Snow Owl is provided as a .zip
and as a .tar.gz
package. These packages can be used to install Snow Owl on any system and are the easiest package format to use when trying out Snow Owl.
The latest stable version of Snow Owl can be found on the Snow Owl Releases page.
Snow Owl requires Java 11 or newer version. Use the official Oracle distribution or an open-source distribution such as OpenJDK.
zip
packageThe .zip
archive for Snow Owl can be downloaded and installed as follows:
.tar.gz
packageThe .tar.gz
archive for Snow Owl can be downloaded and installed as follows:
Snow Owl can be started from the command line as follows:
By default, Snow Owl runs in the foreground, prints its logs to the standard output (stdout), and can be stopped by pressing Ctrl-C.
All scripts packaged with Snow Owl assume that Bash is available at /bin/bash. As such, Bash should be available at this path either directly or via a symbolic link.
You can test that your instance is running by sending an HTTP request to Snow Owl's status endpoint:
which should give you a response like this:
You can send the Snow Owl process to the background using the combination of nohup
and the &
character:
Log messages can be found in the $SO_HOME/serviceability/logs/
directory.
To shut down Snow Owl, you can kill the process ID directly:
or using the provided shutdown script:
.zip
and .tar.gz
archives:The .zip
and .tar.gz
packages are entirely self-contained. All files and directories are, by default, contained within $SO_HOME
— the directory created when unpacking the archive.
This is very convenient because you don’t have to create any directories to start using Snow Owl, and uninstalling Snow Owl is as easy as removing the $SO_HOME
directory. However, it is advisable to change the default locations of the config directory, the data directory, and the logs directory so that you do not delete important data later on.
You now have a test Snow Owl environment set up. Before you start serious development or go into production with Snow Owl, you must do some additional setup:
Learn how to configure Snow Owl.
Configure important Snow Owl settings.
Configure important system settings.
Type
Description
Default Location
Setting
home
Snow Owl home directory or $SO_HOME
Directory created by unpacking the archive
bin
Binary scripts including startup/shutdown to start/stop the instance
$SO_HOME/bin
conf
Configuration files including snowowl.yml
$SO_HOME/configuration
data
The location of the data files and resources.
$SO_HOME/resources
path.data
logs
Log files location.
$SO_HOME/serviceability/logs