| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160 | [role="xpack"][testenv="basic"][[rollup-get-rollup-index-caps]]=== Get rollup index capabilities API++++<titleabbrev>Get rollup index caps</titleabbrev>++++experimental[]This API returns the rollup capabilities of all jobs inside of a rollup index (e.g. the index where rollup data is stored).A single rollup index may store the data for multiple rollup jobs, and may have a variety of capabilities depending on those jobs.This API will allow you to determine:1. What jobs are stored in an index (or indices specified via a pattern)?2. What target indices were rolled up, what fields were used in those rollups and what aggregations can be performed on each job?==== Request`GET {index}/_rollup/data`//===== Description==== Path Parameters`index`::  (string) Index or index-pattern of concrete rollup indices to check for capabilities.==== Request BodyThere is no request body for the Get Jobs API.==== AuthorizationYou must have the `read` index privilege on the index that stores the rollup results.For more information, see{xpack-ref}/security-privileges.html[Security Privileges].==== ExamplesImagine we have an index named `sensor-1` full of raw data.  We know that the data will grow over time, so therewill be a `sensor-2`, `sensor-3`, etc.  Let's create a Rollup job, which stores it's data in `sensor_rollup`:[source,js]--------------------------------------------------PUT _rollup/job/sensor{    "index_pattern": "sensor-*",    "rollup_index": "sensor_rollup",    "cron": "*/30 * * * * ?",    "page_size" :1000,    "groups" : {      "date_histogram": {        "field": "timestamp",        "interval": "1h",        "delay": "7d"      },      "terms": {        "fields": ["node"]      }    },    "metrics": [        {            "field": "temperature",            "metrics": ["min", "max", "sum"]        },        {            "field": "voltage",            "metrics": ["avg"]        }    ]}--------------------------------------------------// CONSOLE// TEST[setup:sensor_index]If at a later date, we'd like to determine what jobs and capabilities were stored in the `sensor_rollup` index, we can use the Get RollupIndex API:[source,js]--------------------------------------------------GET /sensor_rollup/_rollup/data--------------------------------------------------// CONSOLE// TEST[continued]Note how we are requesting the concrete rollup index name (`sensor_rollup`) as the first part of the URL.This  will yield the following response:[source,js]----{  "sensor_rollup" : {    "rollup_jobs" : [      {        "job_id" : "sensor",        "rollup_index" : "sensor_rollup",        "index_pattern" : "sensor-*",        "fields" : {          "node" : [            {              "agg" : "terms"            }          ],          "temperature" : [            {              "agg" : "min"            },            {              "agg" : "max"            },            {              "agg" : "sum"            }          ],          "timestamp" : [            {              "agg" : "date_histogram",              "time_zone" : "UTC",              "interval" : "1h",              "delay": "7d"            }          ],          "voltage" : [            {              "agg" : "avg"            }          ]        }      }    ]  }}----// TESTRESPONSEThe response that is returned contains information that is similar to the original Rollup configuration, but formatteddifferently.  First, there are some house-keeping details: the Rollup job's ID, the index that holds the rolled data,the index pattern that the job was targeting.Next it shows a list of fields that contain data eligible for rollup searches.  Here we see four fields: `node`, `temperature`,`timestamp` and `voltage`.  Each of these fields list the aggregations that are possible.  For example, you can use a min, maxor sum aggregation on the `temperature` field, but only a `date_histogram` on `timestamp`.Note that the `rollup_jobs` element is an array; there can be multiple, independent jobs configured for a single indexor index pattern.  Each of these jobs may have different configurations, so the API returns a list of all the variousconfigurations available.Like other APIs that interact with indices, you can specify index patterns instead of explicit indices:[source,js]--------------------------------------------------GET /*_rollup/_rollup/data--------------------------------------------------// CONSOLE// TEST[continued]
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