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Aggregations
editAggregations
editThe aggregations framework helps provide aggregated data based on a search query. It is based on simple building blocks called aggregations, that can be composed in order to build complex summaries of the data.
An aggregation can be seen as a unit-of-work that builds analytic information over a set of documents. The context of the execution defines what this document set is (e.g. a top-level aggregation executes within the context of the executed query/filters of the search request).
There are many different types of aggregations, each with its own purpose and output. To better understand these types, it is often easier to break them into four main families:
- Bucketing
- A family of aggregations that build buckets, where each bucket is associated with a key and a document criterion. When the aggregation is executed, all the buckets criteria are evaluated on every document in the context and when a criterion matches, the document is considered to "fall in" the relevant bucket. By the end of the aggregation process, we’ll end up with a list of buckets - each one with a set of documents that "belong" to it.
- Metric
- Aggregations that keep track and compute metrics over a set of documents.
- Matrix
- A family of aggregations that operate on multiple fields and produce a matrix result based on the values extracted from the requested document fields. Unlike metric and bucket aggregations, this aggregation family does not yet support scripting.
- Pipeline
- Aggregations that aggregate the output of other aggregations and their associated metrics
The interesting part comes next. Since each bucket effectively defines a document set (all documents belonging to the bucket), one can potentially associate aggregations on the bucket level, and those will execute within the context of that bucket. This is where the real power of aggregations kicks in: aggregations can be nested!
Bucketing aggregations can have sub-aggregations (bucketing or metric). The sub-aggregations will be computed for the buckets which their parent aggregation generates. There is no hard limit on the level/depth of nested aggregations (one can nest an aggregation under a "parent" aggregation, which is itself a sub-aggregation of another higher-level aggregation).
Aggregations operate on the double
representation of
the data. As a consequence, the result may be approximate when running on longs
whose absolute value is greater than 2^53
.
Structuring Aggregations
editThe following snippet captures the basic structure of aggregations:
"aggregations" : { "<aggregation_name>" : { "<aggregation_type>" : { <aggregation_body> } [,"meta" : { [<meta_data_body>] } ]? [,"aggregations" : { [<sub_aggregation>]+ } ]? } [,"<aggregation_name_2>" : { ... } ]* }
The aggregations
object (the key aggs
can also be used) in the JSON holds the aggregations to be computed. Each aggregation
is associated with a logical name that the user defines (e.g. if the aggregation computes the average price, then it would
make sense to name it avg_price
). These logical names will also be used to uniquely identify the aggregations in the
response. Each aggregation has a specific type (<aggregation_type>
in the above snippet) and is typically the first
key within the named aggregation body. Each type of aggregation defines its own body, depending on the nature of the
aggregation (e.g. an avg
aggregation on a specific field will define the field on which the average will be calculated).
At the same level of the aggregation type definition, one can optionally define a set of additional aggregations,
though this only makes sense if the aggregation you defined is of a bucketing nature. In this scenario, the
sub-aggregations you define on the bucketing aggregation level will be computed for all the buckets built by the
bucketing aggregation. For example, if you define a set of aggregations under the range
aggregation, the
sub-aggregations will be computed for the range buckets that are defined.
Values Source
editSome aggregations work on values extracted from the aggregated documents. Typically, the values will be extracted from
a specific document field which is set using the field
key for the aggregations. It is also possible to define a
script
which will generate the values (per document).
When both field
and script
settings are configured for the aggregation, the script will be treated as a
value script
. While normal scripts are evaluated on a document level (i.e. the script has access to all the data
associated with the document), value scripts are evaluated on the value level. In this mode, the values are extracted
from the configured field
and the script
is used to apply a "transformation" over these value/s.
When working with scripts, the lang
and params
settings can also be defined. The former defines the scripting
language which is used (assuming the proper language is available in Elasticsearch, either by default or as a plugin). The latter
enables defining all the "dynamic" expressions in the script as parameters, which enables the script to keep itself static
between calls (this will ensure the use of the cached compiled scripts in Elasticsearch).
Elasticsearch uses the type of the field in the mapping in order to figure out
how to run the aggregation and format the response. However there are two cases
in which Elasticsearch cannot figure out this information: unmapped fields (for
instance in the case of a search request across multiple indices, and only some
of them have a mapping for the field) and pure scripts. For those cases, it is
possible to give Elasticsearch a hint using the value_type
option, which
accepts the following values: string
, long
(works for all integer types),
double
(works for all decimal types like float
or scaled_float
), date
,
ip
and boolean
.