WARNING: Version 1.4 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.
Glossary of terms
editGlossary of terms
edit- analysis
-
Analysis is the process of converting full text to terms. Depending on which analyzer is used, these phrases:
FOO BAR
,Foo-Bar
,foo,bar
will probably all result in the termsfoo
andbar
. These terms are what is actually stored in the index.A full text query (not a term query) for
FoO:bAR
will also be analyzed to the termsfoo
,bar
and will thus match the terms stored in the index.It is this process of analysis (both at index time and at search time) that allows elasticsearch to perform full text queries.
- cluster
- A cluster consists of one or more nodes which share the same cluster name. Each cluster has a single master node which is chosen automatically by the cluster and which can be replaced if the current master node fails.
- document
-
A document is a JSON document which is stored in elasticsearch. It is like a row in a table in a relational database. Each document is stored in an index and has a type and an id.
A document is a JSON object (also known in other languages as a hash / hashmap / associative array) which contains zero or more fields, or key-value pairs.
The original JSON document that is indexed will be stored in the
_source
field, which is returned by default when getting or searching for a document. - id
-
The ID of a document identifies a document. The
index/type/id
of a document must be unique. If no ID is provided, then it will be auto-generated. (also see routing) - field
-
A document contains a list of fields, or key-value pairs. The value can be a simple (scalar) value (eg a string, integer, date), or a nested structure like an array or an object. A field is similar to a column in a table in a relational database.
The mapping for each field has a field type (not to be confused with document type) which indicates the type of data that can be stored in that field, eg
integer
,string
,object
. The mapping also allows you to define (amongst other things) how the value for a field should be analyzed. - index
-
An index is like a database in a relational database. It has a mapping which defines multiple types.
An index is a logical namespace which maps to one or more primary shards and can have zero or more replica shards.
- mapping
-
A mapping is like a schema definition in a relational database. Each index has a mapping, which defines each type within the index, plus a number of index-wide settings.
A mapping can either be defined explicitly, or it will be generated automatically when a document is indexed.
- node
-
A node is a running instance of elasticsearch which belongs to a cluster. Multiple nodes can be started on a single server for testing purposes, but usually you should have one node per server.
At startup, a node will use unicast (or multicast, if specified) to discover an existing cluster with the same cluster name and will try to join that cluster.
- primary shard
-
Each document is stored in a single primary shard. When you index a document, it is indexed first on the primary shard, then on all replicas of the primary shard.
By default, an index has 5 primary shards. You can specify fewer or more primary shards to scale the number of documents that your index can handle.
You cannot change the number of primary shards in an index, once the index is created.
See also routing
- replica shard
-
Each primary shard can have zero or more replicas. A replica is a copy of the primary shard, and has two purposes:
- increase failover: a replica shard can be promoted to a primary shard if the primary fails
-
increase performance: get and search requests can be handled by primary or replica shards.
By default, each primary shard has one replica, but the number of replicas can be changed dynamically on an existing index. A replica shard will never be started on the same node as its primary shard.
- routing
-
When you index a document, it is stored on a single primary shard. That shard is chosen by hashing the
routing
value. By default, therouting
value is derived from the ID of the document or, if the document has a specified parent document, from the ID of the parent document (to ensure that child and parent documents are stored on the same shard).This value can be overridden by specifying a
routing
value at index time, or a routing field in the mapping. - shard
-
A shard is a single Lucene instance. It is a low-level “worker” unit which is managed automatically by elasticsearch. An index is a logical namespace which points to primary and replica shards.
Other than defining the number of primary and replica shards that an index should have, you never need to refer to shards directly. Instead, your code should deal only with an index.
Elasticsearch distributes shards amongst all nodes in the cluster, and can move shards automatically from one node to another in the case of node failure, or the addition of new nodes.
- source field
-
By default, the JSON document that you index will be stored in the
_source
field and will be returned by all get and search requests. This allows you access to the original object directly from search results, rather than requiring a second step to retrieve the object from an ID.Note: the exact JSON string that you indexed will be returned to you, even if it contains invalid JSON. The contents of this field do not indicate anything about how the data in the object has been indexed.
- term
-
A term is an exact value that is indexed in elasticsearch. The terms
foo
,Foo
,FOO
are NOT equivalent. Terms (i.e. exact values) can be searched for using term queries.
See also text and analysis. - text
-
Text (or full text) is ordinary unstructured text, such as this paragraph. By default, text will be analyzed into terms, which is what is actually stored in the index.
Text fields need to be analyzed at index time in order to be searchable as full text, and keywords in full text queries must be analyzed at search time to produce (and search for) the same terms that were generated at index time.
- type
- A type is like a table in a relational database. Each type has a list of fields that can be specified for documents of that type. The mapping defines how each field in the document is analyzed.