352 lines
8.7 KiB
Plaintext
352 lines
8.7 KiB
Plaintext
[[mapping-all-field]]
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=== `_all` field
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The `_all` field is a special _catch-all_ field which concatenates the values
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of all of the other fields into one big string, using space as a delimiter, which is then
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<<analysis,analyzed>> and indexed, but not stored. This means that it can be
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searched, but not retrieved.
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The `_all` field allows you to search for values in documents without knowing
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which field contains the value. This makes it a useful option when getting
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started with a new dataset. For instance:
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------
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PUT my_index/user/1 <1>
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{
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"first_name": "John",
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"last_name": "Smith",
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"date_of_birth": "1970-10-24"
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}
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GET my_index/_search
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{
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"query": {
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"match": {
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"_all": "john smith new york"
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}
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}
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}
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--------------------------------
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// CONSOLE
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<1> The `_all` field will contain the terms: [ `"john"`, `"smith"`, `"1970"`, `"10"`, `"24"` ]
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[NOTE]
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.All values treated as strings
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=============================================================================
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The `date_of_birth` field in the above example is recognised as a `date` field
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and so will index a single term representing `1970-10-24 00:00:00 UTC`. The
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`_all` field, however, treats all values as strings, so the date value is
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indexed as the three string terms: `"1970"`, `"24"`, `"10"`.
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It is important to note that the `_all` field combines the original values
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from each field as a string. It does not combine the _terms_ from each field.
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=============================================================================
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The `_all` field is just a <<text,`text`>> field, and accepts the same
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parameters that other string fields accept, including `analyzer`,
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`term_vectors`, `index_options`, and `store`.
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The `_all` field can be useful, especially when exploring new data using
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simple filtering. However, by concatenating field values into one big string,
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the `_all` field loses the distinction between short fields (more relevant)
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and long fields (less relevant). For use cases where search relevance is
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important, it is better to query individual fields specifically.
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The `_all` field is not free: it requires extra CPU cycles and uses more disk
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space. If not needed, it can be completely <<disabling-all-field,disabled>> or
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customised on a <<include-in-all,per-field basis>>.
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[[querying-all-field]]
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==== Using the `_all` field in queries
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The <<query-dsl-query-string-query,`query_string`>> and
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<<query-dsl-simple-query-string-query,`simple_query_string`>> queries query
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the `_all` field by default, unless another field is specified:
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------
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GET _search
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{
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"query": {
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"query_string": {
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"query": "john smith new york"
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}
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}
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}
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--------------------------------
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// CONSOLE
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The same goes for the `?q=` parameter in <<search-uri-request, URI search
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requests>> (which is rewritten to a `query_string` query internally):
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------
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GET _search?q=john+smith+new+york
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--------------------------------
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Other queries, such as the <<query-dsl-match-query,`match`>> and
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<<query-dsl-term-query,`term`>> queries require you to specify
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the `_all` field explicitly, as per the
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<<mapping-all-field,first example>>.
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[[disabling-all-field]]
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==== Disabling the `_all` field
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The `_all` field can be completely disabled per-type by setting `enabled` to
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`false`:
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------
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PUT my_index
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{
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"mappings": {
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"type_1": { <1>
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"properties": {...}
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},
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"type_2": { <2>
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"_all": {
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"enabled": false
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},
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"properties": {...}
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}
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}
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}
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--------------------------------
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// CONSOLE
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// TEST[s/\.\.\.//]
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<1> The `_all` field in `type_1` is enabled.
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<2> The `_all` field in `type_2` is completely disabled.
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If the `_all` field is disabled, then URI search requests and the
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`query_string` and `simple_query_string` queries will not be able to use it
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for queries (see <<querying-all-field>>). You can configure them to use a
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different field with the `index.query.default_field` setting:
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------
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PUT my_index
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{
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"mappings": {
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"my_type": {
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"_all": {
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"enabled": false <1>
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},
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"properties": {
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"content": {
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"type": "text"
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}
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}
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}
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},
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"settings": {
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"index.query.default_field": "content" <2>
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}
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}
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--------------------------------
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// CONSOLE
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<1> The `_all` field is disabled for the `my_type` type.
