- Elasticsearch Guide: other versions:
- Getting Started
- Setup Elasticsearch
- Breaking changes
- Breaking changes in 5.4
- Breaking changes in 5.3
- Breaking changes in 5.2
- Breaking changes in 5.1
- Breaking changes in 5.0
- Search and Query DSL changes
- Mapping changes
- Percolator changes
- Suggester changes
- Index APIs changes
- Document API changes
- Settings changes
- Allocation changes
- HTTP changes
- REST API changes
- CAT API changes
- Java API changes
- Packaging
- Plugin changes
- Filesystem related changes
- Path to data on disk
- Aggregation changes
- Script related changes
- API Conventions
- Document APIs
- Search APIs
- Aggregations
- Metrics Aggregations
- Avg Aggregation
- Cardinality Aggregation
- Extended Stats Aggregation
- Geo Bounds Aggregation
- Geo Centroid Aggregation
- Max Aggregation
- Min Aggregation
- Percentiles Aggregation
- Percentile Ranks Aggregation
- Scripted Metric Aggregation
- Stats Aggregation
- Sum Aggregation
- Top hits Aggregation
- Value Count Aggregation
- Bucket Aggregations
- Adjacency Matrix Aggregation
- Children Aggregation
- Date Histogram Aggregation
- Date Range Aggregation
- Diversified Sampler Aggregation
- Filter Aggregation
- Filters Aggregation
- Geo Distance Aggregation
- GeoHash grid Aggregation
- Global Aggregation
- Histogram Aggregation
- IP Range Aggregation
- Missing Aggregation
- Nested Aggregation
- Range Aggregation
- Reverse nested Aggregation
- Sampler Aggregation
- Significant Terms Aggregation
- Terms Aggregation
- Pipeline Aggregations
- Avg Bucket Aggregation
- Derivative Aggregation
- Max Bucket Aggregation
- Min Bucket Aggregation
- Sum Bucket Aggregation
- Stats Bucket Aggregation
- Extended Stats Bucket Aggregation
- Percentiles Bucket Aggregation
- Moving Average Aggregation
- Cumulative Sum Aggregation
- Bucket Script Aggregation
- Bucket Selector Aggregation
- Serial Differencing Aggregation
- Matrix Aggregations
- Caching heavy aggregations
- Returning only aggregation results
- Aggregation Metadata
- Returning the type of the aggregation
- Metrics Aggregations
- Indices APIs
- Create Index
- Delete Index
- Get Index
- Indices Exists
- Open / Close Index API
- Shrink Index
- Rollover Index
- Put Mapping
- Get Mapping
- Get Field Mapping
- Types Exists
- Index Aliases
- Update Indices Settings
- Get Settings
- Analyze
- Index Templates
- Shadow replica indices
- Indices Stats
- Indices Segments
- Indices Recovery
- Indices Shard Stores
- Clear Cache
- Flush
- Refresh
- Force Merge
- cat APIs
- Cluster APIs
- Query DSL
- Mapping
- Analysis
- Anatomy of an analyzer
- Testing analyzers
- Analyzers
- Normalizers
- Tokenizers
- Token Filters
- Standard Token Filter
- ASCII Folding Token Filter
- Flatten Graph Token Filter
- Length Token Filter
- Lowercase Token Filter
- Uppercase Token Filter
- NGram Token Filter
- Edge NGram Token Filter
- Porter Stem Token Filter
- Shingle Token Filter
- Stop Token Filter
- Word Delimiter Token Filter
- Word Delimiter Graph Token Filter
- Stemmer Token Filter
- Stemmer Override Token Filter
- Keyword Marker Token Filter
- Keyword Repeat Token Filter
- KStem Token Filter
- Snowball Token Filter
- Phonetic Token Filter
- Synonym Token Filter
- Synonym Graph Token Filter
- Compound Word Token Filters
- Reverse Token Filter
- Elision Token Filter
- Truncate Token Filter
- Unique Token Filter
- Pattern Capture Token Filter
- Pattern Replace Token Filter
- Trim Token Filter
- Limit Token Count Token Filter
- Hunspell Token Filter
- Common Grams Token Filter
- Normalization Token Filter
- CJK Width Token Filter
- CJK Bigram Token Filter
- Delimited Payload Token Filter
- Keep Words Token Filter
- Keep Types Token Filter
- Classic Token Filter
- Apostrophe Token Filter
- Decimal Digit Token Filter
- Fingerprint Token Filter
- Minhash Token Filter
- Character Filters
- Modules
- Index Modules
- Ingest Node
- Pipeline Definition
- Ingest APIs
- Accessing Data in Pipelines
- Handling Failures in Pipelines
- Processors
