using.asciidoc 8.8 KB

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  1. [[modules-scripting-using]]
  2. === How to use scripts
  3. Wherever scripting is supported in the Elasticsearch API, the syntax follows
  4. the same pattern:
  5. [source,js]
  6. -------------------------------------
  7. "script": {
  8. "lang": "...", <1>
  9. "inline" | "stored" | "file": "...", <2>
  10. "params": { ... } <3>
  11. }
  12. -------------------------------------
  13. <1> The language the script is written in, which defaults to `painless`.
  14. <2> The script itself which may be specified as `inline`, `stored`, or `file`.
  15. <3> Any named parameters that should be passed into the script.
  16. For example, the following script is used in a search request to return a
  17. <<search-request-script-fields, scripted field>>:
  18. [source,js]
  19. -------------------------------------
  20. PUT my_index/my_type/1
  21. {
  22. "my_field": 5
  23. }
  24. GET my_index/_search
  25. {
  26. "script_fields": {
  27. "my_doubled_field": {
  28. "script": {
  29. "lang": "expression",
  30. "inline": "doc['my_field'] * multiplier",
  31. "params": {
  32. "multiplier": 2
  33. }
  34. }
  35. }
  36. }
  37. }
  38. -------------------------------------
  39. // CONSOLE
  40. [float]
  41. === Script Parameters
  42. `lang`::
  43. Specifies the language the script is written in. Defaults to `painless` but
  44. may be set to any of languages listed in <<modules-scripting>>. The
  45. default language may be changed in the `elasticsearch.yml` config file by
  46. setting `script.default_lang` to the appropriate language.
  47. `inline`, `stored`, `file`::
  48. Specifies the source of the script. An `inline` script is specified
  49. `inline` as in the example above, a `stored` script is specified `stored`
  50. and is retrieved from the cluster state (see <<modules-scripting-stored-scripts,Stored Scripts>>),
  51. and a `file` script is retrieved from a file in the `config/scripts`
  52. directory (see <<modules-scripting-file-scripts, File Scripts>>).
  53. +
  54. While languages like `expression` and `painless` can be used out of the box as
  55. inline or stored scripts, other languages can only be
  56. specified as `file` unless you first adjust the default
  57. <<modules-scripting-security,scripting security settings>>.
  58. `params`::
  59. Specifies any named parameters that are passed into the script as
  60. variables.
  61. [IMPORTANT]
  62. [[prefer-params]]
  63. .Prefer parameters
  64. ========================================
  65. The first time Elasticsearch sees a new script, it compiles it and stores the
  66. compiled version in a cache. Compilation can be a heavy process.
  67. If you need to pass variables into the script, you should pass them in as
  68. named `params` instead of hard-coding values into the script itself. For
  69. example, if you want to be able to multiply a field value by different
  70. multipliers, don't hard-code the multiplier into the script:
  71. [source,js]
  72. ----------------------
  73. "inline": "doc['my_field'] * 2"
  74. ----------------------
  75. Instead, pass it in as a named parameter:
  76. [source,js]
  77. ----------------------
  78. "inline": "doc['my_field'] * multiplier",
  79. "params": {
  80. "multiplier": 2
  81. }
  82. ----------------------
  83. The first version has to be recompiled every time the multiplier changes. The
  84. second version is only compiled once.
  85. If you compile too many unique scripts within a small amount of time,
  86. Elasticsearch will reject the new dynamic scripts with a
  87. `circuit_breaking_exception` error. By default, up to 15 inline scripts per
  88. minute will be compiled. You can change this setting dynamically by setting
  89. `script.max_compilations_per_minute`.
  90. ========================================
  91. [float]
  92. [[modules-scripting-file-scripts]]
  93. === File-based Scripts
  94. To increase security, non-sandboxed languages can only be specified in script
  95. files stored on every node in the cluster. File scripts must be saved in the
  96. `scripts` directory whose default location depends on whether you use the
  97. <<zip-targz-layout,`zip`/`tar.gz`>> (`$ES_HOME/config/scripts/`),
  98. <<rpm-layout,RPM>>, or <<deb-layout,Debian>> package. The default may be
  99. changed with the `path.scripts` setting.
  100. The languages which are assumed to be safe by default are: `painless`,
  101. `expression`, and `mustache` (used for search and query templates).
  102. Any files placed in the `scripts` directory will be compiled automatically
  103. when the node starts up and then <<reload-scripts,every 60 seconds thereafter>>.
