OpenSearch/docs/reference/index-modules/codec.asciidoc

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[[index-modules-codec]]
== Codec module
Codecs define how documents are written to disk and read from disk. The
postings format is the part of the codec that responsible for reading
and writing the term dictionary, postings lists and positions, payloads
and offsets stored in the postings list.
Configuring custom postings formats is an expert feature and most likely
using the builtin postings formats will suite your needs as is described
in the <<mapping-core-types,mapping section>>
[float]
[[custom-postings]]
=== Configuring a custom postings format
Custom postings format can be defined in the index settings in the
`codec` part. The `codec` part can be configured when creating an index
or updating index settings. An example on how to define your custom
postings format:
[source,js]
--------------------------------------------------
curl -XPUT 'http://localhost:9200/twitter/' -d '{
"settings" : {
"index" : {
"codec" : {
"postings_format" : {
"my_format" : {
"type" : "pulsing",
"freq_cut_off" : "5"
}
}
}
}
}
}'
--------------------------------------------------
Then we defining your mapping your can use the `my_format` name in the
`postings_format` option as the example below illustrates:
[source,js]
--------------------------------------------------
{
"person" : {
"properties" : {
"second_person_id" : {"type" : "string", "postings_format" : "my_format"}
}
}
}
--------------------------------------------------
[float]
=== Available postings formats
[float]
[[direct-postings]]
==== Direct postings format
Wraps the default postings format for on-disk storage, but then at read
time loads and stores all terms & postings directly in RAM. This
postings format makes no effort to compress the terms and posting list
and therefore is memory intensive, but because of this it gives a
substantial increase in search performance. Because this holds all term
bytes as a single byte[], you cannot have more than 2.1GB worth of terms
in a single segment.
This postings format offers the following parameters:
`min_skip_count`::
The minimum number terms with a shared prefix to
allow a skip pointer to be written. The default is *8*.
`low_freq_cutoff`::
Terms with a lower document frequency use a
single array object representation for postings and positions. The
default is *32*.
Type name: `direct`
[float]
[[memory-postings]]
==== Memory postings format
A postings format that stores terms & postings (docs, positions,
payloads) in RAM, using an FST. This postings format does write to disk,
but loads everything into memory. The memory postings format has the
following options:
`pack_fst`::
A boolean option that defines if the in memory structure
should be packed once its build. Packed will reduce the size for the
data-structure in memory but requires more memory during building.
Default is *false*.
`acceptable_overhead_ratio`::
The compression ratio specified as a
float, that is used to compress internal structures. Example ratios `0`
(Compact, no memory overhead at all, but the returned implementation may
be slow), `0.5` (Fast, at most 50% memory overhead, always select a
reasonably fast implementation), `7` (Fastest, at most 700% memory
overhead, no compression). Default is `0.2`.
Type name: `memory`
[float]
[[bloom-postings]]
==== Bloom filter posting format
The bloom filter postings format wraps a delegate postings format and on
top of this creates a bloom filter that is written to disk. During
opening this bloom filter is loaded into memory and used to offer
"fast-fail" reads. This postings format is useful for low doc-frequency
fields such as primary keys. The bloom filter postings format has the
following options:
`delegate`::
The name of the configured postings format that the
bloom filter postings format will wrap.
`fpp`::
The desired false positive probability specified as a
floating point number between 0 and 1.0. The `fpp` can be configured for
multiple expected insertions. Example expression: *10k=0.01,1m=0.03*. If
number docs per index segment is larger than *1m* then use *0.03* as fpp
and if number of docs per segment is larger than *10k* use *0.01* as
fpp. The last fallback value is always *0.03*. This example expression
is also the default.
Type name: `bloom`
[float]
[[pulsing-postings]]
==== Pulsing postings format
The pulsing implementation in-lines the posting lists for very low
frequent terms in the term dictionary. This is useful to improve lookup
performance for low-frequent terms. This postings format offers the
following parameters:
`min_block_size`::
The minimum block size the default Lucene term
dictionary uses to encode on-disk blocks. Defaults to *25*.
`max_block_size`::
The maximum block size the default Lucene term
dictionary uses to encode on-disk blocks. Defaults to *48*.
`freq_cut_off`::
The document frequency cut off where pulsing
in-lines posting lists into the term dictionary. Terms with a document
frequency less or equal to the cutoff will be in-lined. The default is
*1*.
Type name: `pulsing`
[float]
[[default-postings]]
==== Default postings format
The default postings format has the following options:
`min_block_size`::
The minimum block size the default Lucene term
dictionary uses to encode on-disk blocks. Defaults to *25*.
`max_block_size`::
The maximum block size the default Lucene term
dictionary uses to encode on-disk blocks. Defaults to *48*.
Type name: `default`