The elasticsearch cluster has been installed. Elasticsearch can be accessed: * Within your cluster, at the following DNS name at port 9200: {{ template "elasticsearch.client.fullname" . }}.{{ .Release.Namespace }}.svc.cluster.local * From outside the cluster, run these commands in the same shell: {{- if contains "NodePort" .Values.client.serviceType }} export NODE_PORT=$(kubectl get --namespace {{ .Release.Namespace }} -o jsonpath="{.spec.ports[0].nodePort}" services {{ template "elasticsearch.client.fullname" . }}) export NODE_IP=$(kubectl get nodes --namespace {{ .Release.Namespace }} -o jsonpath="{.items[0].status.addresses[0].address}") echo http://$NODE_IP:$NODE_PORT {{- else if contains "LoadBalancer" .Values.client.serviceType }} WARNING: You have likely exposed your Elasticsearch cluster direct to the internet. Elasticsearch does not implement any security for public facing clusters by default. As a minimum level of security; switch to ClusterIP/NodePort and place an Nginx gateway infront of the cluster in order to lock down access to dangerous HTTP endpoints and verbs. NOTE: It may take a few minutes for the LoadBalancer IP to be available. You can watch the status of by running 'kubectl get svc -w {{ template "elasticsearch.client.fullname" . }}' export SERVICE_IP=$(kubectl get svc --namespace {{ .Release.Namespace }} {{ template "elasticsearch.client.fullname" . }} -o jsonpath='{.status.loadBalancer.ingress[0].ip}') echo http://$SERVICE_IP:9200 {{- else if contains "ClusterIP" .Values.client.serviceType }} export POD_NAME=$(kubectl get pods --namespace {{ .Release.Namespace }} -l "app={{ template "elasticsearch.name" . }},component={{ .Values.client.name }},release={{ .Release.Name }}" -o jsonpath="{.items[0].metadata.name}") echo "Visit http://127.0.0.1:9200 to use Elasticsearch" kubectl port-forward --namespace {{ .Release.Namespace }} $POD_NAME 9200:9200 {{- end }}