  104. The file should be named as follows: `{script-name}.{lang}`. For instance,
  105. the following example creates a Groovy script called `calculate-score`:
  106. [source,sh]
  107. --------------------------------------------------
  108. cat "Math.log(_score * 2) + my_modifier" > config/scripts/calculate-score.painless
  109. --------------------------------------------------
  110. This script can be used as follows:
  111. [source,js]
  112. --------------------------------------------------
  113. GET my_index/_search
  114. {
  115. "query": {
  116. "script": {
  117. "script": {
  118. "lang": "painless", <1>
  119. "file": "calculate-score", <2>
  120. "params": {
  121. "my_modifier": 2
  122. }
  123. }
  124. }
  125. }
  126. }
  127. --------------------------------------------------
  128. <1> The language of the script, which should correspond with the script file suffix.
  129. <2> The name of the script, which should be the name of the file.
  130. The `script` directory may contain sub-directories, in which case the
  131. hierarchy of directories is flattened and concatenated with underscores. A
  132. script in `group1/group2/my_script.painless` should use `group1_group2_myscript`
  133. as the `file` name.
  134. [[reload-scripts]]
  135. [float]
  136. ==== Automatic script reloading
  137. The `scripts` directory will be rescanned every `60s` (configurable with the
  138. `resource.reload.interval` setting) and new, changed, or removed scripts will
  139. be compiled, updated, or deleted from the script cache.
  140. Script reloading can be completely disabled by setting
  141. `script.auto_reload_enabled` to `false`.
  142. [float]
  143. [[modules-scripting-stored-scripts]]
  144. === Stored Scripts
  145. Scripts may be stored in and retrieved from the cluster state using the
  146. `_scripts` end-point.
  147. ==== Deprecated Namespace
  148. The namespace for stored scripts using both `lang` and `id` as a unique
  149. identifier has been deprecated. The new namespace for stored scripts will
  150. only use `id`. Stored scripts with the same `id`, but different `lang`'s
  151. will no longer be allowed in 6.0. To comply with the new namespace for
  152. stored scripts, existing stored scripts should be deleted and put again.
  153. Any scripts that share an `id` but have different `lang`s will need to
  154. be re-named. For example, take the following:
  155. "id": "example", "lang": "painless"
  156. "id": "example", "lang": "expressions"
  157. The above scripts will conflict under the new namespace since the id's are
  158. the same. At least one will have to be re-named to comply with the new
  159. namespace of only `id`.
  160. As a final caveat, stored search templates and stored scripts share
  161. the same namespace, so if a search template has the same `id` as a
  162. stored script, one of the two will have to be re-named as well using
  163. delete and put requests.
  164. ==== Request Examples
  165. The following are examples of stored script requests:
  166. [source,js]
  167. -----------------------------------
  168. /_scripts/{id} <1>
  169. -----------------------------------
  170. <1> The `id` is a unique identifier for the stored script.
  171. This example stores a Painless script called `calculate-score` in the cluster
  172. state:
  173. [source,js]
  174. -----------------------------------
  175. POST _scripts/calculate-score
  176. {
  177. "script": {
  178. "lang": "painless",
  179. "code": "Math.log(_score * 2) + params.my_modifier"
  180. }
  181. }
  182. -----------------------------------
  183. // CONSOLE
  184. This same script can be retrieved with:
  185. [source,js]
  186. -----------------------------------
  187. GET _scripts/calculate-score
  188. -----------------------------------
  189. // CONSOLE
  190. // TEST[continued]
  191. Stored scripts can be used by specifying the `stored` parameters as follows:
  192. [source,js]
  193. --------------------------------------------------
  194. GET _search
  195. {
  196. "query": {
  197. "script": {
  198. "script": {
  199. "stored": "calculate-score",
  200. "params": {
  201. "my_modifier": 2
  202. }
  203. }
  204. }
  205. }
  206. }
  207. --------------------------------------------------
  208. // CONSOLE
  209. // TEST[continued]
  210. And deleted with:
  211. [source,js]
  212. -----------------------------------
  213. DELETE _scripts/calculate-score
  214. -----------------------------------
  215. // CONSOLE
  216. // TEST[continued]
  217. [float]
  218. [[modules-scripting-using-caching]]
  219. === Script Caching
  220. All scripts are cached by default so that they only need to be recompiled
  221. when updates occur. File scripts keep a static cache and will always reside
  222. in memory. Both inline and stored scripts are stored in a cache that can evict
  223. residing scripts. By default, scripts do not have a time-based expiration, but
  224. you can change this behavior by using the `script.cache.expire` setting.
  225. You can configure the size of this cache by using the `script.cache.max_size` setting.
  226. By default, the cache size is `100`.
  227. NOTE: The size of stored scripts is limited to 65,535 bytes. This can be
  228. changed by setting `script.max_size_in_bytes` setting to increase that soft
  229. limit, but if scripts are really large then alternatives like
  230. <<modules-scripting-native,native>> scripts should be considered instead.