api-conventions.asciidoc 22 KB

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  1. [[api-conventions]]
  2. = API Conventions
  3. [partintro]
  4. --
  5. The *elasticsearch* REST APIs are exposed using <<modules-http,JSON over HTTP>>.
  6. The conventions listed in this chapter can be applied throughout the REST
  7. API, unless otherwise specified.
  8. * <<multi-index>>
  9. * <<date-math-index-names>>
  10. * <<common-options>>
  11. * <<url-access-control>>
  12. --
  13. [[multi-index]]
  14. == Multiple Indices
  15. Most APIs that refer to an `index` parameter support execution across multiple indices,
  16. using simple `test1,test2,test3` notation (or `_all` for all indices). It also
  17. support wildcards, for example: `test*` or `*test` or `te*t` or `*test*`, and the
  18. ability to "exclude" (`-`), for example: `test*,-test3`.
  19. All multi indices API support the following url query string parameters:
  20. `ignore_unavailable`::
  21. Controls whether to ignore if any specified indices are unavailable, this
  22. includes indices that don't exist or closed indices. Either `true` or `false`
  23. can be specified.
  24. `allow_no_indices`::
  25. Controls whether to fail if a wildcard indices expressions results into no
  26. concrete indices. Either `true` or `false` can be specified. For example if
  27. the wildcard expression `foo*` is specified and no indices are available that
  28. start with `foo` then depending on this setting the request will fail. This
  29. setting is also applicable when `_all`, `*` or no index has been specified. This
  30. settings also applies for aliases, in case an alias points to a closed index.
  31. `expand_wildcards`::
  32. Controls to what kind of concrete indices wildcard indices expression expand
  33. to. If `open` is specified then the wildcard expression is expanded to only
  34. open indices and if `closed` is specified then the wildcard expression is
  35. expanded only to closed indices. Also both values (`open,closed`) can be
  36. specified to expand to all indices.
  37. If `none` is specified then wildcard expansion will be disabled and if `all`
  38. is specified, wildcard expressions will expand to all indices (this is equivalent
  39. to specifying `open,closed`).
  40. The defaults settings for the above parameters depend on the api being used.
  41. NOTE: Single index APIs such as the <<docs>> and the
  42. <<indices-aliases,single-index `alias` APIs>> do not support multiple indices.
  43. [[date-math-index-names]]
  44. == Date math support in index names
  45. Date math index name resolution enables you to search a range of time-series indices, rather
  46. than searching all of your time-series indices and filtering the results or maintaining aliases.
  47. Limiting the number of indices that are searched reduces the load on the cluster and improves
  48. execution performance. For example, if you are searching for errors in your
  49. daily logs, you can use a date math name template to restrict the search to the past
  50. two days.
  51. Almost all APIs that have an `index` parameter, support date math in the `index` parameter
  52. value.
  53. A date math index name takes the following form:
  54. [source,txt]
  55. ----------------------------------------------------------------------
  56. <static_name{date_math_expr{date_format|time_zone}}>
  57. ----------------------------------------------------------------------
  58. Where:
  59. [horizontal]
  60. `static_name`:: is the static text part of the name
  61. `date_math_expr`:: is a dynamic date math expression that computes the date dynamically
  62. `date_format`:: is the optional format in which the computed date should be rendered. Defaults to `YYYY.MM.dd`.
  63. `time_zone`:: is the optional time zone . Defaults to `utc`.
  64. You must enclose date math index name expressions within angle brackets, and
  65. all special characters should be URI encoded. For example:
  66. [source,js]
  67. ----------------------------------------------------------------------
  68. # GET /<logstash-{now/d}>/_search
  69. GET /%3Clogstash-%7Bnow%2Fd%7D%3E/_search
  70. {
  71. "query" : {
  72. "match": {
  73. "test": "data"
  74. }
  75. }
  76. }
  77. ----------------------------------------------------------------------
  78. // CONSOLE
  79. // TEST[s/^/PUT logstash-2016.09.20\n/]
  80. // TEST[s/now/2016.09.20||/]
  81. [NOTE]
  82. .Percent encoding of date math characters
  83. ======================================================
  84. The special characters used for date rounding must be URI encoded as follows:
  85. [horizontal]
  86. `<`:: `%3C`
  87. `>`:: `%3E`
  88. `/`:: `%2F`
  89. `{`:: `%7B`
  90. `}`:: `%7D`
  91. `|`:: `%7C`
  92. `+`:: `%2B`
  93. `:`:: `%3A`
  94. `,`:: `%2C`
  95. ======================================================
  96. The following example shows different forms of date math index names and the final index names
  97. they resolve to given the current time is 22rd March 2024 noon utc.
