Mapping
editMapping
editMapping is the process of defining how a document, and the fields it contains, are stored and indexed. For instance, use mappings to define:
- which string fields should be treated as full text fields.
- which fields contain numbers, dates, or geolocations.
-
whether the values of all fields in the document should be
indexed into the catch-all
_all
field. - the format of date values.
- custom rules to control the mapping for dynamically added fields.
Mapping Type
editEach index has one mapping type which determines how the document will be indexed.
[6.0.0] Deprecated in 6.0.0. See Removal of mapping types .
A mapping type has:
Field datatypes
editEach field has a data type
which can be:
It is often useful to index the same field in different ways for different
purposes. For instance, a string
field could be indexed as
a text
field for full-text search, and as a keyword
field for
sorting or aggregations. Alternatively, you could index a string field with
the standard
analyzer, the
english
analyzer, and the
french
analyzer.
This is the purpose of multi-fields. Most datatypes support multi-fields
via the fields
parameter.
Settings to prevent mappings explosion
editDefining too many fields in an index is a condition that can lead to a mapping explosion, which can cause out of memory errors and difficult situations to recover from. This problem may be more common than expected. As an example, consider a situation in which every new document inserted introduces new fields. This is quite common with dynamic mappings. Every time a document contains new fields, those will end up in the index’s mappings. This isn’t worrying for a small amount of data, but it can become a problem as the mapping grows. The following settings allow you to limit the number of field mappings that can be created manually or dynamically, in order to prevent bad documents from causing a mapping explosion:
-
index.mapping.total_fields.limit
-
The maximum number of fields in an index. The default value is
1000
. -
index.mapping.depth.limit
-
The maximum depth for a field, which is measured as the number of inner
objects. For instance, if all fields are defined at the root object level,
then the depth is
1
. If there is one object mapping, then the depth is2
, etc. The default is20
. -
index.mapping.nested_fields.limit
-
The maximum number of
nested
fields in an index, defaults to50
. Indexing 1 document with 100 nested fields actually indexes 101 documents as each nested document is indexed as a separate hidden document.
Dynamic mapping
editFields and mapping types do not need to be defined before being used. Thanks
to dynamic mapping, new field names will be added automatically, just by
indexing a document. New fields can be added both to the top-level mapping
type, and to inner object
and nested
fields.
The dynamic mapping rules can be configured to customise the mapping that is used for new fields.
Explicit mappings
editYou know more about your data than Elasticsearch can guess, so while dynamic mapping can be useful to get started, at some point you will want to specify your own explicit mappings.
You can create field mappings when you create an index, and you can add fields to an existing index with the PUT mapping API.
Updating existing field mappings
editOther than where documented, existing field mappings cannot be
updated. Changing the mapping would mean invalidating already indexed
documents. Instead, you should create a new index with the correct mappings
and reindex your data into that index. If you only wish
to rename a field and not change its mappings, it may make sense to introduce
an alias
field.
Example mapping
editA mapping could be specified when creating an index, as follows:
PUT my_index { "mappings": { "_doc": { "properties": { "title": { "type": "text" }, "name": { "type": "text" }, "age": { "type": "integer" }, "created": { "type": "date", "format": "strict_date_optional_time||epoch_millis" } } } } }
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Specify that the |
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Specify that the |
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Specify that the |
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Specify that the |