query-string-syntax.asciidoc 8.6 KB

123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229230231232233234235236237238239240241242243244245246247248249250251252253254255256257258259260261262263264265266267268269270271272273274275276277278279280281282283284285286287288289290
  1. [[query-string-syntax]]
  2. ==== Query string syntax
  3. The query string ``mini-language'' is used by the
  4. <<query-dsl-query-string-query>> and by the
  5. `q` query string parameter in the <<search-search,`search` API>>.
  6. The query string is parsed into a series of _terms_ and _operators_. A
  7. term can be a single word -- `quick` or `brown` -- or a phrase, surrounded by
  8. double quotes -- `"quick brown"` -- which searches for all the words in the
  9. phrase, in the same order.
  10. Operators allow you to customize the search -- the available options are
  11. explained below.
  12. ===== Field names
  13. As mentioned in <<query-dsl-query-string-query>>, the `default_field` is searched for the
  14. search terms, but it is possible to specify other fields in the query syntax:
  15. * where the `status` field contains `active`
  16. status:active
  17. * where the `title` field contains `quick` or `brown`
  18. title:(quick OR brown)
  19. * where the `author` field contains the exact phrase `"john smith"`
  20. author:"John Smith"
  21. * where any of the fields `book.title`, `book.content` or `book.date` contains
  22. `quick` or `brown` (note how we need to escape the `*` with a backslash):
  23. book.\*:(quick OR brown)
  24. * where the field `title` has any non-null value:
  25. _exists_:title
  26. ===== Wildcards
  27. Wildcard searches can be run on individual terms, using `?` to replace
  28. a single character, and `*` to replace zero or more characters:
  29. qu?ck bro*
  30. Be aware that wildcard queries can use an enormous amount of memory and
  31. perform very badly -- just think how many terms need to be queried to
  32. match the query string `"a* b* c*"`.
  33. [WARNING]
  34. =======
  35. Pure wildcards `\*` are rewritten to <<query-dsl-exists-query,`exists`>> queries for efficiency.
  36. As a consequence, the wildcard `"field:*"` would match documents with an empty value
  37. like the following:
  38. ```
  39. {
  40. "field": ""
  41. }
  42. ```
  43. \... and would **not** match if the field is missing or set with an explicit null
  44. value like the following:
  45. ```
  46. {
  47. "field": null
  48. }
  49. ```
  50. =======
  51. [WARNING]
  52. =======
  53. Allowing a wildcard at the beginning of a word (eg `"*ing"`) is particularly
  54. heavy, because all terms in the index need to be examined, just in case
  55. they match. Leading wildcards can be disabled by setting
  56. `allow_leading_wildcard` to `false`.
  57. =======
  58. Only parts of the analysis chain that operate at the character level are
  59. applied. So for instance, if the analyzer performs both lowercasing and
  60. stemming, only the lowercasing will be applied: it would be wrong to perform
  61. stemming on a word that is missing some of its letters.
  62. By setting `analyze_wildcard` to true, queries that end with a `*` will be
  63. analyzed and a boolean query will be built out of the different tokens, by
  64. ensuring exact matches on the first N-1 tokens, and prefix match on the last
  65. token.
  66. ===== Regular expressions
  67. Regular expression patterns can be embedded in the query string by
  68. wrapping them in forward-slashes (`"/"`):
  69. name:/joh?n(ath[oa]n)/
  70. The supported regular expression syntax is explained in <<regexp-syntax>>.
  71. [WARNING]
  72. =======
  73. The `allow_leading_wildcard` parameter does not have any control over
  74. regular expressions. A query string such as the following would force
  75. Elasticsearch to visit every term in the index:
  76. /.*n/
  77. Use with caution!
  78. =======
  79. ===== Fuzziness
  80. We can search for terms that are
  81. similar to, but not exactly like our search terms, using the ``fuzzy''
  82. operator:
  83. quikc~ brwn~ foks~
  84. This uses the
  85. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Damerau-Levenshtein_distance[Damerau-Levenshtein distance]
  86. to find all terms with a maximum of
  87. two changes, where a change is the insertion, deletion
  88. or substitution of a single character, or transposition of two adjacent
  89. characters.
  90. The default _edit distance_ is `2`, but an edit distance of `1` should be
  91. sufficient to catch 80% of all human misspellings. It can be specified as:
  92. quikc~1
  93. ===== Proximity searches
  94. While a phrase query (eg `"john smith"`) expects all of the terms in exactly
  95. the same order, a proximity query allows the specified words to be further
  96. apart or in a different order. In the same way that fuzzy queries can
  97. specify a maximum edit distance for characters in a word, a proximity search
  98. allows us to specify a maximum edit distance of words in a phrase:
  99. "fox quick"~5
  100. The closer the text in a field is to the original order specified in the
  101. query string, the more relevant that document is considered to be. When
  102. compared to the above example query, the phrase `"quick fox"` would be
  103. considered more relevant than `"quick brown fox"`.
