🔥码云GVP开源项目 12k star Uniapp+ElementUI 功能强大 支持多语言、二开方便! 广告
== Sorting Multivalue Buckets Multivalue buckets--the `terms`, `histogram`, and ++date_histogram++&#x2014;dynamically produce many buckets.((("sorting", "of multivalue buckets")))((("buckets", "multivalue, sorting")))((("aggregations", "sorting multivalue buckets"))) How does Elasticsearch decide the order that these buckets are presented to the user? By default, buckets are ordered by `doc_count` in((("doc_count", "buckets ordered by"))) descending order. This is a good default because often we want to find the documents that maximize some criteria: price, population, frequency. But sometimes you'll want to modify this sort order, and there are a few ways to do it, depending on the bucket. === Intrinsic Sorts These sort modes are _intrinsic_ to the bucket: they operate on data that bucket((("sorting", "of multivalue buckets", "intrinsic sorts"))) generates, such as `doc_count`.((("buckets", "multivalue, sorting", "intrinsic sorts"))) They share the same syntax but differ slightly depending on the bucket being used. Let's perform a `terms` aggregation but sort by `doc_count`, in ascending order: [source,js] -------------------------------------------------- GET /cars/transactions/_search?search_type=count { "aggs" : { "colors" : { "terms" : { "field" : "color", "order": { "_count" : "asc" <1> } } } } } -------------------------------------------------- // SENSE: 300_Aggregations/50_sorting_ordering.json <1> Using the `_count` keyword, we can sort by `doc_count`, in ascending order. We introduce an +order+ object((("order parameter (aggregations)"))) into the aggregation, which allows us to sort on one of several values: `_count`:: Sort by document count. Works with `terms`, `histogram`, `date_histogram`. `_term`:: Sort by the string value of a term alphabetically. Works only with `terms`. `_key`:: Sort by the numeric value of each bucket's key (conceptually similar to `_term`). Works only with `histogram` and `date_histogram`. === Sorting by a Metric Often, you'll find yourself wanting to sort based on a metric's calculated value.((("buckets", "multivalue, sorting", "by a metric")))((("metrics", "sorting multivalue buckets by")))((("sorting", "of multivalue buckets", "sorting by a metric"))) For our car sales analytics dashboard, we may want to build a bar chart of sales by car color, but order the bars by the average price, ascending. We can do this by adding a metric to our bucket, and then referencing that metric from the +order+ parameter: [source,js] -------------------------------------------------- GET /cars/transactions/_search?search_type=count { "aggs" : { "colors" : { "terms" : { "field" : "color", "order": { "avg_price" : "asc" <2> } }, "aggs": { "avg_price": { "avg": {"field": "price"} <1> } } } } } -------------------------------------------------- // SENSE: 300_Aggregations/50_sorting_ordering.json <1> The average price is calculated for each bucket. <2> Then the buckets are ordered by the calculated average in ascending order. This lets you override the sort order with any metric, simply by referencing the name of the metric. Some metrics, however, emit multiple values. The `extended_stats` metric is a good example: it provides half a dozen individual metrics. If you want to sort on a multivalue metric,((("metrics", "sorting multivalue buckets by", "multivalue metric"))) you just need to use the dot-path to the metric of interest: [source,js] -------------------------------------------------- GET /cars/transactions/_search?search_type=count { "aggs" : { "colors" : { "terms" : { "field" : "color", "order": { "stats.variance" : "asc" <1> } }, "aggs": { "stats": { "extended_stats": {"field": "price"} } } } } } -------------------------------------------------- // SENSE: 300_Aggregations/50_sorting_ordering.json <1> Using dot notation, we can sort on the metric we are interested in. In this example we are sorting on the variance of each bucket, so that colors with the least variance in price will appear before those that have more variance. === Sorting Based on "Deep" Metrics In the prior examples, the metric was a direct child of the bucket. An average price was calculated for each term.((("buckets", "multivalue, sorting", "on deeper, nested metrics")))((("metrics", "sorting multivalue buckets by", "deeper, nested metrics"))) It is possible to sort on _deeper_ metrics, which are grandchildren or great-grandchildren of the bucket--with some limitations. You can define a path to a deeper, nested metric by using angle brackets (`>`), like so: `my_bucket>another_bucket>metric`. The caveat is that each nested bucket in the path must be a _single-value_ bucket. A `filter` bucket produces((("filter bucket"))) a single bucket: all documents that match the filtering criteria. Multivalue buckets (such as `terms`) generate many dynamic buckets, which makes it impossible to specify a deterministic path. Currently, there are only three single-value buckets: `filter`, `global`((("global bucket"))), and `reverse_nested`. As a quick example, let's build a histogram of car prices, but order the buckets by the variance in price of red and green (but not blue) cars in each price range:((("histograms", "buckets generated by, sorting on a deep metric"))) [source,js] -------------------------------------------------- GET /cars/transactions/_search?search_type=count { "aggs" : { "colors" : { "histogram" : { "field" : "price", "interval": 20000, "order": { "red_green_cars>stats.variance" : "asc" <1> } }, "aggs": { "red_green_cars": { "filter": { "terms": {"color": ["red", "green"]}}, <2> "aggs": { "stats": {"extended_stats": {"field" : "price"}} <3> } } } } } } -------------------------------------------------- // SENSE: 300_Aggregations/50_sorting_ordering.json <1> Sort the buckets generated by the histogram according to the variance of a nested metric. <2> Because we are using a single-value `filter`, we can use nested sorting. <3> Sort on the stats generated by this metric. In this example, you can see that we are accessing a nested metric. The `stats` metric is a child of `red_green_cars`, which is in turn a child of `colors`. To sort on that metric, we define the path as `red_green_cars>stats.variance`. This is allowed because the `filter` bucket is a single-value bucket.