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Basic queries

Use the SELECT clause, along with FROM, WHERE, GROUP BY, HAVING, ORDER BY, and LIMIT to search and aggregate data.

Among these clauses, SELECT and FROM are required, as they specify which fields to retrieve and which indices to retrieve them from. All other clauses are optional. Use them according to your needs.

Syntax

The complete syntax for searching and aggregating data is as follows:

SELECT [DISTINCT] (* | expression) [[AS] alias] [, ...]
FROM index_name
[WHERE predicates]
[GROUP BY expression [, ...]
 [HAVING predicates]]
[ORDER BY expression [IS [NOT] NULL] [ASC | DESC] [, ...]]
[LIMIT [offset, ] size]

Fundamentals

Apart from the predefined keywords of SQL, the most basic elements are literal and identifiers. A literal is a numeric, string, date or boolean constant. An identifier is an OpenSearch index or field name. With arithmetic operators and SQL functions, use literals and identifiers to build complex expressions.

Rule expressionAtom:

expressionAtom

The expression in turn can be combined into a predicate with logical operator. Use a predicate in the WHERE and HAVING clause to filter out data by specific conditions.

Rule expression:

expression

Rule predicate:

expression

Execution Order

These SQL clauses execute in an order different from how they appear:

FROM index
 WHERE predicates
  GROUP BY expressions
   HAVING predicates
    SELECT expressions
     ORDER BY expressions
      LIMIT size

Select

Specify the fields to be retrieved.

Syntax

Rule selectElements:

selectElements

Rule selectElement:

selectElements

Example 1: Use * to retrieve all fields in an index:

SELECT *
FROM accounts
id account_number firstname gender city balance employer state email address lastname age
0 1 Amber M Brogan 39225 Pyrami IL amberduke@pyrami.com 880 Holmes Lane Duke 32
1 16 Hattie M Dante 5686 Netagy TN hattiebond@netagy.com 671 Bristol Street Bond 36
2 13 Nanette F Nogal 32838 Quility VA nanettebates@quility.com 789 Madison Street Bates 28
3 18 Dale M Orick 4180 MD daleadams@boink.com 467 Hutchinson Court Adams 33

Example 2: Use field name(s) to retrieve only specific fields:

SELECT firstname, lastname
FROM accounts
id firstname lastname
0 Amber Duke
1 Hattie Bond
2 Nanette Bates
3 Dale Adams

Example 3: Use field aliases instead of field names. Field aliases are used to make field names more readable:

SELECT account_number AS num
FROM accounts
id num
0 1
1 6
2 13
3 18

Example 4: Use the DISTINCT clause to get back only unique field values. You can specify one or more field names:

SELECT DISTINCT age
FROM accounts
id age
0 28
1 32
2 33
3 36

From

Specify the index that you want search. You can specify subqueries within the FROM clause.

Syntax

Rule tableName:

tableName

Example 1: Use index aliases to query across indexes. To learn about index aliases, see Index Alias. In this sample query, acc is an alias for the accounts index:

SELECT account_number, accounts.age
FROM accounts

or

SELECT account_number, acc.age
FROM accounts acc
id account_number age
0 1 32
1 6 36
2 13 28
3 18 33

Example 2: Use index patterns to query indices that match a specific pattern:

SELECT account_number
FROM account*
id account_number
0 1
1 6
2 13
3 18

Where

Specify a condition to filter the results.

Operators Behavior
= Equal to.
<> Not equal to.
> Greater than.
< Less than.
>= Greater than or equal to.
<= Less than or equal to.
IN Specify multiple OR operators.
BETWEEN Similar to a range query. For more information about range queries, see Range query.
LIKE Use for full text search. For more information about full-text queries, see Full-text queries.
IS NULL Check if the field value is NULL.
IS NOT NULL Check if the field value is NOT NULL.

Combine comparison operators (=, <>, >, >=, <, <=) with boolean operators NOT, AND, or OR to build more complex expressions.

Example 1: Use comparison operators for numbers, strings, or dates:

SELECT account_number
FROM accounts
WHERE account_number = 1
id account_number
0 1

Example 2: OpenSearch allows for flexible schema so documents in an index may have different fields. Use IS NULL or IS NOT NULL to retrieve only missing fields or existing fields. We do not differentiate between missing fields and fields explicitly set to NULL:

SELECT account_number, employer
FROM accounts
WHERE employer IS NULL
id account_number employer
0 18

Example 3: Deletes a document that satisfies the predicates in the WHERE clause:

DELETE FROM accounts
WHERE age > 30

Group By

Group documents with the same field value into buckets.

Example 1: Group by fields:

SELECT age
FROM accounts
GROUP BY age
id age
0 28
1 32
2 33
3 36

Example 2: Group by field alias:

SELECT account_number AS num
FROM accounts
GROUP BY num
id num
0 1
1 6
2 13
3 18

Example 4: Use scalar functions in the GROUP BY clause:

SELECT ABS(age) AS a
FROM accounts
GROUP BY ABS(age)
id a
0 28.0
1 32.0
2 33.0
3 36.0

Having

Use the HAVING clause to aggregate inside each bucket based on aggregation functions (COUNT, AVG, SUM, MIN, and MAX). The HAVING clause filters results from the GROUP BY clause:

Example 1:

SELECT age, MAX(balance)
FROM accounts
GROUP BY age HAVING MIN(balance) > 10000

| id | age | MAX (balance) :--- | :--- 0 | 28 | 32838 1 | 32 | 39225

Order By

Use the ORDER BY clause to sort results into your desired order.

Example 1: Use ORDER BY to sort by ascending or descending order. Besides regular field names, using ordinal, alias, or scalar functions are supported:

SELECT account_number
FROM accounts
ORDER BY account_number DESC
id account_number
0 18
1 13
2 6
3 1

Example 2: Specify if documents with missing fields are to be put at the beginning or at the end of the results. The default behavior of OpenSearch is to return nulls or missing fields at the end. To push them before non-nulls, use the IS NOT NULL operator:

SELECT employer
FROM accounts
ORDER BY employer IS NOT NULL
id employer
0
1 Netagy
2 Pyrami
3 Quility

Limit

Specify the maximum number of documents that you want to retrieve. Used to prevent fetching large amounts of data into memory.

Example 1: If you pass in a single argument, it's mapped to the size parameter in OpenSearch and the from parameter is set to 0.

SELECT account_number
FROM accounts
ORDER BY account_number LIMIT 1
id account_number
0 1

Example 2: If you pass in two arguments, the first is mapped to the from parameter and the second to the size parameter in OpenSearch. You can use this for simple pagination for small indices, as it's inefficient for large indices. Use ORDER BY to ensure the same order between pages:

SELECT account_number
FROM accounts
ORDER BY account_number LIMIT 1, 1
id account_number
0 6