  98. [options="header"]
  99. |======
  100. | Expression |Resolves to
  101. | `<logstash-{now/d}>` | `logstash-2024.03.22`
  102. | `<logstash-{now/M}>` | `logstash-2024.03.01`
  103. | `<logstash-{now/M{YYYY.MM}}>` | `logstash-2024.03`
  104. | `<logstash-{now/M-1M{YYYY.MM}}>` | `logstash-2024.02`
  105. | `<logstash-{now/d{YYYY.MM.dd\|+12:00}}>` | `logstash-2024.03.23`
  106. |======
  107. To use the characters `{` and `}` in the static part of an index name template, escape them
  108. with a backslash `\`, for example:
  109. * `<elastic\\{ON\\}-{now/M}>` resolves to `elastic{ON}-2024.03.01`
  110. The following example shows a search request that searches the Logstash indices for the past
  111. three days, assuming the indices use the default Logstash index name format,
  112. `logstash-YYYY.MM.dd`.
  113. [source,js]
  114. ----------------------------------------------------------------------
  115. # GET /<logstash-{now/d-2d}>,<logstash-{now/d-1d}>,<logstash-{now/d}>/_search
  116. GET /%3Clogstash-%7Bnow%2Fd-2d%7D%3E%2C%3Clogstash-%7Bnow%2Fd-1d%7D%3E%2C%3Clogstash-%7Bnow%2Fd%7D%3E/_search
  117. {
  118. "query" : {
  119. "match": {
  120. "test": "data"
  121. }
  122. }
  123. }
  124. ----------------------------------------------------------------------
  125. // CONSOLE
  126. // TEST[s/^/PUT logstash-2016.09.20\nPUT logstash-2016.09.19\nPUT logstash-2016.09.18\n/]
  127. // TEST[s/now/2016.09.20||/]
  128. [[common-options]]
  129. == Common options
  130. The following options can be applied to all of the REST APIs.
  131. [float]
  132. === Pretty Results
  133. When appending `?pretty=true` to any request made, the JSON returned
  134. will be pretty formatted (use it for debugging only!). Another option is
  135. to set `?format=yaml` which will cause the result to be returned in the
  136. (sometimes) more readable yaml format.
  137. [float]
  138. === Human readable output
  139. Statistics are returned in a format suitable for humans
  140. (eg `"exists_time": "1h"` or `"size": "1kb"`) and for computers
  141. (eg `"exists_time_in_millis": 3600000` or `"size_in_bytes": 1024`).
  142. The human readable values can be turned off by adding `?human=false`
  143. to the query string. This makes sense when the stats results are
  144. being consumed by a monitoring tool, rather than intended for human
  145. consumption. The default for the `human` flag is
  146. `false`.
  147. [[date-math]]
  148. [float]
  149. === Date Math
  150. Most parameters which accept a formatted date value -- such as `gt` and `lt`
  151. in <<query-dsl-range-query,range queries>> `range` queries, or `from` and `to`
  152. in <<search-aggregations-bucket-daterange-aggregation,`daterange`
  153. aggregations>> -- understand date maths.
  154. The expression starts with an anchor date, which can either be `now`, or a
  155. date string ending with `||`. This anchor date can optionally be followed by
  156. one or more maths expressions:
  157. * `+1h` - add one hour
  158. * `-1d` - subtract one day
  159. * `/d` - round down to the nearest day
  160. The supported time units differ than those supported by <<time-units, time units>> for durations.
  161. The supported units are:
  162. [horizontal]
  163. `y`:: years
  164. `M`:: months
  165. `w`:: weeks
  166. `d`:: days
  167. `h`:: hours
  168. `H`:: hours
  169. `m`:: minutes
  170. `s`:: seconds
  171. Some examples are:
  172. [horizontal]
  173. `now+1h`:: The current time plus one hour, with ms resolution.
  174. `now+1h+1m`:: The current time plus one hour plus one minute, with ms resolution.
