PUT my-index-000001/_doc/1
{
"region": "US",
"manager": {
"age": 30,
"name": {
"first": "John",
"last": "Smith"
}
}
}
- The outer document is also a JSON object.
- It contains an inner object called
manager
. - Which in turn contains an inner object called
name
.
Internally, this document is indexed as a simple, flat list of key-value pairs, something like this:
{
"region": "US",
"manager.age": 30,
"manager.name.first": "John",
"manager.name.last": "Smith"
}
An explicit mapping for the above document could look like this:
PUT my-index-000001
{
"mappings": {
"properties": {
"region": {
"type": "keyword"
},
"manager": {
"properties": {
"age": { "type": "integer" },
"name": {
"properties": {
"first": { "type": "text" },
"last": { "type": "text" }
}
}
}
}
}
}
}
- Properties in the top-level mappings definition.
- The
manager
field is an innerobject
field. - The
manager.name
field is an inner object field within themanager
field.
You are not required to set the field
type
toobject
explicitly, as this is the default value.
Source: https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/object.html