially leading to inconsistencies between the search and graph indices and the local database.
Quickstart
If you're using the quickstart images, you can use the datahub
cli to restore the indices.
datahub docker quickstart --restore-indices
Using the datahub
CLI to restore the indices when using the quickstart images will also clear the search and graph indices before restoring.
See this section for more information.
Docker-compose
If you are on a custom docker-compose deployment, run the following command (you need to checkout the source repository) from the root of the repo to send MAE for each aspect in the local database.
./docker/datahub-upgrade/datahub-upgrade.sh -u RestoreIndices
By default this command will not clear the search and graph indices before restoring, thous potentially leading to inconsistencies between the local database and the indices, in case aspects were previously deleted in the local database but were not removed from the correponding index.
If you need to clear the search and graph indices before restoring, add -a clean
to the end of the command. Please take note that the search and graph services might not be fully functional during reindexing when the indices are cleared.
./docker/datahub-upgrade/datahub-upgrade.sh -u RestoreIndices -a clean
Refer to this doc on how to set environment variables for your environment.
Kubernetes
Run kubectl get cronjobs
to see if the restoration job template has been deployed. If you see results like below, you
are good to go.
NAME SCHEDULE SUSPEND ACTIVE LAST SCHEDULE AGE
datahub-datahub-cleanup-job-template * * * * * True 0 <none> 2d3h
datahub-datahub-restore-indices-job-template * * * * * True 0 <none> 2d3h
If not, deploy latest helm charts to use this functionality.
Once restore indices job template has been deployed, run the following command to start a job that restores indices.
kubectl create job --from=cronjob/datahub-datahub-restore-indices-job-template datahub-restore-indices-adhoc
Once the job completes, your indices will have been restored.
By default the restore indices job template will not clear the search and graph indices before restoring, thous potentially leading to inconsistencies between the local database and the indices, in case aspects were previously deleted in the local database but were not removed from the correponding index.
If you need to clear the search and graph indices before restoring, modify the values.yaml
for your deployment and overwrite the default arguments of the restore indices job template to include the -a clean
argument. Please take note that the search and graph services might not be fully functional during reindexing when the indices are cleared.
datahubUpgrade:
restoreIndices:
image:
args:
- "-u"
- "RestoreIndices"
- "-a"
- "batchSize=1000" # default value of datahubUpgrade.batchSize
- "-a"
- "batchDelayMs=100" # default value of datahubUpgrade.batchDelayMs
- "-a"
- "clean"
Through API
See Restore Indices API.