  175. `now+1h/d`:: The current time plus one hour, rounded down to the nearest day.
  176. `2015-01-01||+1M/d`:: `2015-01-01` plus one month, rounded down to the nearest day.
  177. [float]
  178. [[common-options-response-filtering]]
  179. === Response Filtering
  180. All REST APIs accept a `filter_path` parameter that can be used to reduce
  181. the response returned by elasticsearch. This parameter takes a comma
  182. separated list of filters expressed with the dot notation:
  183. [source,js]
  184. --------------------------------------------------
  185. GET /_search?q=elasticsearch&filter_path=took,hits.hits._id,hits.hits._score
  186. --------------------------------------------------
  187. // CONSOLE
  188. // TEST[setup:twitter]
  189. Responds:
  190. [source,js]
  191. --------------------------------------------------
  192. {
  193. "took" : 3,
  194. "hits" : {
  195. "hits" : [
  196. {
  197. "_id" : "0",
  198. "_score" : 1.6375021
  199. }
  200. ]
  201. }
  202. }
  203. --------------------------------------------------
  204. // TESTRESPONSE[s/"took" : 3/"took" : $body.took/]
  205. // TESTRESPONSE[s/1.6375021/$body.hits.hits.0._score/]
  206. It also supports the `*` wildcard character to match any field or part
  207. of a field's name:
  208. [source,sh]
  209. --------------------------------------------------
  210. GET /_cluster/state?filter_path=metadata.indices.*.stat*
  211. --------------------------------------------------
  212. // CONSOLE
  213. // TEST[s/^/PUT twitter\n/]
  214. Responds:
  215. [source,sh]
  216. --------------------------------------------------
  217. {
  218. "metadata" : {
  219. "indices" : {
  220. "twitter": {"state": "open"}
  221. }
  222. }
  223. }
  224. --------------------------------------------------
  225. // TESTRESPONSE
  226. And the `**` wildcard can be used to include fields without knowing the
  227. exact path of the field. For example, we can return the Lucene version
  228. of every segment with this request:
  229. [source,js]
  230. --------------------------------------------------
  231. GET /_cluster/state?filter_path=routing_table.indices.**.state
  232. --------------------------------------------------
  233. // CONSOLE
  234. // TEST[s/^/PUT twitter\n/]
  235. Responds:
  236. [source,js]
  237. --------------------------------------------------
  238. {
  239. "routing_table": {
  240. "indices": {
  241. "twitter": {
  242. "shards": {
  243. "0": [{"state": "STARTED"}, {"state": "UNASSIGNED"}],
  244. "1": [{"state": "STARTED"}, {"state": "UNASSIGNED"}],
  245. "2": [{"state": "STARTED"}, {"state": "UNASSIGNED"}],
  246. "3": [{"state": "STARTED"}, {"state": "UNASSIGNED"}],
  247. "4": [{"state": "STARTED"}, {"state": "UNASSIGNED"}]
  248. }
  249. }
  250. }
  251. }
  252. }
  253. --------------------------------------------------
  254. // TESTRESPONSE
  255. It is also possible to exclude one or more fields by prefixing the filter with the char `-`:
  256. [source,js]
  257. --------------------------------------------------
  258. GET /_count?filter_path=-_shards
  259. --------------------------------------------------
  260. // CONSOLE
  261. // TEST[setup:twitter]
  262. Responds:
  263. [source,js]
  264. --------------------------------------------------
  265. {
  266. "count" : 5
  267. }
  268. --------------------------------------------------
  269. // TESTRESPONSE
  270. And for more control, both inclusive and exclusive filters can be combined in the same expression. In
  271. this case, the exclusive filters will be applied first and the result will be filtered again using the
  272. inclusive filters:
  273. [source,js]
  274. --------------------------------------------------
  275. GET /_cluster/state?filter_path=metadata.indices.*.state,-metadata.indices.logstash-*
  276. --------------------------------------------------
  277. // CONSOLE
  278. // TEST[s/^/PUT index-1\nPUT index-2\nPUT index-3\nPUT logstash-2016.01\n/]
  279. Responds:
  280. [source,js]
  281. --------------------------------------------------
  282. {
  283. "metadata" : {
  284. "indices" : {
  285. "index-1" : {"state" : "open"},
