Changelog of @hackage/katip-elasticsearch 0.4.0.4

0.4.0.4

  • Allow http-types 0.12

0.4.0.3

  • Fix benchmark and test builds for stackage nightly

0.4.0.2

  • Add repository/homepage info to cabal file

0.4.0.1

  • Bump dependencies to allow GHC 8.2.1

0.4.0.0

  • Update to bloodhound >= 0.13.0.0. This version adds support for both ElasticSearch versions 1 and 5. Previously, we implicitly supported one and maybe would work on 5. The types in EsScribeCfg had to change to be able to specify which version was being targeted.
  • Improved documentation.

0.3.1.0

  • Widen dependency on katip

0.3.0.2

  • Loosen deps on aeson to allow 1.1.0.0

0.3.0.1

  • Loosen deps on bloodhound, aeson, and http-client.

0.3.0.0

  • Added zero padding to date-based indices. This shouldn't negatively impact most users but to be safe, this was put behind a breaking version number. Previously, you may see indices log-index-prefix-2016-1-2. That index will now be log-index-prefix-2016-01-02, so at worst when you deploy, the day of the change will have 2 indices: one zero-padded and one not. If you are using custom index sharding, you will not be affected by this. The reasoning here is that most existing elasticsearch tools such as curator expects date indices to be zero padded. By switching to the standard, users can easily get log rotation and other features from curator rather than having to roll their own or add them to Katip.

0.2.1.0

  • Drop direct dependency on random, upgrade uuid to >= 1.3.12 for safer id generation. Previously, UUID was using randomIO, which uses the system clock as a seed. So if multiple nodes happened to start at the same time, they would produce conflicting UUID sequences.

0.2.0.0

  • Default index sharding policy to daily. Previously it was no sharding. The reasoning here is that no sharding creates very large indices which become very difficult to manage in production. Rotating data out on a time basis is very slow compared to deleting date-based indices.

    Upgrade note: if you were using the defaults before and switch to daily, rather than having the index name of my-index, you'll start seeing my-index-2016-3-14. The good news is that whatever you're using to use to search against your logs (such as kibana) will support index patterns, so just use the pattern of my-index* to get everything. Eventually if you have a retention period, you can manually delete the my-index index without disruption.

0.1.1.0

  • Set upper bounds for a few dependencies.

0.1.0.0

  • Initial release