================================
Returns information and statistics on terms in the fields of a particular document as stored in the index.
curl -XGET 'http://localhost:9200/twitter/tweet/1/_termvector?pretty=true'
Tree types of values can be requested: term information, term statistics and field statistics.
By default, all term information and field statistics are returned for all fields but no term statistics.
Optionally, you can specify the fields for which the information is retrieved either with a parameter in the url
curl -XGET 'http://localhost:9200/twitter/tweet/1/_termvector?fields=text,...'
or adding by adding the requested fields in the request body (see example below).
Term information
-------------------------
- term frequency in the field (always returned)
- term positions ("positions" : true)
- start and end offsets ("offsets" : true)
- term payloads ("payloads" : true), as base64 encoded bytes
If the requested information wasn't stored in the index, it will be omitted without further warning.
See [mapping](http://www.elasticsearch.org/guide/reference/mapping/core-types/) on how to configure your index to store term vectors.
Term statistics
-------------------------
Setting "term_statistics" to "true" (default is "false") will return
- total term frequency (how often a term occurs in all documents)
- document frequency (the number of documents containing the current term)
By default these values are not returned since term statistics can have a serious performance impact.
Field statistics
-------------------------
Setting "field_statistics" to "false" (default is "true") will omit
- document count (how many documents contain this field)
- sum of document frequencies (the sum of document frequencies for all terms in this field)
- sum of total term frequencies (the sum of total term frequencies of each term in this field)
Behavior
-------------------------
The term and field statistics are not accurate. Deleted documents are not taken into account. The information is only retrieved for the shard the requested document resides in. The term and field statistics are therefore only useful as relative measures whereas the absolute numbers have no meaning in this context.
Example
-------------------------
First, we create an index that stores term vectors, payloads etc. :
curl -s -XPUT 'http://localhost:9200/twitter/' -d '{
"mappings": {
"tweet": {
"properties": {
"text": {
"type": "string",
"term_vector": "with_positions_offsets_payloads",
"store" : "yes",
"index_analyzer" : "fulltext_analyzer"
},
"fullname": {
"type": "string",
"term_vector": "with_positions_offsets_payloads",
"index_analyzer" : "fulltext_analyzer"
}
}
}
},
"settings" : {
"index" : {
"number_of_shards" : 1,
"number_of_replicas" : 0
},
"analysis": {
"analyzer": {
"fulltext_analyzer": {
"type": "custom",
"tokenizer": "whitespace",
"filter": [
"lowercase",
"type_as_payload"
]
}
}
}
}
}'
Second, we add some documents:
curl -XPUT 'http://localhost:9200/twitter/tweet/1?pretty=true' -d '{
"fullname" : "John Doe",
"text" : "twitter test test test "
}'
curl -XPUT 'http://localhost:9200/twitter/tweet/2?pretty=true' -d '{
"fullname" : "Jane Doe",
"text" : "Another twitter test ..."
}'
The following request returns all information and statistics for field "text" in document "1" (John Doe):
curl -XGET 'http://localhost:9200/twitter/tweet/1/_termvector?pretty=true' -d '{
"fields" : ["text"],
"offsets" : true,
"payloads" : true,
"positions" : true,
"term_statistics" : true,
"field_statistics" : true
}'
Equivalently, all parameters can be passed as URI parameters:
curl -GET 'http://localhost:9200/twitter/tweet/1/_termvector?pretty=true&fields=text&offsets=true&payloads=true&positions=true&term_statistics=true&field_statistics=true'
Response:
{
"_index" : "twitter",
"_type" : "tweet",
"_id" : "1",
"_version" : 1,
"exists" : true,
"term_vectors" : {
"text" : {
"field_statistics" : {
"sum_doc_freq" : 6,
"doc_count" : 2,
"sum_ttf" : 8
},
"terms" : {
"test" : {
"doc_freq" : 2,
"ttf" : 4,
"term_freq" : 3,
"pos" : [ 1, 2, 3 ],
"start" : [ 8, 13, 18 ],
"end" : [ 12, 17, 22 ],
"payload" : [ "d29yZA==", "d29yZA==", "d29yZA==" ]
},
"twitter" : {
"doc_freq" : 2,
"ttf" : 2,
"term_freq" : 1,
"pos" : [ 0 ],
"start" : [ 0 ],
"end" : [ 7 ],
"payload" : [ "d29yZA==" ]
}
}
}
}
}
Further changes:
-------------------------
XContentBuilder
new method
public XContentBuilder field(XContentBuilderString name, int offset, int length, int... value)
to put an integer array.