  286. "index-2" : {"state" : "open"},
  287. "index-3" : {"state" : "open"}
  288. }
  289. }
  290. }
  291. --------------------------------------------------
  292. // TESTRESPONSE
  293. Note that elasticsearch sometimes returns directly the raw value of a field,
  294. like the `_source` field. If you want to filter `_source` fields, you should
  295. consider combining the already existing `_source` parameter (see
  296. <<get-source-filtering,Get API>> for more details) with the `filter_path`
  297. parameter like this:
  298. [source,js]
  299. --------------------------------------------------
  300. POST /library/book?refresh
  301. {"title": "Book #1", "rating": 200.1}
  302. POST /library/book?refresh
  303. {"title": "Book #2", "rating": 1.7}
  304. POST /library/book?refresh
  305. {"title": "Book #3", "rating": 0.1}
  306. GET /_search?filter_path=hits.hits._source&_source=title&sort=rating:desc
  307. --------------------------------------------------
  308. // CONSOLE
  309. [source,js]
  310. --------------------------------------------------
  311. {
  312. "hits" : {
  313. "hits" : [ {
  314. "_source":{"title":"Book #1"}
  315. }, {
  316. "_source":{"title":"Book #2"}
  317. }, {
  318. "_source":{"title":"Book #3"}
  319. } ]
  320. }
  321. }
  322. --------------------------------------------------
  323. // TESTRESPONSE
  324. [float]
  325. === Flat Settings
  326. The `flat_settings` flag affects rendering of the lists of settings. When
  327. `flat_settings` flag is `true` settings are returned in a flat format:
  328. [source,js]
  329. --------------------------------------------------
  330. GET twitter/_settings?flat_settings=true
  331. --------------------------------------------------
  332. // CONSOLE
  333. // TEST[setup:twitter]
  334. Returns:
  335. [source,js]
  336. --------------------------------------------------
  337. {
  338. "twitter" : {
  339. "settings": {
  340. "index.number_of_replicas": "1",
  341. "index.number_of_shards": "1",
  342. "index.creation_date": "1474389951325",
  343. "index.uuid": "n6gzFZTgS664GUfx0Xrpjw",
  344. "index.version.created": ...,
  345. "index.provided_name" : "twitter"
  346. }
  347. }
  348. }
  349. --------------------------------------------------
  350. // TESTRESPONSE[s/1474389951325/$body.twitter.settings.index\\\\.creation_date/]
  351. // TESTRESPONSE[s/n6gzFZTgS664GUfx0Xrpjw/$body.twitter.settings.index\\\\.uuid/]
  352. // TESTRESPONSE[s/"index.version.created": \.\.\./"index.version.created": $body.twitter.settings.index\\\\.version\\\\.created/]
  353. When the `flat_settings` flag is `false` settings are returned in a more
  354. human readable structured format:
  355. [source,js]
  356. --------------------------------------------------
  357. GET twitter/_settings?flat_settings=false
  358. --------------------------------------------------
  359. // CONSOLE
  360. // TEST[setup:twitter]
  361. Returns:
  362. [source,js]
  363. --------------------------------------------------
  364. {
  365. "twitter" : {
  366. "settings" : {
  367. "index" : {
  368. "number_of_replicas": "1",
  369. "number_of_shards": "1",
  370. "creation_date": "1474389951325",
  371. "uuid": "n6gzFZTgS664GUfx0Xrpjw",
  372. "version": {
  373. "created": ...
  374. },
  375. "provided_name" : "twitter"
  376. }
  377. }
  378. }
  379. }
  380. --------------------------------------------------
  381. // TESTRESPONSE[s/1474389951325/$body.twitter.settings.index.creation_date/]
  382. // TESTRESPONSE[s/n6gzFZTgS664GUfx0Xrpjw/$body.twitter.settings.index.uuid/]
  383. // TESTRESPONSE[s/"created": \.\.\./"created": $body.twitter.settings.index.version.created/]
  384. By default the `flat_settings` is set to `false`.
  385. [float]
  386. === Parameters
  387. Rest parameters (when using HTTP, map to HTTP URL parameters) follow the
  388. convention of using underscore casing.
  389. [float]
  390. === Boolean Values
  391. All REST APIs parameters (both request parameters and JSON body) support
  392. providing boolean "false" as the value `false` and boolean "true" as the
  393. value `true`. All other values will raise an error.
