Publish address is a wildcard address falling back to first non-loopback – How to solve this Elasticsearch error

Opster Team

Aug-23, Version: 2-2

Briefly, this error occurs when Elasticsearch is configured to bind to any IP address (0.0.0.0), but it needs a specific IP to publish to other nodes. This can happen if the server has multiple network interfaces. To resolve this, you can specify a non-wildcard IP address in the Elasticsearch configuration file (elasticsearch.yml) for the network.publish_host setting. Alternatively, if you want Elasticsearch to choose an IP automatically, ensure that the server has only one non-loopback IP address.

This guide will help you check for common problems that cause the log ” publish address: {{}} is a wildcard address; falling back to first non-loopback: {{}} ” to appear. To understand the issues related to this log, read the explanation below about the following Elasticsearch concepts: network.

Log Context

Log “publish address: {{}} is a wildcard address; falling back to first non-loopback: {{}}” classname is NetworkService.java.
We extracted the following from Elasticsearch source code for those seeking an in-depth context :

}
            // wildcard address; probably set by network.host
            if (address.isAnyLocalAddress()) {
                InetAddress old = address;
                address = NetworkUtils.getFirstNonLoopbackAddresses()[0];
                logger.warn("publish address: {{}} is a wildcard address; falling back to first non-loopback: {{}}"; 
                            NetworkAddress.format(old); NetworkAddress.format(address));
            }
        }
        return address;
    }

 

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