This is a collection of smallish datasets to use for playing with Elasticsearch.
You can only fit so much data in an R package. The R client for Elasticsearch we maintain elastic comes with some data, but of course it's nice to have more, so here it is.
See also nodbi for working with Elasticsearch from R.
plos_everything.json
plos_introductions.json
plos_data.json
geonames_elastic_bulk.zip
- too big for gitub, at dropboxgbif_data.json
gbif_geo.json
gbif_geopoint.json
gbif_geoshape.json
gbif_geosmall.json
shakespeare_data.json
omdb.json
These datasets are formatted to be ready for bulk loading into Elasticsearch via the bulk API
geonames_elastic_bulk.zip
is about 70 .json
files in Elasticsearch bulk format. It was prepared from the Geonames database at http://download.geonames.org/export/dump/. The original data from Geonames was licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License, see http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/.
To load the geonames data into Elasticsearch, do as you wish, but e.g., in R you could do:
First, create the index and set the geo_shape
mapping
body <- '{
"mappings": {
"record": {
"properties": {
"location" : {"type" : "geo_shape"}
}
}
}
}'
index_create(index='geonames', body=body)
should return
#> $acknowledged
#> [1] TRUE
Note: the index type is record
, and the index name is geonames
. The index and index type were set in the json files.
Then use a for loop to load in each file. AKAIK there is a limit on the file size you can load in (let me know if there's a way to get around it), so that's why theres a bunch of json files instead of one big file.
devtools::install_github("ropensci/elastic")
library("elastic")
files <- list.files("path/to/unzipped/files")
for(i in seq_along(files)){
invisible(
docs_bulk(
sprintf("path/geonames%s.json", files[i])
)
)
}
The docs_bulk()
function uses the /_bulk
endpoint to POST
data to an index called geonames
in your ES server. The output of the bulk load call prints info, that's why we use invisible()
so you don't get thousands of lines printed.
Check that it worked:
Search("geonames")$hits$total
#> [1] 6646030
You should have ~ 6.6 million records