[[analysis-keyword-analyzer]] === Keyword Analyzer The `keyword` analyzer is a ``noop'' analyzer which returns the entire input string as a single token. [float] === Example output [source,js] --------------------------- POST _analyze { "analyzer": "keyword", "text": "The 2 QUICK Brown-Foxes jumped over the lazy dog's bone." } --------------------------- // CONSOLE ///////////////////// [source,js] ---------------------------- { "tokens": [ { "token": "The 2 QUICK Brown-Foxes jumped over the lazy dog's bone.", "start_offset": 0, "end_offset": 56, "type": "word", "position": 0 } ] } ---------------------------- // TESTRESPONSE ///////////////////// The above sentence would produce the following single term: [source,text] --------------------------- [ The 2 QUICK Brown-Foxes jumped over the lazy dog's bone. ] --------------------------- [float] === Configuration The `keyword` analyzer is not configurable. [float] === Definition The `keyword` analyzer consists of: Tokenizer:: * <> If you need to customize the `keyword` analyzer then you need to recreate it as a `custom` analyzer and modify it, usually by adding token filters. Usually, you should prefer the <> when you want strings that are not split into tokens, but just in case you need it, this would recreate the built-in `keyword` analyzer and you can use it as a starting point for further customization: [source,js] ---------------------------------------------------- PUT /keyword_example?include_type_name=true { "settings": { "analysis": { "analyzer": { "rebuilt_keyword": { "tokenizer": "keyword", "filter": [ <1> ] } } } } } ---------------------------------------------------- // CONSOLE // TEST[s/\n$/\nstartyaml\n - compare_analyzers: {index: keyword_example, first: keyword, second: rebuilt_keyword}\nendyaml\n/] <1> You'd add any token filters here.