Important: This project has been stopped since elasticsearch 2.0.
The Twitter river indexes the public twitter stream, aka the hose, and makes it searchable.
Rivers are deprecated and will be removed in the future. Have a look at logstash twitter input.
In order to install the plugin, run:
bin/plugin install elasticsearch/elasticsearch-river-twitter/2.6.0
After installing the plugin you need to restart elasticsearch.
You need to install a version matching your Elasticsearch version:
Elasticsearch | Twitter River Plugin | Docs |
---|---|---|
master | Build from source | See below |
es-1.x | Build from source | 2.7.0-SNAPSHOT |
es-1.6 | 2.6.0 | 2.6.0 |
es-1.5 | 2.5.0 | 2.5.0 |
es-1.4 | 2.4.2 | 2.4.2 |
es-1.3 | 2.3.0 | 2.3.0 |
es-1.2 | 2.2.0 | 2.2.0 |
es-1.0 | 2.0.0 | 2.0.0 |
es-0.90 | 1.5.0 | 1.5.0 |
To build a SNAPSHOT
version, you need to build it with Maven:
mvn clean install
plugin --install river-twitter \
--url file:target/releases/elasticsearch-river-twitter-X.X.X-SNAPSHOT.zip
You need to get an OAuth token in order to use Twitter river. Please follow Twitter documentation, basically:
- Login to: https://dev.twitter.com/apps/
- Create a new Twitter application (let's say elasticsearch): https://dev.twitter.com/apps/new You don't need a callback URL.
- When done, click on
Create my access token
. - Open
OAuth tool
tab and noteConsumer key
,Consumer secret
,Access token
andAccess token secret
.
Creating the twitter river can be done using:
PUT _river/my_twitter_river/_meta
{
"type" : "twitter",
"twitter" : {
"oauth" : {
"consumer_key" : "*** YOUR Consumer key HERE ***",
"consumer_secret" : "*** YOUR Consumer secret HERE ***",
"access_token" : "*** YOUR Access token HERE ***",
"access_token_secret" : "*** YOUR Access token secret HERE ***"
}
},
"index" : {
"index" : "my_twitter_river",
"type" : "status",
"bulk_size" : 100,
"flush_interval" : "5s",
"retry_after" : "10s"
}
}
The above lists all the options controlling the creation of a twitter river.
If you don't define index.index
, it will use your river name (my_twitter_river
) as the default index name.
If you don't define index.type
, default status
type will be used.
Note that you can define any or all of your oauth settings in elasticsearch.yml
file on each node by prefixing
setting with river.twitter.
:
river.twitter.oauth.consumer_key: "*** YOUR Consumer key HERE ***"
river.twitter.oauth.consumer_secret: "*** YOUR Consumer secret HERE ***"
river.twitter.oauth.access_token: "*** YOUR Access token HERE ***"
river.twitter.oauth.access_token_secret: "*** YOUR Access token secret HERE ***"
In that case, you can create the river using:
PUT _river/my_twitter_river/_meta
{
"type" : "twitter"
}
You can also overload any of elasticsearch.yml
setting. A good practice could be to have consumer_key
and
consumer_secret
in elasticsearch.yml
and provide to the river access_token
and access_token_secret
properties.
By default, the twitter river will read a small random of all public statuses using sample API.
But, you can define statuses type you want to read:
- sample: the default one
- filter: track for text, users and locations. See Filtered Stream
- user: listen to tweets in the authenticated user's timeline. See User Stream
- firehose: all public statuses (restricted access)
For example:
PUT _river/my_twitter_river/_meta
{
"type" : "twitter",
"twitter" : {
"type" : "firehose"
}
}
Note that if you define a filter (see next section), type will be automatically set to filter
.
Tweets will be indexed once a bulk_size
of them have been accumulated (default to 100
)
or every flush_interval
period (default to 5s
).
Filtered stream can also be supported (as per the twitter stream API). Filter stream can be configured to
support tracks
, follow
, locations
and language
. user_lists
is a shortcut to follow all members of a public
twitter list identified by the user id and the list slug (last part of uri when open a list in your browser). The
configuration is the same as the twitter API (a single comma separated string value, or using json arrays).
Here is an example:
PUT _river/my_twitter_river/_meta
{
"type" : "twitter",
"twitter" : {
"filter" : {
"tracks" : "test,something,please",
"follow" : "111,222,333",
"user_lists" : "ownerScreenName1/slug1,ownerScreenName2/slug2",
"locations" : "-122.75,36.8,-121.75,37.8,-74,40,-73,41",
"language" : "fr,en"
}
}
}
Note that locations use geoJSON order (longitude, latitude).
Note that if you want to use language filtering you need also to define at least one of tracks
,
follow
or locations
filter.
