- .NET Clients: other versions:
- Introduction
- Breaking changes
- API Conventions
- Elasticsearch.Net - Low level client
- NEST - High level client
- Troubleshooting
- Search
- Query DSL
- Full text queries
- Term level queries
- Exists Query Usage
- Fuzzy Date Query Usage
- Fuzzy Numeric Query Usage
- Fuzzy Query Usage
- Ids Query Usage
- Prefix Query Usage
- Date Range Query Usage
- Long Range Query Usage
- Numeric Range Query Usage
- Term Range Query Usage
- Regexp Query Usage
- Term Query Usage
- Terms List Query Usage
- Terms Lookup Query Usage
- Terms Query Usage
- Terms Set Query Usage
- Type Query Usage
- Wildcard Query Usage
- Compound queries
- Joining queries
- Geo queries
- Geo Bounding Box Query Usage
- Geo Distance Query Usage
- Geo Polygon Query Usage
- Geo Shape Circle Query Usage
- Geo Shape Envelope Query Usage
- Geo Shape Geometry Collection Query Usage
- Geo Shape Indexed Shape Query Usage
- Geo Shape Line String Query Usage
- Geo Shape Multi Line String Query Usage
- Geo Shape Multi Point Query Usage
- Geo Shape Multi Polygon Query Usage
- Geo Shape Point Query Usage
- Geo Shape Polygon Query Usage
- Specialized queries
- Span queries
- NEST specific queries
- Aggregations
- Metric Aggregations
- Average Aggregation Usage
- Cardinality Aggregation Usage
- Extended Stats Aggregation Usage
- Geo Bounds Aggregation Usage
- Geo Centroid Aggregation Usage
- Max Aggregation Usage
- Median Absolute Deviation Aggregation Usage
- Min Aggregation Usage
- Percentile Ranks Aggregation Usage
- Percentiles Aggregation Usage
- Scripted Metric Aggregation Usage
- Stats Aggregation Usage
- Sum Aggregation Usage
- Top Hits Aggregation Usage
- Value Count Aggregation Usage
- Weighted Average Aggregation Usage
- Bucket Aggregations
- Adjacency Matrix Usage
- Auto Date Histogram Aggregation Usage
- Children Aggregation Usage
- Composite Aggregation Usage
- Date Histogram Aggregation Usage
- Date Range Aggregation Usage
- Filter Aggregation Usage
- Filters Aggregation Usage
- Geo Distance Aggregation Usage
- Geo Hash Grid Aggregation Usage
- Global Aggregation Usage
- Histogram Aggregation Usage
- Ip Range Aggregation Usage
- Missing Aggregation Usage
- Nested Aggregation Usage
- Parent Aggregation Usage
- Range Aggregation Usage
- Reverse Nested Aggregation Usage
- Sampler Aggregation Usage
- Significant Terms Aggregation Usage
- Significant Text Aggregation Usage
- Terms Aggregation Usage
- Pipeline Aggregations
- Average Bucket Aggregation Usage
- Bucket Script Aggregation Usage
- Bucket Selector Aggregation Usage
- Bucket Sort Aggregation Usage
- Cumulative Sum Aggregation Usage
- Derivative Aggregation Usage
- Extended Stats Bucket Aggregation Usage
- Max Bucket Aggregation Usage
- Min Bucket Aggregation Usage
- Moving Average Ewma Aggregation Usage
- Moving Average Holt Linear Aggregation Usage
- Moving Average Holt Winters Aggregation Usage
- Moving Average Linear Aggregation Usage
- Moving Average Simple Aggregation Usage
- Moving Function Aggregation Usage
- Percentiles Bucket Aggregation Usage
- Serial Differencing Aggregation Usage
- Stats Bucket Aggregation Usage
- Sum Bucket Aggregation Usage
- Matrix Aggregations
- Metric Aggregations
NOTE: You are looking at documentation for an older release. For the latest information, see the current release documentation.
Date time providers
editDate time providers
editNot typically something you’ll have to pass to the client but all calls to System.DateTime.UtcNow
in the client have been abstracted behind an IDateTimeProvider
interface.
This allows us to unit test timeouts and cluster failover without being bound to wall clock
time as calculated by using System.DateTime.UtcNow
directly.
var dateTimeProvider = DateTimeProvider.Default; dateTimeProvider.Now().Should().BeCloseTo(DateTime.UtcNow);
As you can see, dates are always returned in UTC from the default implementation.
Another responsibility of this interface is to calculate the time a node has to be taken out of rotation based on the number of attempts to revive it. For very advanced use cases, this might be something of interest to provide a custom implementation for.
The default timeout calculation is
min(timeout * 2 ^ (attempts * 0.5 -1), maxTimeout)
where the default values for timeout
and maxTimeout
are
var timeout = TimeSpan.FromMinutes(1); var maxTimeout = TimeSpan.FromMinutes(30);
Plotting these defaults looks as follows

The goal here is that whenever a node is resurrected and is found to still be offline, we send it back to the doghouse for an ever increasingly long period, until we hit a bounded maximum.
var dateTimeProvider = DateTimeProvider.Default; var timeouts = Enumerable.Range(0, 30) .Select(attempt => dateTimeProvider.DeadTime(attempt, timeout, maxTimeout)) .ToList(); foreach (var increasedTimeout in timeouts.Take(10)) increasedTimeout.Should().BeWithin(maxTimeout);