Environment variables¶
CrateDB can be configured with some environment variables.
There are many different ways to set environment variables, depending on how CrateDB is being deployed.
Here is a trivial example:
sh$ export CRATE_HOME=/tmp/crate
sh$ ./bin/crate
Here, we set CRATE_HOME
to /tmp/crate
, export it so that
sub-processes of the shell have access, and then start CrateDB.
CrateDB supports two kinds of environment variables:
Application variables
Java Virtual Machine (JVM) variables
We use “application” here to distinguish between CrateDB running as a Java application and the JVM itself, which runs CrateDB.
Table of contents
Application variables¶
CRATE_HOME
: directory pathThe home directory of the CrateDB installation.
This directory is used as the root for the configuration directory, data directory, log directory, and so on.
If you have installed CrateDB from a package, this variable should be set for you.
If you are installing manually, in most cases, this should be set to the directory from which you would normally execute
bin/crate
, i.e. the root directory of the basic installation.
JVM variables¶
General¶
CRATE_JAVA_OPTS
: Java optionsThe Java options to use when running CrateDB.
For example, you could change the stack size like this:
CRATE_JAVA_OPTS=-Xss500k
See also
For more information about Java options, consult the documentation for Microsoft Windows or Unix-like operating systems.
CRATE_HEAP_SIZE
: sizeThe Java heap size, i.e. the amount of memory that can be used.
You can set the heap size to four gigabytes like this:
CRATE_HEAP_SIZE=4g
Use
g
for gigabytes orm
for megabytes.See also
Appropriate memory configuration is important for optimal performance.
CRATE_HEAP_DUMP_PATH
: file or directory path (default: varies)The directory to be used for heap dumps in the case of a crash.
If a directory path is configured, new heap dumps will be written to that directory every time CrateDB crashes.
If a file path is configured (i.e. the last node of the path is non-existent or exists and is a file) CrateDB will overwrite that file with a heap dump every time it crashes.
Default values are as follows:
For a basic installation, the process working directory
If you have installed a CrateDB Linux package,
/var/lib/crate
When running CrateDB on Docker,
/data/data
Warning
Make sure there is enough disk space available for heap dumps.