[[ignore-above]] === `ignore_above` Strings longer than the `ignore_above` setting will not be indexed or stored. For arrays of strings, `ignore_above` will be applied for each array element separately and string elements longer than `ignore_above` will not be indexed or stored. NOTE: All strings/array elements will still be present in the `_source` field, if the latter is enabled which is the default in Elasticsearch. [source,js] -------------------------------------------------- PUT my_index?include_type_name=true { "mappings": { "_doc": { "properties": { "message": { "type": "keyword", "ignore_above": 20 <1> } } } } } PUT my_index/_doc/1 <2> { "message": "Syntax error" } PUT my_index/_doc/2 <3> { "message": "Syntax error with some long stacktrace" } GET _search <4> { "aggs": { "messages": { "terms": { "field": "message" } } } } -------------------------------------------------- // CONSOLE <1> This field will ignore any string longer than 20 characters. <2> This document is indexed successfully. <3> This document will be indexed, but without indexing the `message` field. <4> Search returns both documents, but only the first is present in the terms aggregation. TIP: The `ignore_above` setting can be updated on existing fields using the <>. This option is also useful for protecting against Lucene's term byte-length limit of `32766`. NOTE: The value for `ignore_above` is the _character count_, but Lucene counts bytes. If you use UTF-8 text with many non-ASCII characters, you may want to set the limit to `32766 / 4 = 8191` since UTF-8 characters may occupy at most 4 bytes.