githaven/vendor/github.com/olivere/elastic/v7/doc.go
Lunny Xiao 5dbf36f356
Issue search support elasticsearch (#9428)
* Issue search support elasticsearch

* Fix lint

* Add indexer name on app.ini

* add a warnning on SearchIssuesByKeyword

* improve code
2020-02-13 14:06:17 +08:00

52 lines
1.7 KiB
Go
Vendored

// Copyright 2012-present Oliver Eilhard. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a MIT-license.
// See http://olivere.mit-license.org/license.txt for details.
/*
Package elastic provides an interface to the Elasticsearch server
(https://www.elastic.co/products/elasticsearch).
The first thing you do is to create a Client. If you have Elasticsearch
installed and running with its default settings
(i.e. available at http://127.0.0.1:9200), all you need to do is:
client, err := elastic.NewClient()
if err != nil {
// Handle error
}
If your Elasticsearch server is running on a different IP and/or port,
just provide a URL to NewClient:
// Create a client and connect to http://192.168.2.10:9201
client, err := elastic.NewClient(elastic.SetURL("http://192.168.2.10:9201"))
if err != nil {
// Handle error
}
You can pass many more configuration parameters to NewClient. Review the
documentation of NewClient for more information.
If no Elasticsearch server is available, services will fail when creating
a new request and will return ErrNoClient.
A Client provides services. The services usually come with a variety of
methods to prepare the query and a Do function to execute it against the
Elasticsearch REST interface and return a response. Here is an example
of the IndexExists service that checks if a given index already exists.
exists, err := client.IndexExists("twitter").Do(context.Background())
if err != nil {
// Handle error
}
if !exists {
// Index does not exist yet.
}
Look up the documentation for Client to get an idea of the services provided
and what kinds of responses you get when executing the Do function of a service.
Also see the wiki on Github for more details.
*/
package elastic