Supported languages identifiers are BCP 47. You can filter
whatever language defined in Twitter Advanced Search.
Here is an array based configuration example:
PUT _river/my_twitter_river/_meta
{
"type" : "twitter",
"twitter" : {
"filter" : {
"tracks" : ["test", "something"],
"follow" : [111, 222, 333],
"locations" : [ [-122.75,36.8], [-121.75,37.8], [-74,40], [-73,41]],
"language" : [ "fr", "en" ]
}
}
}
User stream can also be supported (as per the twitter stream API). This stream return tweets on the authenticated user's timeline. Here is a basic configuration example:
PUT _river/my_twitter_river/_meta
{
"type" : "twitter",
"twitter" : {
"type" : "user"
}
}
By default, elasticsearch twitter river will convert tweets to an equivalent representation
in elasticsearch. If you want to index RAW twitter JSON content without any transformation,
you can set raw
to true
:
PUT _river/my_twitter_river/_meta
{
"type" : "twitter",
"twitter" : {
"raw" : true
}
}
Note that you should think of creating a mapping first for your tweets. See Twitter documentation on raw Tweet format:
PUT my_twitter_river/status/_mapping
{
"status" : {
"properties" : {
"text" : {"type" : "string", "analyzer" : "standard"}
}
}
}
If you don't want to index retweets (aka RT), just set ignore_retweet
to true
(default to false
):
PUT _river/my_twitter_river/_meta
{
"type" : "twitter",
"twitter" : {
"ignore_retweet" : true
}
}
It can happen that the river fails, thus closing the current connection to the Streaming API. Then, a new connection is scheduled by the river after 10s by default.
If you want to manage this time, simply use the retry_after
option, as in:
PUT _river/my_twitter_river/_meta
{
"type" : "twitter",
"index" : {
"retry_after" : "30s"
}
}
By default, elasticsearch twitter river index location
field using the lat lon as properties format.
You can set geo_as_array
to true
if you prefer having location
indexed as an array [lon, lat]
.
PUT _river/my_twitter_river/_meta
{
"type" : "twitter",
"twitter" : {
"geo_as_array" : true
}
}
If you need to stop the Twitter river, you have to remove it:
DELETE _river/my_twitter_river/
You can define a proxy if you are using one:
PUT _river/my_twitter_river/_meta
{
"type" : "twitter",
"twitter" : {
"proxy" : {
"host": "host",
"port": "port",
"user": "proxy_user_if_any",
"password": "proxy_password_if_any"
}
}
}
You can also define proxy settings in elasticsearch.yml
file on each node by prefixing setting with river.twitter.
:
river.twitter.proxy.host: "host"
river.twitter.proxy.port: "port"
river.twitter.proxy.user: "proxy_user_if_any"
river.twitter.proxy.password: "proxy_password_if_any"
Here is how a document could look like when using this river (without raw
option):
{
"text":"This is a text",
"created_at":"2015-01-26T15:22:35.000Z",
"source":"<a href=\"http://www.twitter.com\" rel=\"nofollow\">Twitter for Windows Phone</a>",
"truncated":false,
"language":"en",
"mention":[
],
"retweet_count":0,
"hashtag":[
],
"location":[
78.418407,
17.431913
],
"place":{
"id":"243cc16f6417a167",
"name":"Hyderabad",
"type":"city",
"full_name":"Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh",
"street_address":null,
"country":"India",
"country_code":"IN",
"url":"https://api.twitter.com/1.1/geo/id/243cc16f6417a167.json"
},
"link":[
],
"user":{
"id":1111111111,
"name":"User Name",
"screen_name":"twitter_handle",
"location":"A full text location description",
"description":"A description",
"profile_image_url":"http://pbs.twimg.com/profile_images/1111111111/QATJ00Yp_normal.jpeg",
"profile_image_url_https":"https://pbs.twimg.com/profile_images/1111111111/QATJ00Yp_normal.jpeg"
}
}
Integrations tests in this plugin require working Twitter account and therefore disabled by default. You need to create your credentials as explained in Prerequisites.
To enable tests prepare a config file elasticsearch.yml
with the following content:
river:
twitter:
oauth:
consumer_key: "your_consumer_key"
consumer_secret: "your_consumer_secret"
access_token: "your_access_token"
access_token_secret: "your_access_token_secret"
Replace all occurrences of your_consumer_key
, your_consumer_secret
, your_access_token
and
your_access_token_secret
with your settings.
To run test:
mvn -Dtests.twitter=true -Dtests.config=/path/to/config/file/elasticsearch.yml clean test
Note that if you want to test User Stream, you need to define write rights for your twitter application.
This software is licensed under the Apache 2 license, quoted below.
Copyright 2009-2014 Elasticsearch <http://www.elasticsearch.org>
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not
use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of
the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT
WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under
the License.