  104. ===== Ranges
  105. Ranges can be specified for date, numeric or string fields. Inclusive ranges
  106. are specified with square brackets `[min TO max]` and exclusive ranges with
  107. curly brackets `{min TO max}`.
  108. * All days in 2012:
  109. date:[2012-01-01 TO 2012-12-31]
  110. * Numbers 1..5
  111. count:[1 TO 5]
  112. * Tags between `alpha` and `omega`, excluding `alpha` and `omega`:
  113. tag:{alpha TO omega}
  114. * Numbers from 10 upwards
  115. count:[10 TO *]
  116. * Dates before 2012
  117. date:{* TO 2012-01-01}
  118. Curly and square brackets can be combined:
  119. * Numbers from 1 up to but not including 5
  120. count:[1 TO 5}
  121. Ranges with one side unbounded can use the following syntax:
  122. age:>10
  123. age:>=10
  124. age:<10
  125. age:<=10
  126. [NOTE]
  127. ====================================================================
  128. To combine an upper and lower bound with the simplified syntax, you
  129. would need to join two clauses with an `AND` operator:
  130. age:(>=10 AND <20)
  131. age:(+>=10 +<20)
  132. ====================================================================
  133. The parsing of ranges in query strings can be complex and error prone. It is
  134. much more reliable to use an explicit <<query-dsl-range-query,`range` query>>.
  135. ===== Boosting
  136. Use the _boost_ operator `^` to make one term more relevant than another.
  137. For instance, if we want to find all documents about foxes, but we are
  138. especially interested in quick foxes:
  139. quick^2 fox
  140. The default `boost` value is 1, but can be any positive floating point number.
  141. Boosts between 0 and 1 reduce relevance.
  142. Boosts can also be applied to phrases or to groups:
  143. "john smith"^2 (foo bar)^4
  144. ===== Boolean operators
  145. By default, all terms are optional, as long as one term matches. A search
  146. for `foo bar baz` will find any document that contains one or more of
  147. `foo` or `bar` or `baz`. We have already discussed the `default_operator`
  148. above which allows you to force all terms to be required, but there are
  149. also _boolean operators_ which can be used in the query string itself
  150. to provide more control.
  151. The preferred operators are `+` (this term *must* be present) and `-`
  152. (this term *must not* be present). All other terms are optional.
  153. For example, this query:
  154. quick brown +fox -news
  155. states that:
  156. * `fox` must be present
  157. * `news` must not be present
  158. * `quick` and `brown` are optional -- their presence increases the relevance
  159. The familiar boolean operators `AND`, `OR` and `NOT` (also written `&&`, `||`
  160. and `!`) are also supported but beware that they do not honor the usual
  161. precedence rules, so parentheses should be used whenever multiple operators are
  162. used together. For instance the previous query could be rewritten as:
  163. `((quick AND fox) OR (brown AND fox) OR fox) AND NOT news`::
  164. This form now replicates the logic from the original query correctly, but
  165. the relevance scoring bears little resemblance to the original.
  166. In contrast, the same query rewritten using the <<query-dsl-match-query,`match` query>>
  167. would look like this:
  168. {
  169. "bool": {
  170. "must": { "match": "fox" },
  171. "should": { "match": "quick brown" },
  172. "must_not": { "match": "news" }
  173. }
  174. }
  175. ****
  176. ===== Grouping
  177. Multiple terms or clauses can be grouped together with parentheses, to form
  178. sub-queries:
  179. (quick OR brown) AND fox
  180. Groups can be used to target a particular field, or to boost the result
  181. of a sub-query:
  182. status:(active OR pending) title:(full text search)^2
  183. ===== Reserved characters
  184. If you need to use any of the characters which function as operators in your
  185. query itself (and not as operators), then you should escape them with
  186. a leading backslash. For instance, to search for `(1+1)=2`, you would
  187. need to write your query as `\(1\+1\)\=2`.
  188. The reserved characters are: `+ - = && || > < ! ( ) { } [ ] ^ " ~ * ? : \ /`
  189. Failing to escape these special characters correctly could lead to a syntax
  190. error which prevents your query from running.
  191. NOTE: `<` and `>` can't be escaped at all. The only way to prevent them from
  192. attempting to create a range query is to remove them from the query string
  193. entirely.
  194. ===== Empty Query
  195. If the query string is empty or only contains whitespaces the query will
  196. yield an empty result set.