While I was at it, I noticed I accidentally had my master node set to be a data as well, so I turned that off, and ran ./elasticsearch-node repurpose. My cluster setup (its just a dev environment) is 5 data + 1 master + 1 coordinating.

I have since wiped all my data and restarted OK, so this question is more of: what could I have done? What am I missing? Why was a missing primary shard a problem? There should have been at least 4 replica shards available as that index appears to have N-1 replicas, where N is the number of data nodes. Having a scenario that is unrecoverable is concerning.


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@lightbulb There are a number of actions that can be done in order to avoid this in the future. The first thing is 1 master node is not going to work in this case as to run ./elasticsearch-node repurpose - the node needs to be down, in which case that would mean that at that moment you would have no master and therefore nothing in charge of promoting replicas to primary. I managed to reproduce your issue locally with 1 master node, but when I attempted the same with 3 master eligible nodes, everything recovered as expected as the new master promoted the replica of the security index to primary. I would suggest in the future to find out which node the primary of the security index is located at and moving it off that node prior to taking it down for any reason. But there should not be any issues if you have at least 3 master eligible nodes. I would also recommend taking backups of the security index using securityadmin.sh with --retrieve option - which will dump contents in the relevant yml files, which can later be used to recreate security index after using the same tool with -dci option to delete the index and then recreate it. I hope this helps

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If you are a content creator, using a service provider like Repurpose House can help you lessen your workload. What Repurpose House does is taking one piece of content and turning it into multiple different creative assets.

For example, my 15-minute Youtube video can be broken down into a snippet of 2 minutes audiogram. This is something that you see often on my page with my podcast episode. They will also create graphics that I can put into blogs, quotes, and even use on my Instagram.

The main purpose of Repurpose House is to help content creators to spend more time creating content. As you repurpose content with them, they turn them into various assets in different dimensions. You can use these assets on multiple different platforms.

If you are a content creator who creates on a daily or weekly basis, they offer full sets of assets for you. This is a perfect option for someone who does not have time to turn their current content to multiple different assets.

So, we do get a lot more assets available to us. We also get more support. But if you are just someone who makes one video per week and less volume than what I do, you can try the other smaller packages.

I know I create content on a daily and weekly basis. The idea of continuously creating new content is overwhelming. But by repurposing content, it cuts my time in half. It also helps my team to quickly have assets when needed. This is my secret sauce, guys. This is how I do the things that I do. I outsource.

This will work really well, especially if you have a podcast or a YouTube channel. If you just want to create quick audiograms or quick little videos that you can use as an IGTV for Instagram, you can use Headliner. This app can help you easily.

But if you are on a lower budget and not too picky, Headliner is a great alternative. The free option gives you 10 videos a month. If you want to upgrade, you can do so too. Their services are pretty similar to Repurpose House.

My secret weapon is not-so-secret. If you notice on my website, I have listed down all of my favorite tools and services I personally use. Repurpose House has always been listed among the services in that section.

"there is no longer an ABC team, but XYZ Analytics would like to repurpose the ABC Analytics project for XYZ Analytics and retain the history if possible. Is it? New project would be called XYZ Analytics, so prefacing tickets with XYZA probably makes the most sense."

I just removed all the Wyze Cams from my office and installed a POE system that works rock solid. Wyze has such unbelievably inconsistent service that I want to Un-Wyze the cameras and repurpose them.

I first stumbled on the foundations of my Storytelling System when I was in college and struggling to make a story work. It was a short film I'd written in my introduction screenwriting course that I was excited about, but every time I wrote it the idea fell flat. There was something missing and off about the story and I could not for the life of me figure out what that was.

Then one day I was in a creative writing class for prose. I was lost for any new ideas so I decided on a whim to just try out that screenplay I had had so much trouble with in the prose medium. I wasn't expecting much, so I just let myself have fun with it, using the same exact story structure as my short film I'd written, only translating it into prose.

Now you might argue that really time was the healer of this storytelling predicament. And that might be true except for that whenever I've tried to make it a screenplay again, it just doesn't work. The story needs the slowness of prose, the patience of a reader, the unreliability of a narrator. It thrives on those features. It wouldn't be the same story in any other form and the prose version of this story was the one I wanted to tell from the beginning.

One of the most essential skills you'll learn as you go from being a "writer" to a "storyteller" is the ability to perceive which medium is best for the story you're trying to tell. An idea will pop into your head and you'll run through all the different strengths of each medium (prose, screenwriting, playwriting and video game writing) and you'll choose the best idea accordingly.

But what about all the ideas you had before you became a Swiss Army Storyteller? All the abandoned projects tucked away that you hoped to forget about? Or the ones you completely gave up on because you couldn't get it right? How do you sift through it all and decide whether its worth your time to bring an old story back to life?

After spending four years of my life in undergrad dedicated to storytelling and how to write in various mediums, I'm still not an expert on storytelling and I'll never be. That's what's so exciting and great about it. However, since I've flitted between so many mediums and failed so many times in each one, I do have an inkling as to what stories are to bring back to life and which to leave behind.

Do you have a story that you wrote and hid away, but still think about? A story that you love deeply and just feel you never did the justice to? Perhaps it's sitting on your shelf, waiting for you to gain more "experience" as a writer. But no matter the reason, if there's a story you love and think you failed at the execution, it is definitely one to try and repurpose for a new storytelling medium.

Love and enthusiasm for a project should never be undermined. As a storyteller, it's clear you know that you have a good story but know that you maybe have a bad screenplay or short story. Look for the stories on your shelf that you were sad to see go, the ones that haunt you, the ones that you have promised to get right one day. These are the stories that are dying to try out a new form.

If your enthusiasm for a story teetered out into nothing, it could be due in part to the fact that you were writing in the wrong medium. Perhaps you ran into a huge writers' block or maybe your characters suddenly had nothing to do, or perhaps you have no idea at all why you stopped writing your story.

In writing your story in a new medium you might be surprised to find very quickly that many of the solutions to your blocks are embedded in this new form. Maybe your silent brooding protagonist is better off in a film, where her silence can be heard loud and clear or maybe your independent vagabond has more room to breathe and be herself in an open-world video game. As a result, changing things up might be a step in the direction for a finished piece you love.

It is worth mentioning that not finishing a story because you knew it was bad or because you hated it are not good reasons to repurpose the story. Whenever you choose your story, you must choose one you still love and admire and believe in, including the unfinished ones. Choosing an unfinished story you hated to repurpose will still churn out the same attitude no matter what medium you write in, so choose an unfinished piece you still believe in!

This last reason is of course, quite obvious. If you've written a story you love and were happy with and want to see how it holds up in new mediums, by all means do it. You might choose to do this just for fun or you might do it because you plan on one day writing a novel that supplements the world in your video game or you want a character from your play to show up in your next movie.

Additionally, in repurposing a story you love and feel proud of in another medium, you'll approach adapting it to a new medium more confidently. You know the story already works as it is, so the pressure is off to get it right. Plus, you won't have to worry about the shape of the story or the plot or getting characterization right. It will all be there for you to mess around with, which is incredibly fun!

Prose: The advantages of prose lie in the language and in the reader. As a result, if you found your story did not work in this medium it might be because your story does not use language to its advantage. If your story has a lot of action it or visuals that your prose does not describe in a way that plays with language, a screenplay might be a better idea. Or, if your story was a character study told in first-person, consider how turning it into a play might make things more interesting. 152ee80cbc

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