[[breaking_50_percolator]] === Percolator changes ==== Percolator is near-real time Previously percolators were activated in real-time, i.e. as soon as they were indexed. Now, changes to the `percolate` query are visible in near-real time, as soon as the index has been refreshed. This change was required because, in indices created from 5.0 onwards, the terms used in a percolator query are automatically indexed to allow for more efficient query selection during percolation. ==== Percolate and multi percolator APIs Percolator and multi percolate APIs have been deprecated and will be removed in the next major release. These APIs have been replaced by the `percolate` query that can be used in the search and multi search APIs. ==== Percolator field mapping The `.percolator` type can no longer be used to index percolator queries. Instead a <> must be configured prior to indexing percolator queries. Indices with a `.percolator` type created on a version before 5.0.0 can still be used, but new indices no longer accept the `.percolator` type. ==== Percolate document mapping The `percolate` query no longer modifies the mappings. Before the percolate API could be used to dynamically introduce new fields to the mappings based on the fields in the document being percolated. This no longer works, because these unmapped fields are not persisted in the mapping. ==== Percolator documents returned by search Documents with the `.percolate` type were previously excluded from the search response, unless the `.percolate` type was specified explicitly in the search request. Now, percolator documents are treated in the same way as any other document and are returned by search requests. ==== Percolating existing document When percolating an existing document then also specifying a document as source in the `percolate` query is not allowed any more. Before the percolate API allowed and ignored the existing document. ==== Percolate Stats Percolate stats have been replaced with `percolate` query cache stats in nodes stats and cluster stats APIs.