[[mapping-parent-field]]
=== `_parent` field

A parent-child relationship can be established between documents in the same
index by making one mapping type the parent of another:

[source,js]
--------------------------------------------------
PUT my_index
{
  "mappings": {
    "my_parent": {},
    "my_child": {
      "_parent": {
        "type": "my_parent" <1>
      }
    }
  }
}

PUT my_index/my_parent/1 <2>
{
  "text": "This is a parent document"
}

PUT my_index/my_child/2?parent=1 <3>
{
  "text": "This is a child document"
}

PUT my_index/my_child/3?parent=1 <3>
{
  "text": "This is another child document"
}

GET my_index/my_parent/_search
{
  "query": {
    "has_child": { <4>
      "type": "my_child",
      "query": {
        "match": {
          "text": "child document"
        }
      }
    }
  }
}
--------------------------------------------------
// AUTOSENSE
<1> The `my_parent` type is parent to the `my_child` type.
<2> Index a parent document.
<3> Index two child documents, specifying the parent document's ID.
<4> Find all parent documents that have children which match the query.


See the <<query-dsl-has-child-query,`has_child`>> and
<<query-dsl-has-parent-query,`has_parent`>> queries,
the <<search-aggregations-bucket-children-aggregation,`children`>> aggregation,
and <<parent-child-inner-hits,inner hits>> for more information.

The value of the `_parent` field is accessible in queries, aggregations, scripts,
and when sorting:

[source,js]
--------------------------
GET my_index/_search
{
  "query": {
    "terms": {
      "_parent": [ "1" ] <1>
    }
  },
  "aggs": {
    "parents": {
      "terms": {
        "field": "_parent", <2>
        "size": 10
      }
    }
  },
  "sort": [
    {
      "_parent": { <3>
        "order": "desc"
      }
    }
  ],
  "script_fields": {
    "parent": {
      "script": "doc['_parent']" <4>
    }
  }
}
--------------------------
// AUTOSENSE

<1> Querying on the `_parent` field (also see the <<query-dsl-has-parent-query,`has_parent` query>> and the <<query-dsl-has-child-query,`has_child` query>>)
<2> Aggregating on the `_parent` field (also see the <<search-aggregations-bucket-children-aggregation,`children`>> aggregation)
<3> Sorting on the `_parent` field
<4> Accessing the `_parent` field in scripts (inline scripts must be <<enable-dynamic-scripting,enabled>> for this example to work)


==== Parent-child restrictions

* The parent and child types must be different -- parent-child relationships
  cannot be established between documents of the same type.

* The `_parent.type` setting can only point to a type that doesn't exist yet.
  This means that a type cannot become a parent type after it is has been
  created.

* Parent and child documents must be indexed on the same shard.  The `parent`
  ID is used as the <<mapping-routing-field,routing>> value for the child,
  to ensure that the child is indexed on the same shard as the parent.
  This means that the same `parent` value needs to be provided when
  <<docs-get,getting>>, <<docs-delete,deleting>>, or <<docs-update,updating>>
  a child document.

==== Global ordinals

Parent-child uses <<global-ordinals,global ordinals>> to speed up joins.
Global ordinals need to be rebuilt after any change to a shard. The more
parent id values are stored in a shard, the longer it takes to rebuild the
global ordinals for the `_parent` field.

Global ordinals, by default, are built lazily: the first parent-child query or
aggregation after a refresh will trigger building of global ordinals. This can
introduce a significant latency spike for your users. You can use
<<global-ordinals,eager_global_ordinals>> to shift the cost of building global
ordinals from query time to refresh time, by mapping the `_parent` field as follows:

[source,js]
--------------------------------------------------
PUT my_index
{
  "mappings": {
    "my_parent": {},
    "my_child": {
      "_parent": {
        "type": "my_parent",
        "eager_global_ordinals": true
      }
    }
  }
}
--------------------------------------------------
// AUTOSENSE

The amount of heap used by global ordinals can be checked as follows:

[source,sh]
--------------------------------------------------
# Per-index
GET _stats/fielddata?human&fields=_parent

# Per-node per-index
GET _nodes/stats/indices/fielddata?human&fields=_parent
--------------------------------------------------
// AUTOSENSE