Who is using opensearch




















Our mission is to make you a search expert. Push data to our API to make it searchable in real time. Build your dream front end with one of our web or mobile UI libraries. Tune relevance and get analytics right from your dashboard. Amazon Elasticsearch Service is a fully managed service that makes it easy for you to deploy, secure, and operate Elasticsearch at scale with zero down time.

Elasticsearch and Kibana offer superior product capabilities and maturity: Search and data analytics are rapidly evolving technology domains, and products in this space reflect this pace of technology progress. Elasticsearch keeps up with this momentum and delivers multiple architectural and functionality enhancements to its search experience with every release.

In , Elastic made an intentional decision to release new feature developments under the Elastic License , which keeps our code and products free and open but prevents Amazon from taking these new Elasticsearch features and delivering them as a service.

These new features include:. These, as well as other major features introduced over the last three years, were built and delivered under the Elastic License, and are not available for Amazon or the OpenSearch project. Elasticsearch and Kibana are cloud-neutral by design: Elastic developed Elasticsearch, Kibana, and the ELK Stack under strict pillars of cloud and location neutrality. All major capabilities are built into Elastic ELK Stack, and available to all customers, without taking on any proprietary dependencies.

A key example of this is machine learning, built into Elasticsearch and readily available to all customers, without dependencies on any specific proprietary external services.

We do not believe this to be the case with the new forks, which are primarily built for and governed by AWS. In contrast, Elastic offers Elastic Cloud in over 40 regions across multiple cloud providers — including Microsoft, Google, and AWS — with built-in integrations for multiple cloud and on premises environments.

Elastic created these products, and we have over engineers who are dedicated to innovating on these products. We make these products available to customers on premises and on major clouds, offering a consistent and integrated experience across these deployment choices.

To put this in perspective, GitHub statistics show that out of the tens of thousands of commits to Elasticsearch between and , AWS contributed only a handful.

But Amazon does not have the deep technology expertise around search that enables Elastic to innovate on these products. To put it bluntly, for a company that puts customers above all, this move clearly hurts Amazon customers by inflicting on them avoidable changes and subpar products rather than collaborating with Elastic to create a better user experience.

Other cloud providers around the world , including Google and Microsoft , collaborate with Elastic to bring a complete, consistent, and unified Elasticsearch experience to their customers.

Amazon Elasticsearch Service was launched in , based on Elasticsearch version 1. This was not a collaboration with Elastic, as we have highlighted in previous blogs , despite Amazon's suggestions misrepresenting the engagement. With the change of name to Amazon OpenSearch Service, the service will no longer offer current or future versions of Elasticsearch, and will instead offer older versions of open source Elasticsearch releases prior to 7.

Today, Amazon OpenSearch Service includes several proprietary features that are not available in open source. These include recent announcements like AWS UltraWarm and Auto-Tune, which are proprietary features not available in the forked open source projects.

We expect this to be the case moving forward as well, and that the Amazon service will not be the same as the OpenSearch project. Amazon Elasticsearch Service is based on an old version of Elasticsearch. Historically, new versions, security patches, and new capabilities in Amazon Elasticsearch Service came largely from improvements in Elasticsearch and Kibana, developed by Elastic.

Customers can easily migrate to the official Elastic Cloud by following these steps. Elastic adds several new features every release. These include beta releases of the latest innovations, technical previews of new features, and GA releases of mature production-ready features.

While a full listing of new features is available at the Elastic release notes page, a few of the key new features are listed in the table below. No credit card required. The URL for the site's search page for which the plugin. This lets Firefox users visit the web site directly.

Note: Since this element is Firefox-specific, and not part of the OpenSearch specification, we use the moz: XML namespace prefix in the example above to ensure that other user agents that don't support this element can safely ignore it. Web sites with search plugins can advertise them so Firefox users can easily install the plugins. If your site offers multiple search plugins, you can support autodiscovery for them all. For example:. Note: In Firefox, an icon change in the search box indicates there's a provided search plugin.

See image, the green plus sign. Thus if a search box is not shown in the user's UI, they will receive no indication. In general, behavior varies among browsers. OpenSearch plugins can automatically update. Note: At this time, addons. If you want to put your search plugin on AMO, remove the auto-updating feature before submitting it.



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