[[mapping]] = Mapping [partintro] -- Mapping is the process of defining how a document, and the fields it contains, are stored and indexed. For instance, use mappings to define: * which string fields should be treated as full text fields. * which fields contain numbers, dates, or geolocations. * the <> of date values. * custom rules to control the mapping for <>. A mapping definition includes metadata fields and fields: <>:: Metadata fields are used to customize how a document's associated metadata is treated. Examples of metadata fields include the document's <>, <>, and <> fields. <>:: A mapping contains a list of fields or `properties` pertinent to the document. Each field has its own <>. NOTE: Before 7.0.0, the 'mappings' definition used to include a type name. For more details, please see <>. [discrete] [[mapping-limit-settings]] == Settings to prevent mapping explosion Defining too many fields in an index can lead to a mapping explosion, which can cause out of memory errors and difficult situations to recover from. Consider a situation where every new document inserted introduces new fields, such as with <>. Each new field is added to the index mapping, which can become a problem as the mapping grows. Use the <> to limit the number of field mappings (created manually or dynamically) and prevent documents from causing a mapping explosion. [discrete] [[runtime-fields]] == Runtime fields Typically, you index data into {es} to promote faster search. However, indexing can be slow and requires more disk space, and you have to reindex your data to add fields to existing documents. <> are not indexed, which saves disk space and makes data ingest faster. You can add runtime fields to existing documents without reindexing your data and calculate field values dynamically at search time. [discrete] [[dynamic-mapping-intro]] == Dynamic mapping Fields and mapping types do not need to be defined before being used. Thanks to _dynamic mapping_, new field names will be added automatically, just by indexing a document. New fields can be added both to the top-level mapping type, and to inner <> and <> fields. The <> rules can be configured to customise the mapping that is used for new fields. [discrete] == Explicit mappings You know more about your data than Elasticsearch can guess, so while dynamic mapping can be useful to get started, at some point you will want to specify your own explicit mappings. You can create field mappings when you <> and <>. [discrete] [[create-mapping]] === Create an index with an explicit mapping You can use the <> API to create a new index with an explicit mapping. [source,console] ---- PUT /my-index-000001 { "mappings": { "properties": { "age": { "type": "integer" }, <1> "email": { "type": "keyword" }, <2> "name": { "type": "text" } <3> } } } ---- <1> Creates `age`, an <> field <2> Creates `email`, a <> field <3> Creates `name`, a <> field [discrete] [[add-field-mapping]] == Add a field to an existing mapping You can use the <> API to add one or more new fields to an existing index. The following example adds `employee-id`, a `keyword` field with an <> mapping parameter value of `false`. This means values for the `employee-id` field are stored but not indexed or available for search. [source,console] ---- PUT /my-index-000001/_mapping { "properties": { "employee-id": { "type": "keyword", "index": false } } } ---- // TEST[continued] [discrete] [[update-mapping]] === Update the mapping of a field include::{es-repo-dir}/indices/put-mapping.asciidoc[tag=change-field-mapping] include::{es-repo-dir}/indices/put-mapping.asciidoc[tag=rename-field] [discrete] [[view-mapping]] == View the mapping of an index You can use the <> API to view the mapping of an existing index. [source,console] ---- GET /my-index-000001/_mapping ---- // TEST[continued] The API returns the following response: [source,console-result] ---- { "my-index-000001" : { "mappings" : { "properties" : { "age" : { "type" : "integer" }, "email" : { "type" : "keyword" }, "employee-id" : { "type" : "keyword", "index" : false }, "name" : { "type" : "text" } } } } } ---- [discrete] [[view-field-mapping]] == View the mapping of specific fields If you only want to view the mapping of one or more specific fields, you can use the <> API. This is useful if you don't need the complete mapping of an index or your index contains a large number of fields. The following request retrieves the mapping for the `employee-id` field. [source,console] ---- GET /my-index-000001/_mapping/field/employee-id ---- // TEST[continued] The API returns the following response: [source,console-result] ---- { "my-index-000001" : { "mappings" : { "employee-id" : { "full_name" : "employee-id", "mapping" : { "employee-id" : { "type" : "keyword", "index" : false } } } } } } ---- -- include::mapping/removal_of_types.asciidoc[] include::mapping/mapping-settings-limit.asciidoc[] include::mapping/types.asciidoc[] include::mapping/runtime.asciidoc[] include::mapping/fields.asciidoc[] include::mapping/params.asciidoc[] include::mapping/dynamic-mapping.asciidoc[]