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---
layout: default
title: Low-level Python client
nav_order: 10
redirect_from:
- /clients/python/
---
# Low-level Python client
The OpenSearch low-level Python client (`opensearch-py`) provides wrapper methods for the OpenSearch REST API so that you can interact with your cluster more naturally in Python. Rather than sending raw HTTP requests to a given URL, you can create an OpenSearch client for your cluster and call the client's built-in functions. For the client's complete API documentation and additional examples, see the [`opensearch-py` API documentation](https://opensearch-project.github.io/opensearch-py/).
This getting started guide illustrates how to connect to OpenSearch, index documents, and run queries. For the client source code, see the [`opensearch-py` repo](https://github.com/opensearch-project/opensearch-py).
## Setup
To add the client to your project, install it using [pip](https://pip.pypa.io/):
```bash
pip install opensearch-py
```
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After installing the client, you can import it like any other module:
```python
from opensearchpy import OpenSearch
```
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## Connecting to OpenSearch
To connect to the default OpenSearch host, create a client object with SSL enabled if you are using the Security plugin. You can use the default credentials for testing purposes:
```python
host = 'localhost'
port = 9200
auth = ('admin', 'admin') # For testing only. Don't store credentials in code.
ca_certs_path = '/full/path/to/root-ca.pem' # Provide a CA bundle if you use intermediate CAs with your root CA.
# Create the client with SSL/TLS enabled, but hostname verification disabled.
client = OpenSearch(
hosts = [{'host': host, 'port': port}],
http_compress = True, # enables gzip compression for request bodies
http_auth = auth,
use_ssl = True,
verify_certs = True,
ssl_assert_hostname = False,
ssl_show_warn = False,
ca_certs = ca_certs_path
)
```
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If you have your own client certificates, specify them in the `client_cert_path` and `client_key_path` parameters:
```python
host = 'localhost'
port = 9200
auth = ('admin', 'admin') # For testing only. Don't store credentials in code.
ca_certs_path = '/full/path/to/root-ca.pem' # Provide a CA bundle if you use intermediate CAs with your root CA.
# Optional client certificates if you don't want to use HTTP basic authentication.
client_cert_path = '/full/path/to/client.pem'
client_key_path = '/full/path/to/client-key.pem'
# Create the client with SSL/TLS enabled, but hostname verification disabled.
client = OpenSearch(
hosts = [{'host': host, 'port': port}],
http_compress = True, # enables gzip compression for request bodies
http_auth = auth,
client_cert = client_cert_path,
client_key = client_key_path,
use_ssl = True,
verify_certs = True,
ssl_assert_hostname = False,
ssl_show_warn = False,
ca_certs = ca_certs_path
)
```
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If you are not using the Security plugin, create a client object with SSL disabled:
```python
host = 'localhost'
port = 9200
# Create the client with SSL/TLS and hostname verification disabled.
client = OpenSearch(
hosts = [{'host': host, 'port': port}],
http_compress = True, # enables gzip compression for request bodies
use_ssl = False,
verify_certs = False,
ssl_assert_hostname = False,
ssl_show_warn = False
)
```
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## Connecting to Amazon OpenSearch Service
The following example illustrates connecting to Amazon OpenSearch Service:
```python
from opensearchpy import OpenSearch, RequestsHttpConnection, AWSV4SignerAuth
import boto3
host = '' # cluster endpoint, for example: my-test-domain.us-east-1.es.amazonaws.com
region = 'us-west-2'
service = 'es'
credentials = boto3.Session().get_credentials()
auth = AWSV4SignerAuth(credentials, region, service)
client = OpenSearch(
hosts = [{'host': host, 'port': 443}],
http_auth = auth,
use_ssl = True,
verify_certs = True,
connection_class = RequestsHttpConnection,
pool_maxsize = 20
)
```
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## Connecting to Amazon OpenSearch Serverless
The following example illustrates connecting to Amazon OpenSearch Serverless Service:
```python
from opensearchpy import OpenSearch, RequestsHttpConnection, AWSV4SignerAuth
import boto3
host = '' # cluster endpoint, for example: my-test-domain.us-east-1.aoss.amazonaws.com
region = 'us-west-2'
service = 'aoss'
credentials = boto3.Session().get_credentials()
auth = AWSV4SignerAuth(credentials, region, service)
client = OpenSearch(
hosts = [{'host': host, 'port': 443}],
http_auth = auth,
use_ssl = True,
verify_certs = True,
connection_class = RequestsHttpConnection,
pool_maxsize = 20
)
```
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## Creating an index
To create an OpenSearch index, use the `client.indices.create()` method. You can use the following code to construct a JSON object with custom settings:
