OpenSearch/docs/reference/search/quickly-check-for-matching-...

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[discrete]
[[quickly-check-for-matching-docs]]
=== Quickly check for matching docs
If you only want to know if there are any documents matching a
specific query, you can set the `size` to `0` to indicate that we are not
interested in the search results. You can also set `terminate_after` to `1`
to indicate that the query execution can be terminated whenever the first
matching document was found (per shard).
[source,console]
--------------------------------------------------
GET /_search?q=user.id:elkbee&size=0&terminate_after=1
--------------------------------------------------
// TEST[setup:my_index]
NOTE: `terminate_after` is always applied **after** the
<<post-filter,`post_filter`>> and stops the query as well as the aggregation
executions when enough hits have been collected on the shard. Though the doc
count on aggregations may not reflect the `hits.total` in the response since
aggregations are applied **before** the post filtering.
The response will not contain any hits as the `size` was set to `0`. The
`hits.total` will be either equal to `0`, indicating that there were no
matching documents, or greater than `0` meaning that there were at least
as many documents matching the query when it was early terminated.
Also if the query was terminated early, the `terminated_early` flag will
be set to `true` in the response.
[source,console-result]
--------------------------------------------------
{
"took": 3,
"timed_out": false,
"terminated_early": true,
"_shards": {
"total": 1,
"successful": 1,
"skipped" : 0,
"failed": 0
},
"hits": {
"total" : {
"value": 1,
"relation": "eq"
},
"max_score": null,
"hits": []
}
}
--------------------------------------------------
// TESTRESPONSE[s/"took": 3/"took": $body.took/]
The `took` time in the response contains the milliseconds that this request
took for processing, beginning quickly after the node received the query, up
until all search related work is done and before the above JSON is returned
to the client. This means it includes the time spent waiting in thread pools,
executing a distributed search across the whole cluster and gathering all the
results.