Elasticsearch has no concept of inner objects. Therefore, it flattens object hierarchies into a simple list of field names and values. For instance, consider the following document:
PUT my-index-000001/_doc/1
{
"group" : "fans",
"user" : [
{
"first" : "John",
"last" : "Smith"
},
{
"first" : "Alice",
"last" : "White"
}
]
}
The user
field is dynamically added as a field of type object
.
This document would be transformed internally into a document that looks more like this:
{
"group" : "fans",
"user.first" : [ "alice", "john" ],
"user.last" : [ "smith", "white" ]
}
The user.first
and user.last
fields are flattened into multi-value fields, and the association between alice
and white
is lost.
This document would incorrectly match a query for alice
AND smith
:
GET my-index-000001/_search
{
"query": {
"bool": {
"must": [
{ "match": { "user.first": "Alice" }},
{ "match": { "user.last": "Smith" }}
]
}
}
}
Result:
{
"took" : 7,
"timed_out" : false,
"_shards" : {
"total" : 1,
"successful" : 1,
"skipped" : 0,
"failed" : 0
},
"hits" : {
"total" : {
"value" : 1,
"relation" : "eq"
},
"max_score" : 0.5753642,
"hits" : [
{
"_index" : "my-index-000001",
"_type" : "_doc",
"_id" : "1",
"_score" : 0.5753642,
"_source" : {
"group" : "fans",
"user" : [
{
"first" : "John",
"last" : "Smith"
},
{
"first" : "Alice",
"last" : "White"
}
]
}
}
]
}
}
If you need to index arrays of objects and to maintain the independence of each object in the array, use the nested
data type instead of the object
data type.
Internally, nested objects index each object in the array as a separate hidden document, meaning that each nested object can be queried independently of the others with the nested query
:
The user field is mapped as type nested
instead of type object
.
PUT my-index-000001
{
"mappings": {
"properties": {
"user": {
"type": "nested"
}
}
}
}
PUT my-index-000001/_doc/1
{
"group" : "fans",
"user" : [
{
"first" : "John",
"last" : "Smith"
},
{
"first" : "Alice",
"last" : "White"
}
]
}
This query doesn’t match because Alice
and Smith
are not in the same nested object.
GET my-index-000001/_search
{
"query": {
"nested": {
"path": "user",
"query": {
"bool": {
"must": [
{ "match": { "user.first": "Alice" }},
{ "match": { "user.last": "Smith" }}
]
}
}
}
}
}
This query matches because Alice
and White
are in the same nested object.
inner_hits
allow us to highlight the matching nested documents.
GET my-index-000001/_search
{
"query": {
"nested": {
"path": "user",
"query": {
"bool": {
"must": [
{ "match": { "user.first": "Alice" }},
{ "match": { "user.last": "White" }}
]
}
},
"inner_hits": {
"highlight": {
"fields": {
"user.first": {}
}
}
}
}
}
}
https://opster.com/guides/elasticsearch/data-structuring/elasticsearch-nested-field-object-field/