WARNING: Version 5.5 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.
cat segments
editcat segments
editThe segments
command provides low level information about the segments
in the shards of an index. It provides information similar to the
_segments endpoint. For example:
GET /_cat/segments?v
might look like:
index shard prirep ip segment generation docs.count docs.deleted size size.memory committed searchable version compound test 3 p 127.0.0.1 _0 0 1 0 3kb 2042 false true 6.5.1 true test1 3 p 127.0.0.1 _0 0 1 0 3kb 2042 false true 6.5.1 true
The output shows information about index names and shard numbers in the first two columns.
If you only want to get information about segments in one particular index,
you can add the index name in the URL, for example /_cat/segments/test
. Also,
several indexes can be queried like /_cat/segments/test,test1
The following columns provide additional monitoring information:
- prirep
- Whether this segment belongs to a primary or replica shard.
- ip
- The ip address of the segment’s shard.
- segment
- A segment name, derived from the segment generation. The name is internally used to generate the file names in the directory of the shard this segment belongs to.
- generation
- The generation number is incremented with each segment that is written. The name of the segment is derived from this generation number.
- docs.count
- The number of non-deleted documents that are stored in this segment. Note that these are Lucene documents, so the count will include hidden documents (e.g. from nested types).
- docs.deleted
- The number of deleted documents that are stored in this segment. It is perfectly fine if this number is greater than 0, space is going to be reclaimed when this segment gets merged.
- size
- The amount of disk space that this segment uses.
- size.memory
- Segments store some data into memory in order to be searchable efficiently. This column shows the number of bytes in memory that are used.
- committed
- Whether the segment has been sync’ed on disk. Segments that are committed would survive a hard reboot. No need to worry in case of false, the data from uncommitted segments is also stored in the transaction log so that Elasticsearch is able to replay changes on the next start.
- searchable
- True if the segment is searchable. A value of false would most likely mean that the segment has been written to disk but no refresh occurred since then to make it searchable.
- version
- The version of Lucene that has been used to write this segment.
- compound
- Whether the segment is stored in a compound file. When true, this means that Lucene merged all files from the segment in a single one in order to save file descriptors.