Nested aggregations
The nested
aggregation lets you aggregate on fields inside a nested object. The nested
type is a specialized version of the object data type that allows arrays of objects to be indexed in a way that they can be queried independently of each other
With the object
type, all the data is stored in the same document, so matches for a search can go across sub documents. For example, imagine a logs
index with pages
mapped as an object
datatype:
PUT logs/_doc/0
{
"response": "200",
"pages": [
{
"page": "landing",
"load_time": 200
},
{
"page": "blog",
"load_time": 500
}
]
}
Lucenia merges all sub-properties of the entity relations that looks something like this:
{
"logs": {
"pages": ["landing", "blog"],
"load_time": ["200", "500"]
}
}
So, if you wanted to search this index with pages=landing
and load_time=500
, this document matches the criteria even though the load_time
value for landing is 200.
If you want to make sure such cross-object matches don’t happen, map the field as a nested
type:
PUT logs
{
"mappings": {
"properties": {
"pages": {
"type": "nested",
"properties": {
"page": { "type": "text" },
"load_time": { "type": "double" }
}
}
}
}
}
Nested documents allow you to index the same JSON document but will keep your pages in separate Lucene documents, making only searches like pages=landing
and load_time=200
return the expected result. Internally, nested objects index each object in the array as a separate hidden document, meaning that each nested object can be queried independently of the others.
You have to specify a nested path relative to parent that contains the nested documents:
GET logs/_search
{
"query": {
"match": { "response": "200" }
},
"aggs": {
"pages": {
"nested": {
"path": "pages"
},
"aggs": {
"min_load_time": { "min": { "field": "pages.load_time" } }
}
}
}
}
Example response
...
"aggregations" : {
"pages" : {
"doc_count" : 2,
"min_price" : {
"value" : 200.0
}
}
}
}