Link Search Menu Expand Document Documentation Menu

You're viewing version 2.3 of the OpenSearch documentation. This version is no longer maintained. For the latest version, see the current documentation. For information about OpenSearch version maintenance, see Release Schedule and Maintenance Policy.

Object field type

An object field type contains a JSON object (a set of name/value pairs). A value in a JSON object may be another JSON object. It is not necessary to specify object as the type when mapping object fields because object is the default type.

Example

Create a mapping with an object field:

PUT testindex1/_mappings
{
    "properties": {
      "patient": { 
        "properties" :
          {
            "name" : {
              "type" : "text"
            },
            "id" : {
              "type" : "keyword"
            }
          }   
      }
    }
}

Index a document with an object field:

PUT testindex1/_doc/1
{ 
  "patient": { 
    "name" : "John Doe",
    "id" : "123456"
  } 
}

Nested objects are stored as flat key/value pairs internally. To refer to a field in a nested object, use parent field.child field (for example, patient.id).

Search for a patient with ID 123456:

GET testindex1/_search
{
  "query": {
    "term" : {
      "patient.id" : "123456"
    }
  }
}

Parameters

The following table lists the parameters accepted by object field types. All parameters are optional.

Parameter Description
dynamic Specifies whether new fields can be dynamically added to this object. Valid values are true, false, and strict. Default is true.
enabled A Boolean value that specifies whether the JSON contents of the object should be parsed. If enabled is set to false, the object’s contents are not indexed or searchable, but they are still retrievable from the _source field. Default is true.
properties Fields of this object, which can be of any supported type. New properties can be dynamically added to this object if dynamic is set to true.

The dynamic parameter

The dynamic parameter specifies whether new fields can be dynamically added to an object that is already indexed.

For example, you can initially create a mapping with a patient object that has only one field:

PUT testindex1/_mappings
{
    "properties": {
      "patient": { 
        "properties" :
          {
            "name" : {
              "type" : "text"
            }
          }   
      }
    }
}

Then you index a document with a new id field in patient:

PUT testindex1/_doc/1
{ 
  "patient": { 
    "name" : "John Doe",
    "id" : "123456"
  } 
}

As a result, the field id is added to the mappings:

{
  "testindex1" : {
    "mappings" : {
      "properties" : {        
        "patient" : {
          "properties" : {
            "id" : {
              "type" : "text",
              "fields" : {
                "keyword" : {
                  "type" : "keyword",
                  "ignore_above" : 256
                }
              }
            },
            "name" : {
              "type" : "text"
            }
          }
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

The dynamic parameter has the following valid values.

Value Description
true New fields can be added to the mapping dynamically. This is the default.
false New fields cannot be added to the mapping dynamically. If a new field is detected, it is not indexed or searchable. However, it is still retrievable from the _source field.
strict When new fields are added to the mapping dynamically, an exception is thrown. To add a new field to an object, you have to add it to the mapping first.

Inner objects inherit the dynamic parameter value from their parent unless they declare their own dynamic parameter value.

350 characters left

Have a question? .

Want to contribute? or .