- Append Processor
- Convert Processor
- Date Processor
- Date Index Name Processor
- Fail Processor
- Foreach Processor
- Grok Processor
- Gsub Processor
- Join Processor
- JSON Processor
- KV Processor
- Lowercase Processor
- Remove Processor
- Rename Processor
- Script Processor
- Set Processor
- Split Processor
- Sort Processor
- Trim Processor
- Uppercase Processor
- Dot Expander Processor
- How To
- Testing
- Glossary of terms
- Release Notes
- 5.4.3 Release Notes
- 5.4.2 Release Notes
- 5.4.1 Release Notes
- 5.4.0 Release Notes
- 5.3.3 Release Notes
- 5.3.2 Release Notes
- 5.3.1 Release Notes
- 5.3.0 Release Notes
- 5.2.2 Release Notes
- 5.2.1 Release Notes
- 5.2.0 Release Notes
- 5.1.2 Release Notes
- 5.1.1 Release Notes
- 5.1.0 Release Notes
- 5.0.2 Release Notes
- 5.0.1 Release Notes
- 5.0.0 Combined Release Notes
- 5.0.0 GA Release Notes
- 5.0.0-rc1 Release Notes
- 5.0.0-beta1 Release Notes
- 5.0.0-alpha5 Release Notes
- 5.0.0-alpha4 Release Notes
- 5.0.0-alpha3 Release Notes
- 5.0.0-alpha2 Release Notes
- 5.0.0-alpha1 Release Notes
- 5.0.0-alpha1 Release Notes (Changes previously released in 2.x)
- Painless API Reference
WARNING: Version 5.4 of Elasticsearch has passed its EOL date.
This documentation is no longer being maintained and may be removed. If you are running this version, we strongly advise you to upgrade. For the latest information, see the current release documentation.
Search APIs
editSearch APIs
editMost search APIs are multi-index, multi-type, with the exception of the Explain API endpoints.
Routing
editWhen executing a search, it will be broadcast to all the index/indices
shards (round robin between replicas). Which shards will be searched on
can be controlled by providing the routing
parameter. For example,
when indexing tweets, the routing value can be the user name:
POST /twitter/tweet?routing=kimchy { "user" : "kimchy", "postDate" : "2009-11-15T14:12:12", "message" : "trying out Elasticsearch" }
In such a case, if we want to search only on the tweets for a specific user, we can specify it as the routing, resulting in the search hitting only the relevant shard:
POST /twitter/tweet/_search?routing=kimchy { "query": { "bool" : { "must" : { "query_string" : { "query" : "some query string here" } }, "filter" : { "term" : { "user" : "kimchy" } } } } }
The routing parameter can be multi valued represented as a comma separated string. This will result in hitting the relevant shards where the routing values match to.
Stats Groups
editA search can be associated with stats groups, which maintains a statistics aggregation per group. It can later be retrieved using the indices stats API specifically. For example, here is a search body request that associate the request with two different groups:
POST /_search { "query" : { "match_all" : {} }, "stats" : ["group1", "group2"] }
Global Search Timeout
editIndividual searches can have a timeout as part of the
Request Body Search. Since search requests can originate from many
sources, Elasticsearch has a dynamic cluster-level setting for a global
search timeout that applies to all search requests that do not set a
timeout in the Request Body Search. The default value is no global
timeout. The setting key is search.default_search_timeout
and can be
set using the Cluster Update Settings endpoints. Setting this value
to -1
resets the global search timeout to no timeout.
Search Cancellation
editSearches can be cancelled using standard task cancellation
mechanism. By default, a running search only checks if it is cancelled or
not on segment boundaries, therefore the cancellation can be delayed by large
segments. The search cancellation responsiveness can be improved by setting
the dynamic cluster-level setting search.low_level_cancellation
to true
.
However, it comes with an additional overhead of more frequent cancellation
checks that can be noticeable on large fast running search queries. Changing this
setting only affects the searches that start after the change is made.