Index patterns
editIndex patterns
editElasticsearch SQL supports two types of patterns for matching multiple indices or tables:
Elasticsearch multi-index
editThe Elasticsearch notation for enumerating, including or excluding multi-target syntax is supported as long as it is quoted or escaped as a table identifier.
For example:
SHOW TABLES "*,-l*"; name | type | kind ---------------+----------+--------------- emp |TABLE |INDEX employees |VIEW |ALIAS
Notice the pattern is surrounded by double quotes "
. It enumerated *
meaning all indices however
it excludes (due to -
) all indices that start with l
.
This notation is very convenient and powerful as it allows both inclusion and exclusion, depending on
the target naming convention.
The same kind of patterns can also be used to query multiple indices or tables.
For example:
SELECT emp_no FROM "e*p" LIMIT 1; emp_no --------------- 10001
There is the restriction that all resolved concrete tables have the exact same mapping.
SQL LIKE
notation
editThe common LIKE
statement (including escaping if needed) to match a wildcard pattern, based on one _
or multiple %
characters.
Using SHOW TABLES
command again:
SHOW TABLES LIKE 'emp%'; name | type | kind ---------------+----------+--------------- emp |TABLE |INDEX employees |VIEW |ALIAS
The pattern matches all tables that start with emp
.
This command supports escaping as well, for example:
SHOW TABLES LIKE 'emp!%' ESCAPE '!'; name | type | kind ---------------+---------------+---------------
Notice how now emp%
does not match any tables because %
, which means match zero or more characters,
has been escaped by !
and thus becomes an regular char. And since there is no table named emp%
,
an empty table is returned.
In a nutshell, the differences between the two type of patterns are:
Feature |
Multi index |
SQL |
Type of quoting |
|
|
Inclusion |
Yes |
Yes |
Exclusion |
Yes |
No |
Enumeration |
Yes |
No |
One char pattern |
No |
|
Multi char pattern |
|
|
Escaping |
No |
|
Which one to use, is up to you however try to stick to the same one across your queries for consistency.
As the query type of quoting between the two patterns is fairly similar ("
vs '
), Elasticsearch SQL always
requires the keyword LIKE
for SQL LIKE
pattern.