```python
index_name = 'python-test-index'
index_body = {
'settings': {
'index': {
'number_of_shards': 4
}
}
}
response = client.indices.create(index_name, body=index_body)
```
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## Indexing a document
You can index a document using the `client.index()` method:
```python
document = {
'title': 'Moneyball',
'director': 'Bennett Miller',
'year': '2011'
}
response = client.index(
index = 'python-test-index',
body = document,
id = '1',
refresh = True
)
```
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## Performing bulk operations
You can perform several operations at the same time by using the `bulk()` method of the client. The operations may be of the same type or of different types. Note that the operations must be separated by a `\n` and the entire string must be a single line:
```python
movies = '{ "index" : { "_index" : "my-dsl-index", "_id" : "2" } } \n { "title" : "Interstellar", "director" : "Christopher Nolan", "year" : "2014"} \n { "create" : { "_index" : "my-dsl-index", "_id" : "3" } } \n { "title" : "Star Trek Beyond", "director" : "Justin Lin", "year" : "2015"} \n { "update" : {"_id" : "3", "_index" : "my-dsl-index" } } \n { "doc" : {"year" : "2016"} }'
client.bulk(movies)
```
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## Searching for documents
The easiest way to search for documents is to construct a query string. The following code uses a multi-match query to search for “miller” in the title and director fields. It boosts the documents that have “miller” in the title field:
```python
q = 'miller'
query = {
'size': 5,
'query': {
'multi_match': {
'query': q,
'fields': ['title^2', 'director']
}
}
}
response = client.search(
body = query,
index = 'python-test-index'
)
```
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## Deleting a document
You can delete a document using the `client.delete()` method:
```python
response = client.delete(
index = 'python-test-index',
id = '1'
)
```
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## Deleting an index
You can delete an index using the `client.indices.delete()` method:
```python
response = client.indices.delete(
index = 'python-test-index'
)
```
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## Sample program
The following sample program creates a client, adds an index with non-default settings, inserts a document, performs bulk operations, searches for the document, deletes the document, and then deletes the index:
```python
from opensearchpy import OpenSearch
host = 'localhost'
port = 9200
auth = ('admin', 'admin') # For testing only. Don't store credentials in code.
ca_certs_path = '/full/path/to/root-ca.pem' # Provide a CA bundle if you use intermediate CAs with your root CA.
# Optional client certificates if you don't want to use HTTP basic authentication.
# client_cert_path = '/full/path/to/client.pem'
# client_key_path = '/full/path/to/client-key.pem'
# Create the client with SSL/TLS enabled, but hostname verification disabled.
client = OpenSearch(
hosts = [{'host': host, 'port': port}],
http_compress = True, # enables gzip compression for request bodies
http_auth = auth,
# client_cert = client_cert_path,
# client_key = client_key_path,
use_ssl = True,
verify_certs = True,
ssl_assert_hostname = False,
ssl_show_warn = False,
ca_certs = ca_certs_path
)
# Create an index with non-default settings.
index_name = 'python-test-index'
index_body = {
'settings': {
'index': {
'number_of_shards': 4
}
}
}
response = client.indices.create(index_name, body=index_body)
print('\nCreating index:')
print(response)
# Add a document to the index.
document = {
'title': 'Moneyball',
'director': 'Bennett Miller',
'year': '2011'
}
id = '1'
response = client.index(
index = index_name,
body = document,
id = id,
refresh = True
)
print('\nAdding document:')
print(response)
# Perform bulk operations
movies = '{ "index" : { "_index" : "my-dsl-index", "_id" : "2" } } \n { "title" : "Interstellar", "director" : "Christopher Nolan", "year" : "2014"} \n { "create" : { "_index" : "my-dsl-index", "_id" : "3" } } \n { "title" : "Star Trek Beyond", "director" : "Justin Lin", "year" : "2015"} \n { "update" : {"_id" : "3", "_index" : "my-dsl-index" } } \n { "doc" : {"year" : "2016"} }'
client.bulk(movies)
# Search for the document.
q = 'miller'
query = {
'size': 5,
'query': {
'multi_match': {
'query': q,
'fields': ['title^2', 'director']
}
}
}
response = client.search(
body = query,
index = index_name
)
print('\nSearch results:')
print(response)
# Delete the document.
response = client.delete(
index = index_name,
id = id
)
print('\nDeleting document:')
print(response)
# Delete the index.
response = client.indices.delete(
index = index_name
)
print('\nDeleting index:')
print(response)
```
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## Next steps
- For Python client API, see the [`opensearch-py` API documentation](https://opensearch-project.github.io/opensearch-py/).
- For Python code samples, see [Samples](https://github.com/opensearch-project/opensearch-py/tree/main/samples).