Jack Conradson d2b4f7ac5a Disallow lang to be used with Stored Scripts (#25610)
Requests that execute a stored script will no longer be allowed to specify the lang of the script. This information is stored in the cluster state making only an id necessary to execute against. Putting a stored script will still require a lang.
2017-07-12 07:55:57 -07:00

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[[modules-scripting-using]]
=== How to use scripts
Wherever scripting is supported in the Elasticsearch API, the syntax follows
the same pattern:
[source,js]
-------------------------------------
"script": {
"lang": "...", <1>
"source" | "id": "...", <2>
"params": { ... } <3>
}
-------------------------------------
// NOTCONSOLE
<1> The language the script is written in, which defaults to `painless`.
<2> The script itself which may be specified as `source` for an inline script or `id` for a stored script.
<3> Any named parameters that should be passed into the script.
For example, the following script is used in a search request to return a
<<search-request-script-fields, scripted field>>:
[source,js]
-------------------------------------
PUT my_index/my_type/1
{
"my_field": 5
}
GET my_index/_search
{
"script_fields": {
"my_doubled_field": {
"script": {
"lang": "expression",
"source": "doc['my_field'] * multiplier",
"params": {
"multiplier": 2
}
}
}
}
}
-------------------------------------
// CONSOLE
[float]
=== Script Parameters
`lang`::
Specifies the language the script is written in. Defaults to `painless` but
may be set to any of languages listed in <<modules-scripting>>. The
default language may be changed in the `elasticsearch.yml` config file by
setting `script.default_lang` to the appropriate language.
`source`, `id`::
Specifies the source of the script. An `inline` script is specified
`source` as in the example above. A `stored` script is specified `id`
and is retrieved from the cluster state (see <<modules-scripting-stored-scripts,Stored Scripts>>).
`params`::
Specifies any named parameters that are passed into the script as
variables.
[IMPORTANT]
[[prefer-params]]
.Prefer parameters
========================================
The first time Elasticsearch sees a new script, it compiles it and stores the
compiled version in a cache. Compilation can be a heavy process.
If you need to pass variables into the script, you should pass them in as
named `params` instead of hard-coding values into the script itself. For
example, if you want to be able to multiply a field value by different
multipliers, don't hard-code the multiplier into the script:
[source,js]
----------------------
"source": "doc['my_field'] * 2"
----------------------
// NOTCONSOLE
Instead, pass it in as a named parameter:
[source,js]
----------------------
"source": "doc['my_field'] * multiplier",
"params": {
"multiplier": 2
}
----------------------
// NOTCONSOLE
The first version has to be recompiled every time the multiplier changes. The
second version is only compiled once.
If you compile too many unique scripts within a small amount of time,
Elasticsearch will reject the new dynamic scripts with a
`circuit_breaking_exception` error. By default, up to 15 inline scripts per
minute will be compiled. You can change this setting dynamically by setting
`script.max_compilations_per_minute`.
========================================
[float]
[[modules-scripting-stored-scripts]]
=== Stored Scripts
Scripts may be stored in and retrieved from the cluster state using the
`_scripts` end-point.
==== Request Examples
The following are examples of using a stored script that lives at
`/_scripts/{id}`.
First, create the script called `calculate-score` in the cluster state:
[source,js]
-----------------------------------
POST _scripts/calculate-score
{
"script": {
"lang": "painless",
"source": "Math.log(_score * 2) + params.my_modifier"
}
}
-----------------------------------
// CONSOLE
This same script can be retrieved with:
[source,js]
-----------------------------------
GET _scripts/calculate-score
-----------------------------------
// CONSOLE
// TEST[continued]
Stored scripts can be used by specifying the `id` parameters as follows:
[source,js]
--------------------------------------------------
GET _search
{
"query": {
"script": {
"script": {
"id": "calculate-score",
"params": {
"my_modifier": 2
}
}
}
}
}
--------------------------------------------------
// CONSOLE
// TEST[continued]
And deleted with:
[source,js]
-----------------------------------
DELETE _scripts/calculate-score
-----------------------------------
// CONSOLE
// TEST[continued]
[float]
[[modules-scripting-using-caching]]
=== Script Caching
All scripts are cached by default so that they only need to be recompiled
when updates occur. File scripts keep a static cache and will always reside
in memory. Both inline and stored scripts are stored in a cache that can evict
residing scripts. By default, scripts do not have a time-based expiration, but
you can change this behavior by using the `script.cache.expire` setting.
You can configure the size of this cache by using the `script.cache.max_size` setting.
By default, the cache size is `100`.
NOTE: The size of stored scripts is limited to 65,535 bytes. This can be
changed by setting `script.max_size_in_bytes` setting to increase that soft
limit, but if scripts are really large then alternatives like
<<modules-scripting-native,native>> scripts should be considered instead.