Aggregationsedit
An aggregation summarizes your data as metrics, statistics, or other analytics. Aggregations help you answer questions like:
- What’s the average load time for my website?
- Who are my most valuable customers based on transaction volume?
- What would be considered a large file on my network?
- How many products are in each product category?
Elasticsearch organizes aggregations into three categories:
- Metric aggregations that calculate metrics, such as a sum or average, from field values.
- Bucket aggregations that group documents into buckets, also called bins, based on field values, ranges, or other criteria.
- Pipeline aggregations that take input from other aggregations instead of documents or fields.
Run an aggregationedit
You can run aggregations as part of a search by specifying the search API's aggs
parameter. The
following search runs a
terms aggregation on
my-field
:
GET /my-index-000001/_search { "aggs": { "my-agg-name": { "terms": { "field": "my-field" } } } }
Aggregation results are in the response’s aggregations
object:
{ "took": 78, "timed_out": false, "_shards": { "total": 1, "successful": 1, "skipped": 0, "failed": 0 }, "hits": { "total": { "value": 5, "relation": "eq" }, "max_score": 1.0, "hits": [...] }, "aggregations": { "my-agg-name": { "doc_count_error_upper_bound": 0, "sum_other_doc_count": 0, "buckets": [] } } }
Change an aggregation’s scopeedit
Use the query
parameter to limit the documents on which an aggregation runs:
GET /my-index-000001/_search { "query": { "range": { "@timestamp": { "gte": "now-1d/d", "lt": "now/d" } } }, "aggs": { "my-agg-name": { "terms": { "field": "my-field" } } } }
Return only aggregation resultsedit
By default, searches containing an aggregation return both search hits and
aggregation results. To return only aggregation results, set size
to 0
:
GET /my-index-000001/_search { "size": 0, "aggs": { "my-agg-name": { "terms": { "field": "my-field" } } } }
Run multiple aggregationsedit
You can specify multiple aggregations in the same request:
GET /my-index-000001/_search { "aggs": { "my-first-agg-name": { "terms": { "field": "my-field" } }, "my-second-agg-name": { "avg": { "field": "my-other-field" } } } }
Run sub-aggregationsedit
Bucket aggregations support bucket or metric sub-aggregations. For example, a terms aggregation with an avg sub-aggregation calculates an average value for each bucket of documents. There is no level or depth limit for nesting sub-aggregations.
GET /my-index-000001/_search { "aggs": { "my-agg-name": { "terms": { "field": "my-field" }, "aggs": { "my-sub-agg-name": { "avg": { "field": "my-other-field" } } } } } }
The response nests sub-aggregation results under their parent aggregation:
{ ... "aggregations": { "my-agg-name": { "doc_count_error_upper_bound": 0, "sum_other_doc_count": 0, "buckets": [ { "key": "foo", "doc_count": 5, "my-sub-agg-name": { "value": 75.0 } } ] } } }
Results for the parent aggregation, |
|
Results for |
Add custom metadataedit
Use the meta
object to associate custom metadata with an aggregation:
GET /my-index-000001/_search { "aggs": { "my-agg-name": { "terms": { "field": "my-field" }, "meta": { "my-metadata-field": "foo" } } } }
The response returns the meta
object in place:
{ ... "aggregations": { "my-agg-name": { "meta": { "my-metadata-field": "foo" }, "doc_count_error_upper_bound": 0, "sum_other_doc_count": 0, "buckets": [] } } }
Return the aggregation typeedit
By default, aggregation results include the aggregation’s name but not its type.
To return the aggregation type, use the typed_keys
query parameter.
GET /my-index-000001/_search?typed_keys { "aggs": { "my-agg-name": { "histogram": { "field": "my-field", "interval": 1000 } } } }
The response returns the aggregation type as a prefix to the aggregation’s name.
Some aggregations return a different aggregation type from the type in the request. For example, the terms, significant terms, and percentiles aggregations return different aggregations types depending on the data type of the aggregated field.
Use scripts in an aggregationedit
When a field doesn’t exactly match the aggregation you need, you should aggregate on a runtime field:
GET /my-index-000001/_search?size=0 { "runtime_mappings": { "message.length": { "type": "long", "script": "emit(doc['message.keyword'].value.length())" } }, "aggs": { "message_length": { "histogram": { "interval": 10, "field": "message.length" } } } }
Scripts calculate field values dynamically, which adds a little
overhead to the aggregation. In addition to the time spent calculating,
some aggregations like terms
and filters
can’t use
some of their optimizations with runtime fields. In total, performance costs
for using a runtime field varies from aggregation to aggregation.
Aggregation cachesedit
For faster responses, Elasticsearch caches the results of frequently run aggregations in
the shard request cache. To get cached results, use the
same preference
string for each search. If you
don’t need search hits, set size
to 0
to avoid
filling the cache.
Elasticsearch routes searches with the same preference string to the same shards. If the shards' data doesn’t change between searches, the shards return cached aggregation results.
Limits for long
valuesedit
When running aggregations, Elasticsearch uses double
values to hold and
represent numeric data. As a result, aggregations on long
numbers
greater than 253
are approximate.