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== Aggregation Test-Drive We could spend the next few pages defining the various aggregations and their syntax,((("aggregations", "basic example", id="ix_basicex"))) but aggregations are truly best learned by example. Once you learn how to think about aggregations, and how to nest them appropriately, the syntax is fairly trivial. [NOTE] ========================= A complete list of aggregation buckets and metrics can be found at the http://bit.ly/1KNL1R3[online reference documentation]. We'll cover many of them in this chapter, but glance over it after finishing so you are familiar with the full range of capabilities. ========================= So let's just dive in and start with an example. We are going to build some aggregations that might be useful to a car dealer. Our data will be about car transactions: the car model, manufacturer, sale price, when it sold, and more. First we will bulk-index some data to work with: [source,js] -------------------------------------------------- POST /cars/transactions/_bulk { "index": {}} { "price" : 10000, "color" : "red", "make" : "honda", "sold" : "2014-10-28" } { "index": {}} { "price" : 20000, "color" : "red", "make" : "honda", "sold" : "2014-11-05" } { "index": {}} { "price" : 30000, "color" : "green", "make" : "ford", "sold" : "2014-05-18" } { "index": {}} { "price" : 15000, "color" : "blue", "make" : "toyota", "sold" : "2014-07-02" } { "index": {}} { "price" : 12000, "color" : "green", "make" : "toyota", "sold" : "2014-08-19" } { "index": {}} { "price" : 20000, "color" : "red", "make" : "honda", "sold" : "2014-11-05" } { "index": {}} { "price" : 80000, "color" : "red", "make" : "bmw", "sold" : "2014-01-01" } { "index": {}} { "price" : 25000, "color" : "blue", "make" : "ford", "sold" : "2014-02-12" } -------------------------------------------------- // SENSE: 300_Aggregations/20_basic_example.json Now that we have some data, let's construct our first aggregation. A car dealer may want to know which color car sells the best. This is easily accomplished using a simple aggregation. We will do this using a `terms` bucket: [source,js] -------------------------------------------------- GET /cars/transactions/_search?search_type=count { "aggs" : { <1> "colors" : { <2> "terms" : { "field" : "color" <3> } } } } -------------------------------------------------- // SENSE: 300_Aggregations/20_basic_example.json <1> Aggregations are placed under the ((("aggregations", "aggs parameter")))top-level `aggs` parameter (the longer `aggregations` will also work if you prefer that). <2> We then name the aggregation whatever we want: `colors`, in this example <3> Finally, we define a single bucket of type `terms`. Aggregations are executed in the context of search results,((("searching", "aggregations executed in context of search results"))) which means it is just another top-level parameter in a search request (for example, using the `/_search` endpoint). Aggregations can be paired with queries, but we'll tackle that later in <<_scoping_aggregations>>. [NOTE] ========================= You'll notice that we used the `count` <<search-type,search_type>>.((("count search type"))) Because we don't care about search results--the aggregation totals--the `count` search_type will be faster because it omits the fetch phase. ========================= Next we define a name for our aggregation. Naming is up to you; the response will be labeled with the name you provide so that your application can parse the results later. Next we define the aggregation itself. For this example, we are defining a single `terms` bucket.((("buckets", "terms bucket (example)")))((("terms bucket", "defining in example aggregation"))) The `terms` bucket will dynamically create a new bucket for every unique term it encounters. Since we are telling it to use the `color` field, the `terms` bucket will dynamically create a new bucket for each color. Let's execute that aggregation and take a look at the results: [source,js] -------------------------------------------------- { ... "hits": { "hits": [] <1> }, "aggregations": { "colors": { <2> "buckets": [ { "key": "red", <3> "doc_count": 4 <4> }, { "key": "blue", "doc_count": 2 }, { "key": "green", "doc_count": 2 } ] } } } -------------------------------------------------- <1> No search hits are returned because we used the `search_type=count` parameter <2> Our `colors` aggregation is returned as part of the `aggregations` field. <3> The `key` to each bucket corresponds to a unique term found in the `color` field. It also always includes `doc_count`, which tells us the number of docs containing the term. <4> The count of each bucket represents the number of documents with this color. The ((("doc_count")))response contains a list of buckets, each corresponding to a unique color (for example, red or green). Each bucket also includes a count of the number of documents that "fell into" that particular bucket. For example, there are four red cars. The preceding example is operating entirely in real time: if the documents are searchable, they can be aggregated. This means you can take the aggregation results and pipe them straight into a graphing library to generate real-time dashboards. As soon as you sell a silver car, your graphs would dynamically update to include statistics about silver cars. Voila! Your first aggregation! ((("aggregations", "basic example", startref ="ix_basicex")))