Conventions and Terminology
editConventions and Terminology
editThis functionality is in technical preview and may be changed or removed in a future release. Elastic will work to fix any issues, but features in technical preview are not subject to the support SLA of official GA features.
For clarity, it is important to establish the meaning behind certain words as, the same wording might convey different meanings to different readers depending on one’s familiarity with SQL versus Elasticsearch.
This documentation while trying to be complete, does assume the reader has basic understanding of Elasticsearch and/or SQL. If that is not the case, please continue reading the documentation however take notes and pursue the topics that are unclear either through the main Elasticsearch documentation or through the plethora of SQL material available in the open (there are simply too many excellent resources here to enumerate).
As a general rule, Elasticsearch SQL as the name indicates provides a SQL interface to Elasticsearch. As such, it follows the SQL terminology and conventions first, whenever possible. However the backing engine itself is Elasticsearch for which Elasticsearch SQL was purposely created hence why features or concepts that are not available, or cannot be mapped correctly, in SQL appear in Elasticsearch SQL. Last but not least, Elasticsearch SQL tries to obey the principle of least surprise, though as all things in the world, everything is relative.