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Can someone please add something like "ElasticSearch can be used in conjunction with Kibana and Logstash to provide for analysis and visualization of logging data." with a link to /info/en/?search=Kibana ? Please feel free to remove this paragraph afterwards. Thanks. 128.131.35.164 ( talk) 17:07, 27 May 2015 (UTC)
From the page titles and text on http://www.elasticsearch.org/ , the project does not capitalize the 'S' in Elasticsearch. -- S Page (WMF) ( talk) 04:09, 29 August 2013 (UTC)
The result of the move request was: Page moved - no opposes after a full listing, and reasoning seems valid. Note: Page not yet moved due to the target having a nontrivial edit history. Posting db-move. Any competent admin could also complete this move. (
non-admin closure) —
Amakuru (
talk) 10:28, 13 November 2013 (UTC)
ElasticSearch →
Elasticsearch – The 'S' in Elasticsearch is not capitalized per the project page:
http://elasticsearch.org
Rianjs (
talk) 15:45, 5 November 2013 (UTC)
Since Elasticsearch changed its name to Elastic, should this page be renamed (and a redirect set up) too?
James Earl Douglas 18:33, 20 May 2015 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by Earldouglas ( talk • contribs)
My name is Daniel and I'm an employee at Elastic. One of the previous discussions suggested renaming this page to Elastic, with the response being that this was a page dedicated to the software, and not the company — however, if there were enough information a page could be created. I read that I shouldn't edit this page directly, or try to write new pages myself, but could make suggestions in the discussion. I would like to propose creating a new page for the brand, which I can provide some copy and verifiable references for. Can someone help me with this? — Preceding unsigned comment added by Daniel at Elastic ( talk • contribs)
I took it out - it was huge and didn't contribute anything useful to this article for the general reader. The project's own website should be consulted for that kind of information. — Scott • talk 11:18, 1 June 2018 (UTC)
Extensive lists of customers, partners, providers and products should be hosted on the company's official website - Wikipedia is not a directory for such detailed self-sourced information (see WP:NOTDIRECTORY for more info). Information about noteworthy customers, partners, providers and products can be briefly added of course, but should be covered in prose with some context, and these details must be based on independent reliable sources to establish relevance. GermanJoe ( talk) 19:15, 21 August 2018 (UTC)
Elasticsearch is no longer in whole released under the Apache 2 license. Some functionality is released under the Elastic License. Here's the commit that replaces the Apache license file. Can someone please update this?
109.243.241.80 ( talk) 20:36, 1 January 2019 (UTC)
As of Jan 2021, starting with the next Elasticsearch release, it is no longer distributed under an OSI approved license. See [1]. Should it be removed from the Wikipedia maintained lists of free software, such as "Free software programmed in Java (programming language)" and "Free search engine software"? 100.17.21.75 ( talk) 22:20, 25 January 2021 (UTC)
References
I came here hoping to get an overview of what Elasticsearch is, and all I get is that it's a search engine (I already guessed that from the name) with certain properties (I'd have to follow every link to understand what those are) and certain licenses. (Ok, maybe some people need to know the license, and maybe I will some day, but in the lede?!) I gather it's document search, and I suppose it must be faster than grep, or else why? But it doesn't say that. How does it achieve its speed, indexing? What does it index, individual words (tokens)? Words in context? Word pieces? And what is the use case, as opposed to searching docs with grep etc.? Does it only become more useful than grep when the size is > X? Under what circumstances would I use it, and under what circumstances would a relational db, or some other kind of db, be better? And so forth. Mcswell ( talk) 00:54, 25 October 2019 (UTC)
103.42.216.223 ( talk) 20:20, 4 August 2020 (UTC)
This section seems quite out of place as these do not seem to be data breaches related to security issues with Elasticsearch. They are just general data breaches where servers have been accessed through other means, be that backdoors or misconfigured server. No other database page has similar, see MySQL, Microsoft_SQL_Server, MongoDB etc. Recommend remove this section. Entirety ( talk) 15:18, 20 January 2021 (UTC)
![]() | This article is rated C-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | |||||||||||||||||||
|
