This changes the parameter name `ignore_like` to the more user friendly name
`unlike`. This later feature generates a query from the terms in `A` but not
from the terms in `B`. This translates to a result set which is like `A` but
unlike `B`. We could have further negatively boosted any documents that have
some `B`, but these documents already do not receive any contribution from
having `B`, and would therefore negatively compete with documents having `A`.
Closes#11117
* Cut the `has_child` and `has_parent` queries over to use Lucene's query time global ordinal join. The main benefit of this change is that parent/child queries can now efficiently execute if parent/child queries are wrapped in a bigger boolean query. If the rest of the query only hit a few documents both has_child and has_parent queries don't need to evaluate all parent or child documents any more.
* Cut the `_parent` field over to use doc values. This significantly reduces the on heap memory footprint of parent/child, because the parent id values are never loaded into memory.
Breaking changes:
* The `type` option on the `_parent` field can only point to a parent type that doesn't exist yet, so this means that an existing type/mapping can't become a parent type any longer.
* The `has_child` and `has_parent` queries can no longer be use in alias filters.
All these changes, improvements and breaks in compatibility only apply for indices created with ES version 2.0 or higher. For indices creates with ES <= 2.0 the older implementation is used.
It is highly recommended to re-index all your indices with parent and child documents to benefit from all the improvements that come with this refactoring. The easiest way to achieve this is by using the scan and bulk apis using a simple script.
Closes#6107Closes#8134
This change unifies the way scripts and templates are specified for all instances in the codebase. It builds on the Script class added previously and adds request building and parsing support as well as the ability to transfer script objects between nodes. It also adds a Template class which aims to provide the same functionality for template APIs
Closes#11091
These clauses filter the document space without affecting scoring and map to
Lucene's BooleanClause.Occur.FILTER. The `filtered` query is now deprecated and
```json
{
"filtered": {
"query": { //query },
"filter": { //filter }
}
}
```
should be replaced with
```json
{
"bool": {
"must": { //query },
"filter": { //filter }
}
}
```
Meta fields were locked down to not allow exotic options to the
underlying field types in #8143. This change fixes the docs
to no longer refer to the old settings.
closes#10879
This commit makes queries and filters parsed the same way using the
QueryParser abstraction. This allowed to remove duplicate code that we had
for similar queries/filters such as `range`, `prefix` or `term`.
This removes Elasticsearch's filter cache and uses Lucene's instead. It has some
implications:
- custom cache keys (`_cache_key`) are unsupported
- decisions are made internally and can't be overridden by users ('_cache`)
- not only filters can be cached but also all queries that do not need scores
- parent/child queries can now be cached, however cached entries are only
valid for the current top-level reader so in practice it will likely only
be used on read-only indices
- the cache deduplicates filters, which plays nicer with large keys (eg. `terms`)
- better stats: we already had ram usage and evictions, but now also hit count,
miss count, lookup count, number of cached doc id sets and current number of
doc id sets in the cache
- dynamically changing the filter cache size is not supported anymore
Internally, an important change is that it removes the NoCacheFilter infrastructure
in favour of making Query.rewrite specializing the query for the current reader so
that it will only be cached on this reader (look for IndexCacheableQuery).
Note that consuming filters with the query API (createWeight/scorer) instead of
the filter API (getDocIdSet) is important for parent/child queries because
otherwise a QueryWrapperFilter(ParentQuery) would run the wrapped query per
segment while relations might be cross segments.
Expose new span queries from https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/LUCENE-6083
Within returns matches from 'little' that are enclosed inside of a match from 'big'.
Containing returns matches from 'big' that enclose matches from 'little'.
field_value_factor now takes a default that is used if the document doesn't
have a value for that field. It looks like:
"field_value_factor": {
"field": "popularity",
"missing": 1
}
Closes#10841
Hi there. I've been experimenting with the search templates recently and I'm a bit confused. Shouldn't the Mustache tags be written like `{{tagname}}` instead of `{tagname}`? Your using `{{...}}` [here](http://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/search-template.html) BTW.
Using the first example in that page seems to indicate that something's wrong, or am I missing something?
```
$ curl 'localhost:9200/test/_search' -d '{"query":{"template":{"query":{"match":{"text":"{keywords}"}},"params":{"keywords":"value1_foo"}}}}'
{"took":1,"timed_out":false,"_shards":{"total":1,"successful":1,"failed":0},"hits":{"total":0,"max_score":null,"hits":[]}}
$ curl 'localhost:9200/test/_search' -d '{"query":{"template":{"query":{"match":{"text":"{{keywords}}"}},"params":{"keywords":"value1_foo"}}}}'
{"took":1,"timed_out":false,"_shards":{"total":1,"successful":1,"failed":0},"hits":{"total":1,"max_score":1.0,"hits":[{"_index":"test","_type":"testtype","_id":"1","_score":1.0,"_source":{"text":"value1_foo"}}]}}
```
In Lucene 5.1 lots of filters got deprecated in favour of equivalent queries.
Additionally, random-access to filters is now replaced with approximations on
scorers. This commit
- replaces the deprecated NumericRangeFilter, PrefixFilter, TermFilter and
TermsFilter with NumericRangeQuery, PrefixQuery, TermQuery and TermsQuery,
wrapped in a QueryWrapperFilter
- replaces XBooleanFilter, AndFilter and OrFilter with a BooleanQuery in a
QueryWrapperFilter
- removes DocIdSets.isBroken: the new two-phase iteration API will now help
execute slow filters efficiently
- replaces FilterCachingPolicy with QueryCachingPolicy
Close#8960
This adds a new feature to the Term Vectors API which allows for filtering of
terms based on their tf-idf scores. With `dfs` option on, this could be useful
for finding out a good characteric vector of a document or a set of documents.
The parameters are similar to the ones used in the MLT Query.
Closes#9561
This is really a Collector instead of a filter. This commit deprecates the
`limit` filter, makes it a no-op and recommends to use the `terminate_after`
parameter instead that we introduced in the meantime.
Relates to #10154 and #10150
Adds link to additional information on how document frequencies are treated across shards to the cutoff_frequency parameter documentation.
Closes#10451
The analysis chain should be used instead of relying on this, as it is
confusing when dealing with different per-field analysers.
The `locale` option was only used for `lowercase_expanded_terms`, which,
once removed, is no longer needed, so it was removed as well.
Fixes#9978
Relates to #9973
Double negatives are confusing, but a triple negative (1 no, 2 non, 3 null)? It takes five minutes to understand this little sentence. Cleaned that up a bit.
Closes#9789
This is our only cache which is not 'exact' and might allow for stalled results.
Additionally, a similar cache that we have and needs to perform lookups in other
indices in order to run queries is the script index, and for this index we rely
on the filesystem cache, so we should probably do the same with terms filters
lookups.
Close#9056