NOTE: You are looking at documentation for an older release. For the latest information, see the current release documentation.
Create Index
editCreate Index
editThe Create Index API is used to manually create an index in Elasticsearch. All documents in Elasticsearch are stored inside of one index or another.
The most basic command is the following:
PUT twitter
This create an index named twitter
with all default setting.
Index name limitations
There are several limitations to what you can name your index. The complete list of limitations are:
- Lowercase only
-
Cannot include
\
,/
,*
,?
,"
,<
,>
,|
, ` ` (space character),,
,#
-
Indices prior to 7.0 could contain a colon (
:
), but that’s been deprecated and won’t be supported in 7.0+ -
Cannot start with
-
,_
,+
-
Cannot be
.
or..
- Cannot be longer than 255 bytes (note it is bytes, so multi-byte characters will count towards the 255 limit faster)
Index Settings
editEach index created can have specific settings associated with it, defined in the body:
Default for |
|
Default for |
or more simplified
PUT twitter { "settings" : { "number_of_shards" : 3, "number_of_replicas" : 2 } }
You do not have to explicitly specify index
section inside the
settings
section.
For more information regarding all the different index level settings that can be set when creating an index, please check the index modules section.
Mappings
editThe create index API allows to provide a type mapping:
PUT test { "settings" : { "number_of_shards" : 1 }, "mappings" : { "_doc" : { "properties" : { "field1" : { "type" : "text" } } } } }
Aliases
editThe create index API allows also to provide a set of aliases:
PUT test { "aliases" : { "alias_1" : {}, "alias_2" : { "filter" : { "term" : {"user" : "kimchy" } }, "routing" : "kimchy" } } }
Wait For Active Shards
editBy default, index creation will only return a response to the client when the primary copies of each shard have been started, or the request times out. The index creation response will indicate what happened:
{ "acknowledged": true, "shards_acknowledged": true, "index": "test" }
acknowledged
indicates whether the index was successfully created in the cluster, while
shards_acknowledged
indicates whether the requisite number of shard copies were started for
each shard in the index before timing out. Note that it is still possible for either
acknowledged
or shards_acknowledged
to be false
, but the index creation was successful.
These values simply indicate whether the operation completed before the timeout. If
acknowledged
is false
, then we timed out before the cluster state was updated with the
newly created index, but it probably will be created sometime soon. If shards_acknowledged
is false
, then we timed out before the requisite number of shards were started (by default
just the primaries), even if the cluster state was successfully updated to reflect the newly
created index (i.e. acknowledged=true
).
We can change the default of only waiting for the primary shards to start through the index
setting index.write.wait_for_active_shards
(note that changing this setting will also affect
the wait_for_active_shards
value on all subsequent write operations):
PUT test { "settings": { "index.write.wait_for_active_shards": "2" } }
or through the request parameter wait_for_active_shards
:
PUT test?wait_for_active_shards=2
A detailed explanation of wait_for_active_shards
and its possible values can be found
here.
Skipping types
editTypes are being removed from Elasticsearch: in 7.0, the mappings
element will no
longer take the type name as a top-level key by default. You can already opt in for
this behavior by setting include_type_name=false
and putting mappings directly under
mappings
in the index creation call, without specifying a type name.
Here is an example:
PUT test?include_type_name=false { "mappings": { "properties": { "foo": { "type": "keyword" } } } }