AWS Big Data Blog

Category: Amazon OpenSearch Service

Amazon OpenSearch Service announces Standard and Extended Support dates for Elasticsearch and OpenSearch versions

Today, we’re announcing timelines for end of Standard Support and Extended Support for legacy Elasticsearch versions up to 6.7, Elasticsearch versions 7.1 through 7.8, OpenSearch versions from 1.0 through 1.2, and OpenSearch versions 2.3 through 2.9 available on Amazon OpenSearch Service.

Amazon OpenSearch Service launches the next-generation OpenSearch UI

Amazon OpenSearch Service launches a modernized operational analytics experience that can provide comprehensive observability spanning multiple data sources, so that you can gain insights from OpenSearch and other integrated data sources in one place. The launch also introduces OpenSearch Workspaces that provides tailored experience for popular use cases and supports access control, so that you can create a private space for your use case and share it only to your collaborators.

Improve OpenSearch Service cluster resiliency and performance with dedicated coordinator nodes

Today, we are announcing dedicated coordinator nodes for Amazon OpenSearch Service domains deployed on managed clusters. When you use Amazon OpenSearch Service to create OpenSearch domains, the data nodes serve dual roles of coordinating data-related requests like indexing requests, and search requests, and of doing the work of processing the requests – indexing documents and […]

Proposed Solution

Manage Amazon OpenSearch Service Visualizations, Alerts, and More with GitHub and Jenkins

OpenSearch Service stores different types of stored objects, such as dashboards, visualizations, alerts, security roles, index templates, and more, within the domain. As your user base and number of Amazon OpenSearch Service domains grow, tracking activities and changes to those saved objects becomes increasingly difficult. In this post, we present a solution to deploy stored objects using GitHub and Jenkins while preventing users making direct changes into OpenSearch Service domain

Infor’s Amazon OpenSearch Service Modernization: 94% faster searches and 50% lower costs

In this post, we’ll explore Infor’s journey to modernize its search capabilities, the key benefits they achieved, and the technologies that powered this transformation. We’ll also discuss how Infor’s customers are now able to more effectively search through business messages, documents, and other critical data within the ION OneView platform.

Elevate your search and analytics skills with the new Amazon OpenSearch Service YouTube channel

We’re thrilled to announce the launch of the official Amazon OpenSearch Service YouTube channel—a comprehensive resource for anyone looking to master Amazon OpenSearch Service. Whether you’re just getting started with searches , vectors, analytics, or you’re looking to optimize large-scale implementations, our channel can be your go-to resource to help you unlock the full potential of OpenSearch Service.

Take manual snapshots and restore in a different domain spanning across various Regions and accounts in Amazon OpenSearch Service

This post provides a detailed walkthrough about how to efficiently capture and manage manual snapshots in OpenSearch Service. It covers the essential steps for taking snapshots of your data, implementing safe transfer across different AWS Regions and accounts, and restoring them in a new domain. This guide is designed to help you maintain data integrity and continuity while navigating complex multi-Region and multi-account environments in OpenSearch Service.

Extract insights in a 30TB time series workload with Amazon OpenSearch Serverless

We recently announced a new capacity level of 30TB for time series data per account per AWS Region. The OpenSearch Serverless compute capacity for data ingestion and search/query is measured in OpenSearch Compute Units (OCUs), which are shared among various collections with the same AWS Key Management Service (AWS KMS) key. This post discusses how you can analyze 30TB time series datasets with OpenSearch Serverless.