[[analysis-pathhierarchy-tokenizer]] === Path Hierarchy Tokenizer The `path_hierarchy` tokenizer takes a hierarchical value like a filesystem path, splits on the path separator, and emits a term for each component in the tree. [float] === Example output [source,js] --------------------------- POST _analyze { "tokenizer": "path_hierarchy", "text": "/one/two/three" } --------------------------- // CONSOLE ///////////////////// [source,js] ---------------------------- { "tokens": [ { "token": "/one", "start_offset": 0, "end_offset": 4, "type": "word", "position": 0 }, { "token": "/one/two", "start_offset": 0, "end_offset": 8, "type": "word", "position": 0 }, { "token": "/one/two/three", "start_offset": 0, "end_offset": 14, "type": "word", "position": 0 } ] } ---------------------------- // TESTRESPONSE ///////////////////// The above text would produce the following terms: [source,text] --------------------------- [ /one, /one/two, /one/two/three ] --------------------------- [float] === Configuration The `path_hierarchy` tokenizer accepts the following parameters: [horizontal] `delimiter`:: The character to use as the path separator. Defaults to `/`. `replacement`:: An optional replacement character to use for the delimiter. Defaults to the `delimiter`. `buffer_size`:: The number of characters read into the term buffer in a single pass. Defaults to `1024`. The term buffer will grow by this size until all the text has been consumed. It is advisable not to change this setting. `reverse`:: If set to `true`, emits the tokens in reverse order. Defaults to `false`. `skip`:: The number of initial tokens to skip. Defaults to `0`. [float] === Example configuration In this example, we configure the `path_hierarchy` tokenizer to split on `-` characters, and to replace them with `/`. The first two tokens are skipped: [source,js] ---------------------------- PUT my_index { "settings": { "analysis": { "analyzer": { "my_analyzer": { "tokenizer": "my_tokenizer" } }, "tokenizer": { "my_tokenizer": { "type": "path_hierarchy", "delimiter": "-", "replacement": "/", "skip": 2 } } } } } POST my_index/_analyze { "analyzer": "my_analyzer", "text": "one-two-three-four-five" } ---------------------------- // CONSOLE ///////////////////// [source,js] ---------------------------- { "tokens": [ { "token": "/three", "start_offset": 7, "end_offset": 13, "type": "word", "position": 0 }, { "token": "/three/four", "start_offset": 7, "end_offset": 18, "type": "word", "position": 0 }, { "token": "/three/four/five", "start_offset": 7, "end_offset": 23, "type": "word", "position": 0 } ] } ---------------------------- // TESTRESPONSE ///////////////////// The above example produces the following terms: [source,text] --------------------------- [ /three, /three/four, /three/four/five ] --------------------------- If we were to set `reverse` to `true`, it would produce the following: [source,text] --------------------------- [ one/two/three/, two/three/, three/ ] --------------------------- [float] === Detailed Examples See <>.