Update 'Install_Configure_ElasticSearch'
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@ -38,8 +38,22 @@ network.host: localhost
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These are the minimum settings you can start with in order to use Elasticsearch. Now you can start Elasticsearch for the first time.
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Start the Elasticsearch service with systemctl. Give Elasticsearch a few moments to start up. Otherwise, you may get errors about not being able to connect. \
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Check if Elasticsearch starts: \
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`sudo systemctl start elasticsearch`
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Next, run the following command to enable Elasticsearch to start up every time your server boots: \
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`sudo systemctl enable elasticsearch`
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`sudo systemctl enable elasticsearch`
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Let's create a new file called 'memory.options' in the 'jvm.options.d' directory so we can define memory requirements when an Elasticsearch instance starts:\
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`sudo nano /etc/elasticsearch/jvm.options.d/memory.options`
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In the file, add the minimum and maximum memory requirements:
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```
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-Xms1g
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-Xmx4g
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```
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`sudo systemctl restart elasticsearch`
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# Step 3- Securing ElasticSearch
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