Cannot manage cluster alerts because .watches index is not allocated – How to solve this Elasticsearch error

Opster Team

March-22, Version: 1.7-8.0

Before you begin reading this guide, we recommend you try running the Elasticsearch Error Check-Up which analyzes 2 JSON files to detect many configuration errors.

To easily locate the root cause and resolve this issue try AutoOps for Elasticsearch & OpenSearch. It diagnoses problems by analyzing hundreds of metrics collected by a lightweight agent and offers guidance for resolving them.

Take a self-guided product tour to see for yourself (no registration required).

This guide will help you check for common problems that cause the log ” cannot manage cluster alerts because .watches index is not allocated ” to appear. To understand the issues related to this log, read the explanation below about the following Elasticsearch concepts: cluster, plugin.

Log Context

Log “cannot manage cluster alerts because [.watches] index is not allocated”classname  is LocalExporter.java We extracted the following from Elasticsearch source code for those seeking an in-depth context :

final IndexRoutingTable watches = clusterState.routingTable().index(Watch.INDEX);
 final boolean indexExists = watches != null && watches.allPrimaryShardsActive(); 
 // we cannot do anything with watches until the index is allocated; so we wait until it's ready
 if (watches != null && watches.allPrimaryShardsActive() == false) {
 errors.add(new ElasticsearchException("cannot manage cluster alerts because [.watches] index is not allocated"));
 logger.trace("cannot manage cluster alerts because [.watches] index is not allocated");
 } else if ((watches == null || indexExists) && watcherSetup.compareAndSet(false; true)) {
 addClusterAlertsRemovalAsyncActions(indexExists; asyncActions; pendingResponses; setupListener; errors);
 }
 } else {

 

Watch product tour

Try AutoOps to find & fix Elasticsearch problems

Analyze Your Cluster
Skip to content