[[java-aggs]] == Aggregations Elasticsearch provides a full Java API to play with aggregations. See the {ref}/search-aggregations.html[Aggregations guide]. Use the factory for aggregation builders (`AggregationBuilders`) and add each aggregation you want to compute when querying and add it to your search request: [source,java] -------------------------------------------------- SearchResponse sr = node.client().prepareSearch() .setQuery( /* your query */ ) .addAggregation( /* add an aggregation */ ) .execute().actionGet(); -------------------------------------------------- Note that you can add more than one aggregation. See {ref}/search-search.html[Search Java API] for details. To build aggregation requests, use `AggregationBuilders` helpers. Just import them in your class: [source,java] -------------------------------------------------- import org.elasticsearch.search.aggregations.AggregationBuilders; -------------------------------------------------- === Structuring aggregations As explained in the {ref}/search-aggregations.html[Aggregations guide], you can define sub aggregations inside an aggregation. An aggregation could be a metrics aggregation or a bucket aggregation. For example, here is a 3 levels aggregation composed of: * Terms aggregation (bucket) * Date Histogram aggregation (bucket) * Average aggregation (metric) [source,java] -------------------------------------------------- SearchResponse sr = node.client().prepareSearch() .addAggregation( AggregationBuilders.terms("by_country").field("country") .subAggregation(AggregationBuilders.dateHistogram("by_year") .field("dateOfBirth") .interval((DateHistogramInterval.YEAR) .subAggregation(AggregationBuilders.avg("avg_children").field("children")) ) ) .execute().actionGet(); -------------------------------------------------- === Metrics aggregations include::aggregations/metrics.asciidoc[] === Bucket aggregations include::aggregations/bucket.asciidoc[]