IndicesAnalysisService
make token filter for saving payloads available in elasticsearch
AbstractFieldMapper/TypeParser
make term vector options string available and also fix the parsing of this string:
with_positions_payloads is actually allowed as can be seen in TermVectorsConsumerPerFields.
Closes#3114
Added indices aliases exists api that allows to check to existence of an index alias. This api redirects to the master to check for the existence of one or multiple index aliases.
Possible options:
* `index` - The index name to check index aliases for. Partially names are supported via wildcards, also multiple index names can be specified separated with a comma. Also the alias name for an index can be used.
* `alias` - The name of alias to check the existence for. Like the index option, this option supports wildcards and the option the specify multiple alias names separated by a comma. This is a required option.
* `ignore_indices` - What to do is an specified index name doesn't exist. If set to `missing` then those indices are ignored.
The rest head endpoint is: `/{index}/_alias/{alias}`
Examples:
Check existence for any aliases with the name 2013 in any index:
```
curl -XHEAD 'localhost:9200/_alias/2013
```
Check existence for any aliases that start with 2013_01 in any index
```
curl -XHEAD 'localhost:9200/_alias/2013_01*
```
Check existence for any aliases in the users index.
```
curl -XHEAD 'localhost:9200/users/_alias/*
```
Closes#3100
Added apis to get specific index aliases based on filtering by alias name and index name:
```
curl -XGET 'localhost:9200/{index_or_alias}/_alias/{alias_name}'
```
Added delete index alias api for deleting a single index alias:
```
curl -XDELETE 'localhost:9200/{index}/_alias/{alias_name}'
```
Added create index alias api for adding a single index alias:
```
curl -XPUT 'localhost:9200/{index}/_alias/{alias_name}'
curl -XPUT 'localhost:9200/{index}/_alias/{alias_name}' -d '{
"routing" : {routing},
"filter" : {filter}
}'
```
Closes#3075#3076#3077
The REST Suggester API binds the 'Suggest API' to the REST Layer directly. Hence there is no need to touch the query layer for requesting suggestions.
This API extracts the Phrase Suggester API and makes 'suggestion request' top-level objects in suggestion requests. The complete API can be found in the
underlying ["Suggest Feature API"](http://www.elasticsearch.org/guide/reference/api/search/suggest.html).
# API Example
The following examples show how Suggest Actions work on the REST layer. According to this a simple request and its response will be shown.
## Suggestion Request
```json
curl -XPOST 'localhost:9200/_suggest?pretty=true' -d '{
"text" : "Xor the Got-Jewel",
"simple_phrase" : {
"phrase" : {
"analyzer" : "bigram",
"field" : "bigram",
"size" : 1,
"real_word_error_likelihood" : 0.95,
"max_errors" : 0.5,
"gram_size" : 2
}
}
}'
```
This example shows how to query a suggestion for the global text 'Xor the Got-Jewel'. A 'simple phrase' suggestion is requested and
a 'direct generator' is configured to generate the candidates.
## Suggestion Response
On success the request above will reply with a response like the following:
```json
{
"simple_phrase" : [ {
"text" : "Xor the Got-Jewel",
"offset" : 0,
"length" : 17,
"options" : [ {
"text" : "xorr the the got got jewel",
"score" : 3.5283546E-4
} ]
} ]
}
```
The 'suggest'-response contains a single 'simple phrase' which contains an 'option' in turn. This option represents a suggestion of the
queried text. It contains the corrected text and a score indicating the probability of this option to be meant.
Closes#2774
The types exists api checks whether one or more types exists in one or more indices.
## Example usage
curl -XHEAD 'localhost:9200/twitter/tweet'
## Options
* `index` - One or more indices. Either specified as query string parameter or in the uri path.
* `type` - One or more types. Either specified as query string parameter or in the uri path.
* `ignore_missing` - Determines what type of indices to exclude from a request. The option can have the following values: `none` or `missing`.
Closes#2273