![]() | Individuals with a conflict of interest, particularly those representing the subject of the article, are strongly advised not to directly edit the article. See Wikipedia:Conflict of interest. You may request corrections or suggest content here on the Talk page for independent editors to review, or contact us if the issue is urgent. |
Can someone please add something like "ElasticSearch can be used in conjunction with Kibana and Logstash to provide for analysis and visualization of logging data." with a link to /info/en/?search=Kibana ? Please feel free to remove this paragraph afterwards. Thanks. 128.131.35.164 ( talk) 17:07, 27 May 2015 (UTC)
From the page titles and text on http://www.elasticsearch.org/ , the project does not capitalize the 'S' in Elasticsearch. -- S Page (WMF) ( talk) 04:09, 29 August 2013 (UTC)
The result of the move request was: Page moved - no opposes after a full listing, and reasoning seems valid. Note: Page not yet moved due to the target having a nontrivial edit history. Posting db-move. Any competent admin could also complete this move. (
non-admin closure) —
Amakuru (
talk) 10:28, 13 November 2013 (UTC)
ElasticSearch →
Elasticsearch – The 'S' in Elasticsearch is not capitalized per the project page:
http://elasticsearch.org
Rianjs (
talk) 15:45, 5 November 2013 (UTC)
Since Elasticsearch changed its name to Elastic, should this page be renamed (and a redirect set up) too?
James Earl Douglas 18:33, 20 May 2015 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by Earldouglas ( talk • contribs)
My name is Daniel and I'm an employee at Elastic. One of the previous discussions suggested renaming this page to Elastic, with the response being that this was a page dedicated to the software, and not the company — however, if there were enough information a page could be created. I read that I shouldn't edit this page directly, or try to write new pages myself, but could make suggestions in the discussion. I would like to propose creating a new page for the brand, which I can provide some copy and verifiable references for. Can someone help me with this? — Preceding unsigned comment added by Daniel at Elastic ( talk • contribs)
I took it out - it was huge and didn't contribute anything useful to this article for the general reader. The project's own website should be consulted for that kind of information. — Scott • talk 11:18, 1 June 2018 (UTC)
Extensive lists of customers, partners, providers and products should be hosted on the company's official website - Wikipedia is not a directory for such detailed self-sourced information (see WP:NOTDIRECTORY for more info). Information about noteworthy customers, partners, providers and products can be briefly added of course, but should be covered in prose with some context, and these details must be based on independent reliable sources to establish relevance. GermanJoe ( talk) 19:15, 21 August 2018 (UTC)
Elasticsearch is no longer in whole released under the Apache 2 license. Some functionality is released under the Elastic License. Here's the commit that replaces the Apache license file. Can someone please update this?
109.243.241.80 ( talk) 20:36, 1 January 2019 (UTC)
As of Jan 2021, starting with the next Elasticsearch release, it is no longer distributed under an OSI approved license. See [1]. Should it be removed from the Wikipedia maintained lists of free software, such as "Free software programmed in Java (programming language)" and "Free search engine software"? 100.17.21.75 ( talk) 22:20, 25 January 2021 (UTC)
References
I came here hoping to get an overview of what Elasticsearch is, and all I get is that it's a search engine (I already guessed that from the name) with certain properties (I'd have to follow every link to understand what those are) and certain licenses. (Ok, maybe some people need to know the license, and maybe I will some day, but in the lede?!) I gather it's document search, and I suppose it must be faster than grep, or else why? But it doesn't say that. How does it achieve its speed, indexing? What does it index, individual words (tokens)? Words in context? Word pieces? And what is the use case, as opposed to searching docs with grep etc.? Does it only become more useful than grep when the size is > X? Under what circumstances would I use it, and under what circumstances would a relational db, or some other kind of db, be better? And so forth. Mcswell ( talk) 00:54, 25 October 2019 (UTC)
103.42.216.223 ( talk) 20:20, 4 August 2020 (UTC)
This section seems quite out of place as these do not seem to be data breaches related to security issues with Elasticsearch. They are just general data breaches where servers have been accessed through other means, be that backdoors or misconfigured server. No other database page has similar, see MySQL, Microsoft_SQL_Server, MongoDB etc. Recommend remove this section. Entirety ( talk) 15:18, 20 January 2021 (UTC)