Index Aliases

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APIs in elasticsearch accept an index name when working against a specific index, and several indices when applicable. The index aliases API allow to alias an index with a name, with all APIs automatically converting the alias name to the actual index name. An alias can also be mapped to more than one index, and when specifying it, the alias will automatically expand to the aliases indices. An alias can also be associated with a filter that will automatically be applied when searching, and routing values.

Here is a sample of associating the alias alias1 with index test1:

curl -XPOST 'http://localhost:9200/_aliases' -d '
{
    "actions" : [
        { "add" : { "index" : "test1", "alias" : "alias1" } }
    ]
}'

An alias can also be removed, for example:

curl -XPOST 'http://localhost:9200/_aliases' -d '
{
    "actions" : [
        { "remove" : { "index" : "test1", "alias" : "alias1" } }
    ]
}'

Renaming an alias is a simple remove then add operation within the same API. This operation is atomic, no need to worry about a short period of time where the alias does not point to an index:

curl -XPOST 'http://localhost:9200/_aliases' -d '
{
    "actions" : [
        { "remove" : { "index" : "test1", "alias" : "alias1" } },
        { "add" : { "index" : "test1", "alias" : "alias2" } }
    ]
}'

Associating an alias with more than one index are simply several add actions:

curl -XPOST 'http://localhost:9200/_aliases' -d '
{
    "actions" : [
        { "add" : { "index" : "test1", "alias" : "alias1" } },
        { "add" : { "index" : "test2", "alias" : "alias1" } }
    ]
}'

It is an error to index to an alias which points to more than one index.

Filtered Aliases

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Aliases with filters provide an easy way to create different "views" of the same index. The filter can be defined using Query DSL and is applied to all Search, Count, Delete By Query and More Like This operations with this alias. Here is an example:

curl -XPOST 'http://localhost:9200/_aliases' -d '
{
    "actions" : [
        {
            "add" : {
                 "index" : "test1",
                 "alias" : "alias2",
                 "filter" : { "term" : { "user" : "kimchy" } }
            }
        }
    ]
}'

Routing

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It is possible to associate routing values with aliases. This feature can be used together with filtering aliases in order to avoid unnecessary shard operations.

The following command creates a new alias alias1 that points to index test. After alias1 is created, all operations with this alias are automatically modified to use value 1 for routing:

curl -XPOST 'http://localhost:9200/_aliases' -d '
{
    "actions" : [
        {
            "add" : {
                 "index" : "test",
                 "alias" : "alias1",
                 "routing" : "1"
            }
        }
    ]
}'

It’s also possible to specify different routing values for searching and indexing operations:

curl -XPOST 'http://localhost:9200/_aliases' -d '
{
    "actions" : [
        {
            "add" : {
                 "index" : "test",
                 "alias" : "alias2",
                 "search_routing" : "1,2",
                 "index_routing" : "2"
            }
        }
    ]
}'

As shown in the example above, search routing may contain several values separated by comma. Index routing can contain only a single value.

If an operation that uses routing alias also has a routing parameter, an intersection of both alias routing and routing specified in the parameter is used. For example the following command will use "2" as a routing value:

curl -XGET 'http://localhost:9200/alias2/_search?q=user:kimchy&routing=2,3'

Add a single index alias

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From version 0.90.1 there is an api to add a single index alias, options:

index

The index to alias refers to. This is a required option.

alias

The name of the alias. This is a required option.

routing

An optional routing that can be associated with an alias.

filter

An optional filter that can be associated with an alias.

The rest endpoint is: /{index}/_alias/{alias}.

Examples:

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Adding time based alias:

curl -XPUT 'localhost:9200/logs_201305/_alias/2013'

Adding user alias:

curl -XPUT 'localhost:9200/users/_alias/user_12' -d '{
        "routing" : "12",
    "filter" : {
        "term" : {
            "user_id" : 12
        }
    }
}'

Delete a single index alias

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From version 0.90.1 there is an api to delete a single index alias, options:

index

The index the alias is in, the needs to be deleted. This is a required option.

alias

The name of the alias to delete. This is a required option.

The rest endpoint is: /{index}/_alias/{alias}. Example:

curl -XDELETE 'localhost:9200/users/_alias/user_12'

Retrieving existing aliases

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The get index alias api (Available since 0.90.1) allows to filter by alias name and index name. This api redirects to the master and fetches the requested index aliases, if available. This api only serialises the found index aliases.

Possible options:

index

The index name to get aliases for. Partially names are supported via wildcards, also multiple index names can be specified separated with a comma. Also the alias name for an index can be used.

alias

The name of alias to return in the response. Like the index option, this option supports wildcards and the option the specify multiple alias names separated by a comma. This is a required option.

ignore_indices

What to do is an specified index name doesn’t exist. If set to missing then those indices are ignored.

The rest endpoint is: /{index}/_alias/{alias}.

Examples:

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All aliases for the index users:

curl -XGET 'localhost:9200/users/_alias/*'

Response:

 {
  "users" : {
    "aliases" : {
      "user_13" : {
        "filter" : {
          "term" : {
            "user_id" : 13
          }
        },
        "index_routing" : "13",
        "search_routing" : "13"
      },
      "user_14" : {
        "filter" : {
          "term" : {
            "user_id" : 14
          }
        },
        "index_routing" : "14",
        "search_routing" : "14"
      },
      "user_12" : {
        "filter" : {
          "term" : {
            "user_id" : 12
          }
        },
        "index_routing" : "12",
        "search_routing" : "12"
      }
    }
  }
}

All aliases with the name 2013 in any index:

curl -XGET 'localhost:9200/_alias/2013'

Response:

{
  "logs_201304" : {
    "aliases" : {
      "2013" : { }
    }
  },
  "logs_201305" : {
    "aliases" : {
      "2013" : { }
    }
  }
}

All aliases that start with 2013_01 in any index:

curl -XGET 'localhost:9200/_alias/2013_01*'

Response:

{
  "logs_20130101" : {
    "aliases" : {
      "2013_01" : { }
    }
  }
}

There is also a HEAD variant of the get indices aliases api to check if index aliases exist. The indices aliases exists api supports the same option as the get indices aliases api. Examples:

curl -XHEAD 'localhost:9200/_alias/2013'
curl -XHEAD 'localhost:9200/_alias/2013_01*'
curl -XHEAD 'localhost:9200/users/_alias/*'

Pre 0.90.1 way of getting index aliases

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Aliases can be retrieved using the get aliases API, which can either return all indices with all aliases, or just for specific indices:

curl -XGET 'localhost:9200/test/_aliases'
curl -XGET 'localhost:9200/test1,test2/_aliases'
curl -XGET 'localhost:9200/_aliases'