  394. [float]
  395. === Number Values
  396. All REST APIs support providing numbered parameters as `string` on top
  397. of supporting the native JSON number types.
  398. [[time-units]]
  399. [float]
  400. === Time units
  401. Whenever durations need to be specified, e.g. for a `timeout` parameter, the duration must specify
  402. the unit, like `2d` for 2 days. The supported units are:
  403. [horizontal]
  404. `d`:: days
  405. `h`:: hours
  406. `m`:: minutes
  407. `s`:: seconds
  408. `ms`:: milliseconds
  409. `micros`:: microseconds
  410. `nanos`:: nanoseconds
  411. [[byte-units]]
  412. [float]
  413. === Byte size units
  414. Whenever the byte size of data needs to be specified, eg when setting a buffer size
  415. parameter, the value must specify the unit, like `10kb` for 10 kilobytes. Note that
  416. these units use powers of 1024, so `1kb` means 1024 bytes. The supported units are:
  417. [horizontal]
  418. `b`:: Bytes
  419. `kb`:: Kilobytes
  420. `mb`:: Megabytes
  421. `gb`:: Gigabytes
  422. `tb`:: Terabytes
  423. `pb`:: Petabytes
  424. [[size-units]]
  425. [float]
  426. === Unit-less quantities
  427. Unit-less quantities means that they don't have a "unit" like "bytes" or "Hertz" or "meter" or "long tonne".
  428. If one of these quantities is large we'll print it out like 10m for 10,000,000 or 7k for 7,000. We'll still print 87
  429. when we mean 87 though. These are the supported multipliers:
  430. [horizontal]
  431. ``:: Single
  432. `k`:: Kilo
  433. `m`:: Mega
  434. `g`:: Giga
  435. `t`:: Tera
  436. `p`:: Peta
  437. [[distance-units]]
  438. [float]
  439. === Distance Units
  440. Wherever distances need to be specified, such as the `distance` parameter in
  441. the <<query-dsl-geo-distance-query>>), the default unit if none is specified is
  442. the meter. Distances can be specified in other units, such as `"1km"` or
  443. `"2mi"` (2 miles).
  444. The full list of units is listed below:
  445. [horizontal]
  446. Mile:: `mi` or `miles`
  447. Yard:: `yd` or `yards`
  448. Feet:: `ft` or `feet`
  449. Inch:: `in` or `inch`
  450. Kilometer:: `km` or `kilometers`
  451. Meter:: `m` or `meters`
  452. Centimeter:: `cm` or `centimeters`
  453. Millimeter:: `mm` or `millimeters`
  454. Nautical mile:: `NM`, `nmi` or `nauticalmiles`
  455. [[fuzziness]]
  456. [float]
  457. === Fuzziness
  458. Some queries and APIs support parameters to allow inexact _fuzzy_ matching,
  459. using the `fuzziness` parameter.
  460. When querying `text` or `keyword` fields, `fuzziness` is interpreted as a
  461. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Levenshtein_distance[Levenshtein Edit Distance]
  462. -- the number of one character changes that need to be made to one string to
  463. make it the same as another string.
  464. The `fuzziness` parameter can be specified as:
  465. `0`, `1`, `2`::
  466. the maximum allowed Levenshtein Edit Distance (or number of edits)
  467. `AUTO`::
  468. +
  469. --
  470. generates an edit distance based on the length of the term. For lengths:
  471. `0..2`:: must match exactly
  472. `3..5`:: one edit allowed
  473. `>5`:: two edits allowed
  474. `AUTO` should generally be the preferred value for `fuzziness`.
