Elasticsearch

elastic/elasticsearch
Standalone image
Single-stream repository
Elastic
8.19.5-b526c6c48.19.5
Overview

Description

Elasticsearch is a distributed, open source search and analytics engine for all types of data, including textual, numerical, geospatial, structured, and unstructured. Elasticsearch is built on Apache Lucene and was first released in 2010 by Elasticsearch N.V. (now known as Elastic). Known for its simple REST APIs, distributed nature, speed, and scalability, Elasticsearch is the central component of the Elastic Stack, a set of open source tools for data ingestion, enrichment, storage, analysis, and visualization. Commonly referred to as the ELK Stack (after Elasticsearch, Logstash, and Kibana), the Elastic Stack now includes a rich collection of lightweight shipping agents known as Beats for sending data to Elasticsearch.

 

To learn more read What is Elasticsearch?

Products using this container

Published

Generally Available

Size

1.3 GB

Digest

SecurityTechnical information

General information

The following information was extracted from the containerfile and other sources.

SummaryElasticsearch
DescriptionThe Universal Base Image Minimal is a stripped down image that uses microdnf as a package manager. This base image is freely redistributable, but Red Hat only supports Red Hat technologies through subscriptions for Red Hat products. This image is maintained by Red Hat and updated regularly.
ProviderElastic
Maintainerinfra@elastic.co

Technical information

The following information was extracted from the containerfile and other sources.

Repository nameElasticsearch
Image version8.19.5
Architectureamd64
PackagesGet this image
Terms & conditionsBefore downloading or using this Container, you must agree to the Red Hat subscription agreement located at redhat.com/licenses. If you do not agree with these terms, do not download or use the Container. If you have an existing Red Hat Enterprise Agreement (or other negotiated agreement with Red Hat) with terms that govern subscription services associated with Containers, then your existing agreement will control.
Using registry tokens

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Using OpenShift secrets

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Then, use the following from the command line or from the OpenShift Dashboard GUI interface.

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Using podman login

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Using docker login

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Using Red Hat login

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Using OpenShift

For best practices, it is recommended to use registry tokens when pulling content for OpenShift deployments.

Using podman login

Use the following command(s) from a system with podman installed

Copy to Clipboard

Using docker login

Use the following command(s) from a system with docker service installed and running

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