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<2> The `query_string` query will default to querying the `content` field in this index.
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[[excluding-from-all]]
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==== Excluding fields from `_all`
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Individual fields can be included or excluded from the `_all` field with the
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<<include-in-all,`include_in_all`>> setting.
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[[all-field-and-boosting]]
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==== Index boosting and the `_all` field
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Individual fields can be _boosted_ at index time, with the <<mapping-boost,`boost`>>
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parameter. The `_all` field takes these boosts into account:
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------
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PUT myindex
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{
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"mappings": {
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"mytype": {
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"properties": {
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"title": { <1>
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"type": "text",
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"boost": 2
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},
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"content": { <1>
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"type": "text"
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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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// CONSOLE
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<1> When querying the `_all` field, words that originated in the
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`title` field are twice as relevant as words that originated in
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the `content` field.
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WARNING: Using index-time boosting with the `_all` field has a significant
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impact on query performance. Usually the better solution is to query fields
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individually, with optional query time boosting.
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[[custom-all-fields]]
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==== Custom `_all` fields
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While there is only a single `_all` field per index, the <<copy-to,`copy_to`>>
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parameter allows the creation of multiple __custom `_all` fields__. For
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instance, `first_name` and `last_name` fields can be combined together into
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the `full_name` field:
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------
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PUT myindex
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{
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"mappings": {
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"mytype": {
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"properties": {
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"first_name": {
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"type": "text",
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"copy_to": "full_name" <1>
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},
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"last_name": {
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"type": "text",
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"copy_to": "full_name" <1>
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},
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"full_name": {
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"type": "text"
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}
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}
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}
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}
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}
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PUT myindex/mytype/1
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{
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"first_name": "John",
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"last_name": "Smith"
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}
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GET myindex/_search
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{
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"query": {
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"match": {
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"full_name": "John Smith"
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}
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}
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}
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--------------------------------
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// CONSOLE
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<1> The `first_name` and `last_name` values are copied to the `full_name` field.
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[[highlighting-all-field]]
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==== Highlighting and the `_all` field
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A field can only be used for <<search-request-highlighting,highlighting>> if
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the original string value is available, either from the
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<<mapping-source-field,`_source`>> field or as a stored field.
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The `_all` field is not present in the `_source` field and it is not stored by
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default, and so cannot be highlighted. There are two options. Either
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<<all-field-store,store the `_all` field>> or highlight the
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<<all-highlight-fields,original fields>>.
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[[all-field-store]]
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===== Store the `_all` field
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If `store` is set to `true`, then the original field value is retrievable and
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can be highlighted:
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------
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PUT myindex
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{
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"mappings": {
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"mytype": {
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"_all": {
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"store": true
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}
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}
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}
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}
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PUT myindex/mytype/1
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{
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"first_name": "John",
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"last_name": "Smith"
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}
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GET _search
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{
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"query": {
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"match": {
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"_all": "John Smith"
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}
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},
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"highlight": {
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"fields": {
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"_all": {}
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}
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}
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}
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--------------------------------
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// CONSOLE
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Of course, storing the `_all` field will use significantly more disk space
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and, because it is a combination of other fields, it may result in odd
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highlighting results.
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The `_all` field also accepts the `term_vector` and `index_options`
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parameters, allowing the use of the fast vector highlighter and the postings
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highlighter.
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[[all-highlight-fields]]
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===== Highlight original fields
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You can query the `_all` field, but use the original fields for highlighting as follows:
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------
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PUT myindex
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{
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"mappings": {
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"mytype": {
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"_all": {}
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}
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}
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}
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PUT myindex/mytype/1
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{
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"first_name": "John",
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"last_name": "Smith"
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}
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GET _search
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{
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"query": {
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"match": {
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"_all": "John Smith" <1>
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}
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},
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"highlight": {
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"fields": {
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"*_name": { <2>
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"require_field_match": false <3>
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}
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}
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}
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}
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--------------------------------
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// CONSOLE
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<1> The query inspects the `_all` field to find matching documents.
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<2> Highlighting is performed on the two name fields, which are available from the `_source`.
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<3> The query wasn't run against the name fields, so set `require_field_match` to `false`.
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