  475. --
  476. [float]
  477. [[common-options-error-options]]
  478. === Enabling stack traces
  479. By default when a request returns an error Elasticsearch doesn't include the
  480. stack trace of the error. You can enable that behavior by setting the
  481. `error_trace` url parameter to `true`. For example, by default when you send an
  482. invalid `size` parameter to the `_search` API:
  483. [source,js]
  484. ----------------------------------------------------------------------
  485. POST /twitter/_search?size=surprise_me
  486. ----------------------------------------------------------------------
  487. // CONSOLE
  488. // TEST[s/surprise_me/surprise_me&error_trace=false/ catch:request]
  489. // Since the test system sends error_trace=true by default we have to override
  490. The response looks like:
  491. [source,js]
  492. ----------------------------------------------------------------------
  493. {
  494. "error" : {
  495. "root_cause" : [
  496. {
  497. "type" : "illegal_argument_exception",
  498. "reason" : "Failed to parse int parameter [size] with value [surprise_me]"
  499. }
  500. ],
  501. "type" : "illegal_argument_exception",
  502. "reason" : "Failed to parse int parameter [size] with value [surprise_me]",
  503. "caused_by" : {
  504. "type" : "number_format_exception",
  505. "reason" : "For input string: \"surprise_me\""
  506. }
  507. },
  508. "status" : 400
  509. }
  510. ----------------------------------------------------------------------
  511. // TESTRESPONSE
  512. But if you set `error_trace=true`:
  513. [source,js]
  514. ----------------------------------------------------------------------
  515. POST /twitter/_search?size=surprise_me&error_trace=true
  516. ----------------------------------------------------------------------
  517. // CONSOLE
  518. // TEST[catch:request]
  519. The response looks like:
  520. [source,js]
  521. ----------------------------------------------------------------------
  522. {
  523. "error": {
  524. "root_cause": [
  525. {
  526. "type": "illegal_argument_exception",
  527. "reason": "Failed to parse int parameter [size] with value [surprise_me]",
  528. "stack_trace": "Failed to parse int parameter [size] with value [surprise_me]]; nested: IllegalArgumentException..."
  529. }
  530. ],
  531. "type": "illegal_argument_exception",
  532. "reason": "Failed to parse int parameter [size] with value [surprise_me]",
  533. "stack_trace": "java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: Failed to parse int parameter [size] with value [surprise_me]\n at org.elasticsearch.rest.RestRequest.paramAsInt(RestRequest.java:175)...",
  534. "caused_by": {
  535. "type": "number_format_exception",
  536. "reason": "For input string: \"surprise_me\"",
  537. "stack_trace": "java.lang.NumberFormatException: For input string: \"surprise_me\"\n at java.lang.NumberFormatException.forInputString(NumberFormatException.java:65)..."
  538. }
  539. },
  540. "status": 400
  541. }
  542. ----------------------------------------------------------------------
  543. // TESTRESPONSE[s/"stack_trace": "Failed to parse int parameter.+\.\.\."/"stack_trace": $body.error.root_cause.0.stack_trace/]
  544. // TESTRESPONSE[s/"stack_trace": "java.lang.IllegalArgum.+\.\.\."/"stack_trace": $body.error.stack_trace/]
  545. // TESTRESPONSE[s/"stack_trace": "java.lang.Number.+\.\.\."/"stack_trace": $body.error.caused_by.stack_trace/]
  546. [float]
  547. === Request body in query string
  548. For libraries that don't accept a request body for non-POST requests,
  549. you can pass the request body as the `source` query string parameter
  550. instead. When using this method, the `source_content_type` parameter
  551. should also be passed with a media type value that indicates the format
  552. of the source, such as `application/json`.
  553. [float]
  554. === Content-Type Requirements
  555. The type of the content sent in a request body must be specified using
  556. the `Content-Type` header. The value of this header must map to one of
  557. the supported formats that the API supports. Most APIs support JSON,
  558. YAML, CBOR, and SMILE. The bulk and multi-search APIs support NDJSON,
  559. JSON and SMILE; other types will result in an error response.
  560. Additionally, when using the `source` query string parameter the
  561. content type must be specified using the `source_content_type` query
  562. string parameter.
  563. [[url-access-control]]
  564. == URL-based access control
  565. Many users use a proxy with URL-based access control to secure access to
  566. Elasticsearch indices. For <<search-multi-search,multi-search>>,
  567. <<docs-multi-get,multi-get>> and <<docs-bulk,bulk>> requests, the user has
  568. the choice of specifying an index in the URL and on each individual request
  569. within the request body. This can make URL-based access control challenging.
  570. To prevent the user from overriding the index which has been specified in the
  571. URL, add this setting to the `elasticsearch.yml` file:
  572. rest.action.multi.allow_explicit_index: false
  573. The default value is `true`, but when set to `false`, Elasticsearch will
  574. reject requests that have an explicit index specified in the request body.