--- navigation_title: "Circle" mapped_pages: - https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/ingest-circle-processor.html --- # Circle processor [ingest-circle-processor] Converts circle definitions of shapes to regular polygons which approximate them. $$$circle-processor-options$$$ | Name | Required | Default | Description | | --- | --- | --- | --- | | `field` | yes | - | The field to interpret as a circle. Either a string in WKT format or a map for GeoJSON. | | `target_field` | no | `field` | The field to assign the polygon shape to, by default `field` is updated in-place | | `ignore_missing` | no | `false` | If `true` and `field` does not exist, the processor quietly exits without modifying the document | | `error_distance` | yes | - | The difference between the resulting inscribed distance from center to side and the circle’s radius (measured in meters for `geo_shape`, unit-less for `shape`) | | `shape_type` | yes | - | Which field mapping type is to be used when processing the circle: `geo_shape` or `shape` | | `description` | no | - | Description of the processor. Useful for describing the purpose of the processor or its configuration. | | `if` | no | - | Conditionally execute the processor. See [Conditionally run a processor](docs-content://manage-data/ingest/transform-enrich/ingest-pipelines.md#conditionally-run-processor). | | `ignore_failure` | no | `false` | Ignore failures for the processor. See [Handling pipeline failures](docs-content://manage-data/ingest/transform-enrich/ingest-pipelines.md#handling-pipeline-failures). | | `on_failure` | no | - | Handle failures for the processor. See [Handling pipeline failures](docs-content://manage-data/ingest/transform-enrich/ingest-pipelines.md#handling-pipeline-failures). | | `tag` | no | - | Identifier for the processor. Useful for debugging and metrics. | ![error distance](images/error_distance.png "") ```console PUT circles { "mappings": { "properties": { "circle": { "type": "geo_shape" } } } } PUT _ingest/pipeline/polygonize_circles { "description": "translate circle to polygon", "processors": [ { "circle": { "field": "circle", "error_distance": 28.0, "shape_type": "geo_shape" } } ] } ``` Using the above pipeline, we can attempt to index a document into the `circles` index. The circle can be represented as either a WKT circle or a GeoJSON circle. The resulting polygon will be represented and indexed using the same format as the input circle. WKT will be translated to a WKT polygon, and GeoJSON circles will be translated to GeoJSON polygons. ::::{important} Circles that contain a pole are not supported. :::: ## Example: Circle defined in Well Known Text [_example_circle_defined_in_well_known_text] In this example a circle defined in WKT format is indexed ```console PUT circles/_doc/1?pipeline=polygonize_circles { "circle": "CIRCLE (30 10 40)" } GET circles/_doc/1 ``` The response from the above index request: ```console-result { "found": true, "_index": "circles", "_id": "1", "_version": 1, "_seq_no": 22, "_primary_term": 1, "_source": { "circle": "POLYGON ((30.000365257263184 10.0, 30.000111397193788 10.00034284530941, 29.999706043744222 10.000213571721195, 29.999706043744222 9.999786428278805, 30.000111397193788 9.99965715469059, 30.000365257263184 10.0))" } } ``` ## Example: Circle defined in GeoJSON [_example_circle_defined_in_geojson] In this example a circle defined in GeoJSON format is indexed ```console PUT circles/_doc/2?pipeline=polygonize_circles { "circle": { "type": "circle", "radius": "40m", "coordinates": [30, 10] } } GET circles/_doc/2 ``` The response from the above index request: ```console-result { "found": true, "_index": "circles", "_id": "2", "_version": 1, "_seq_no": 22, "_primary_term": 1, "_source": { "circle": { "coordinates": [ [ [30.000365257263184, 10.0], [30.000111397193788, 10.00034284530941], [29.999706043744222, 10.000213571721195], [29.999706043744222, 9.999786428278805], [30.000111397193788, 9.99965715469059], [30.000365257263184, 10.0] ] ], "type": "Polygon" } } } ``` ## Notes on Accuracy [circle-processor-notes] Accuracy of the polygon that represents the circle is defined as `error_distance`. The smaller this difference is, the closer to a perfect circle the polygon is. Below is a table that aims to help capture how the radius of the circle affects the resulting number of sides of the polygon given different inputs. The minimum number of sides is `4` and the maximum is `1000`. $$$circle-processor-accuracy$$$ | error_distance | radius in meters | number of sides of polygon | | --- | --- | --- | | 1.00 | 1.0 | 4 | | 1.00 | 10.0 | 14 | | 1.00 | 100.0 | 45 | | 1.00 | 1000.0 | 141 | | 1.00 | 10000.0 | 445 | | 1.00 | 100000.0 | 1000 |