If you need to update a document's fields in your index, you can use the update document API operation. You can do so by specifying the new data you want in your index or by including a script in your request body, which OpenSearch runs to update the document.
refresh | Enum | If true, OpenSearch refreshes shards to make the operation visible to searching. Valid options are `true`, `false`, and `wait_for`, which tells OpenSearch to wait for a refresh before executing the operation. Default is `false`. | No
_source | Boolean or List | Whether or not to include the `_source` field in the response body. Default is `false`. This parameter also supports a comma-separated list of source fields for including multiple source fields in the query response. | No
_source_excludes | List | A comma-separated list of source fields to exclude in the query response. | No
_source_includes | List | A comma-separated list of source fields to include in the query response. | No
timeout | Time | How long to wait for a response from the cluster. | No
wait_for_active_shards | String | The number of active shards that must be available before OpenSearch processes the update request. Default is 1 (only the primary shard). Set to `all` or a positive integer. Values greater than 1 require replicas. For example, if you specify a value of 3, the index must have two replicas distributed across two additional nodes for the operation to succeed. | No
## Request body
Your request body must contain the information you want to update your document with. If you just want to replace certain fields in your document, your request body must include a `doc` object, which has the fields you want to update.
```json
{
"doc": {
"first_name": "Thomas",
"last_name": "Wayne"
}
}
```
You can also use a script to tell OpenSearch how to update your document.
Upsert is an operation that conditionally either updates an existing document or inserts a new one based on information in the object. In the following example, the `upsert` operation updates the `last name` and adds the `first_name` field if a document already exists. If a document does not exist, a new one is indexed using content in the `upsert` object.