138 lines
6.1 KiB
Plaintext
138 lines
6.1 KiB
Plaintext
[[search-aggregations-bucket-datehistogram-aggregation]]
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=== Date Histogram
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A multi-bucket aggregation similar to the <<search-aggregations-bucket-histogram-aggregation,histogram>> except it can
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only be applied on date values. Since dates are represented in elasticsearch internally as long values, it is possible
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to use the normal `histogram` on dates as well, though accuracy will be compromised. The reason for this is in the fact
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that time based intervals are not fixed (think of leap years and on the number of days in a month). For this reason,
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we need a special support for time based data. From a functionality perspective, this histogram supports the same features
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as the normal <<search-aggregations-bucket-histogram-aggregation,histogram>>. The main difference is that the interval can be specified by date/time expressions.
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Requesting bucket intervals of a month.
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------------------------
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{
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"aggs" : {
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"articles_over_time" : {
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"date_histogram" : {
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"field" : "date",
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"interval" : "month"
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}
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}
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}
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}
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--------------------------------------------------
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fractional values are allowed, for example 1.5 hours:
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------------------------
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{
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"aggs" : {
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"articles_over_time" : {
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"date_histogram" : {
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"field" : "date",
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"interval" : "1.5h"
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}
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}
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}
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}
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--------------------------------------------------
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Available expressions for interval: `year`, `quarter`, `month`, `week`, `day`, `hour`, `minute`, `second`
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==== Time Zone
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By default, times are stored as UTC milliseconds since the epoch. Thus, all computation and "bucketing" / "rounding" is
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done on UTC. It is possible to provide a time zone (both pre rounding, and post rounding) value, which will cause all
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computations to take the relevant zone into account. The time returned for each bucket/entry is milliseconds since the
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epoch of the provided time zone.
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The parameters are `pre_zone` (pre rounding based on interval) and `post_zone` (post rounding based on interval). The
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`time_zone` parameter simply sets the `pre_zone` parameter. By default, those are set to `UTC`.
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The zone value accepts either a numeric value for the hours offset, for example: `"time_zone" : -2`. It also accepts a
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format of hours and minutes, like `"time_zone" : "-02:30"`. Another option is to provide a time zone accepted as one of
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the values listed here.
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Lets take an example. For `2012-04-01T04:15:30Z`, with a `pre_zone` of `-08:00`. For day interval, the actual time by
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applying the time zone and rounding falls under `2012-03-31`, so the returned value will be (in millis) of
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`2012-03-31T00:00:00Z` (UTC). For hour interval, applying the time zone results in `2012-03-31T20:15:30`, rounding it
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results in `2012-03-31T20:00:00`, but, we want to return it in UTC (`post_zone` is not set), so we convert it back to
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UTC: `2012-04-01T04:00:00Z`. Note, we are consistent in the results, returning the rounded value in UTC.
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`post_zone` simply takes the result, and adds the relevant offset.
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Sometimes, we want to apply the same conversion to UTC we did above for hour also for day (and up) intervals. We can
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set `pre_zone_adjust_large_interval` to `true`, which will apply the same conversion done for hour interval in the
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example, to day and above intervals (it can be set regardless of the interval, but only kick in when using day and
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higher intervals).
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==== Factor
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The date histogram works on numeric values (since time is stored in milliseconds since the epoch in UTC). But,
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sometimes, systems will store a different resolution (like seconds since UTC) in a numeric field. The `factor`
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parameter can be used to change the value in the field to milliseconds to actual do the relevant rounding, and then
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be applied again to get to the original unit. For example, when storing in a numeric field seconds resolution, the
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factor can be set to 1000.
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==== Pre/Post Offset
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Specific offsets can be provided for pre rounding and post rounding. The `pre_offset` for pre rounding, and
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`post_offset` for post rounding. The format is the date time format (`1h`, `1d`, etc...).
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==== Keys
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Since internally, dates are represented as 64bit numbers, these numbers are returned as the bucket keys (each key
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representing a date - milliseconds since the epoch). It is also possible to define a date format, which will result in
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returning the dates as formatted strings next to the numeric key values:
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------------------------
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{
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"aggs" : {
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"articles_over_time" : {
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"date_histogram" : {
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"field" : "date",
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"interval" : "1M",
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"format" : "yyyy-MM-dd" <1>
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}
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}
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}
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}
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--------------------------------------------------
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<1> Supports expressive date <<date-format-pattern,format pattern>>
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Response:
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------------------------
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{
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"aggregations": {
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"articles_over_time": {
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"buckets": [
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{
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"key_as_string": "2013-02-02",
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"key": 1328140800000,
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"doc_count": 1
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},
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{
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"key_as_string": "2013-03-02",
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"key": 1330646400000,
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"doc_count": 2
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},
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...
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]
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}
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}
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}
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--------------------------------------------------
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Like with the normal <<search-aggregations-bucket-histogram-aggregation,histogram>>, both document level scripts and
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value level scripts are supported. It is also possible to control the order of the returned buckets using the `order`
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settings and filter the returned buckets based on a `min_doc_count` setting (by defaults to all buckets with
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`min_doc_count > 0` will be returned). This histogram also supports the `extended_bounds` settings, that enables extending
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the bounds of the histogram beyond the data itself (to read more on why you'd want to do that please refer to the
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explanation <<search-aggregations-bucket-histogram-aggregation-extended-bounds,here>>. |