You're viewing version 2.8 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 This version is no longer maintained.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.
Query string queries
A query_string
query parses the query string based on the query_string
syntax. It lets you create powerful yet concise queries that can incorporate wildcards and search multiple fields.
Example
The following query searches for the speaker KING
in the play name that ends with well
:
GET shakespeare/_search
{
"query": {
"query_string": {
"query": "speaker:KING AND play_name: *well"
}
}
}
Parameters
The following table lists the parameters that query_string
query supports. All parameters except query
are optional.
Parameter | Data type | Description |
---|---|---|
query | String | The query string to use for search. Required. |
fields | String array | The list of fields to search (for example, "fields": ["title^4", "description"] ). Supports wildcards. |
default_field | String | The field in which to search if the field is not specified in the query string. Supports wildcards. Defaults to the value specified in the index.query.default_field index setting. By default, the index.query.default_field is * , which means extract all fields eligible for term query and filter the metadata fields. The extracted fields are combined into a query if the prefix is not specified. Eligible fields do not include nested documents. Searching all eligible fields could be a resource-intensive operation. The indices.query.bool.max_clause_count search setting defines the maximum value for the product of the number of fields and the number of terms that can be queried at one time. The default value for indices.query.bool.max_clause_count is 4,096. |
allow_leading_wildcard | Boolean | Specifies whether * and ? are allowed as first characters of a search term. Default is true . |
analyze_wildcard | Boolean | Specifies whether OpenSearch should attempt to analyze wildcard terms. Default is false . |
analyzer | String | The analyzer used to tokenize the query string text. Default is the index-time analyzer specified for the default_field . If no analyzer is specified for the default_field , the analyzer is the default analyzer for the index. |
quote_analyzer | String | The analyzer used to tokenize quoted text in the query string. Overrides the analyzer parameter for quoted text. Default is the search_quote_analyzer specified for the default_field . |
quote_field_suffix | String | This option lets you search for exact matches (surrounded with quotation marks) using a different analysis method than non-exact matches use. For example, if quote_field_suffix is .exact and you search for \"lightly\" in the title field, OpenSearch searches for the word lightly in the title.exact field. This second field might use a different type (for example, keyword rather than text ) or a different analyzer. |
phrase_slop | Integer | The maximum number of words that are allowed between the matched words. If phrase_slop is 2, a maximum of two words is allowed between matched words in a phrase. Transposed words have a slop of 2. Default is 0 (an exact phrase match where matched words must be next to each other). |
minimum_should_match | Positive or negative integer, positive or negative percentage, combination | If the query string contains multiple search terms and you used the or operator, the number of terms that need to match for the document to be considered a match. For example, if minimum_should_match is 2, “wind often rising” does not match “The Wind Rises.” If minimum_should_match is 1, it matches. |
rewrite | String | Determines how OpenSearch rewrites and scores multi-term queries. Valid values are constant_score , scoring_boolean , constant_score_boolean , top_terms_N , top_terms_boost_N , and top_terms_blended_freqs_N . Default is constant_score . |
auto_generate_synonyms_phrase_query | Boolean | Specifies whether to create match queries automatically for multi-term synonyms. Default is true . |
boost | Floating-point | Boosts the clause by the given multiplier. Values less than 1.0 decrease relevance, and values greater than 1.0 increase relevance. Default is 1.0. |
default_operator | String | The default Boolean operator used if no operators are specified. Valid values are: - OR : The string to be is interpreted as to OR be - AND : The string to be is interpreted as to AND be Default is OR . |
enable_position_increments | Boolean | When true, resulting queries are aware of position increments. This setting is useful when the removal of stop words leaves an unwanted “gap” between terms. Default is true . |
fuzziness | String | The number of character edits (insert, delete, substitute) that it takes to change one word to another when determining whether a term matched a value. For example, the distance between wined and wind is 1. Valid values are non-negative integers or AUTO . The default, AUTO , chooses a value based on the length of each term and is a good choice for most use cases. |
fuzzy_transpositions | Boolean | Setting fuzzy_transpositions to true (default) adds swaps of adjacent characters to the insert, delete, and substitute operations of the fuzziness option. For example, the distance between wind and wnid is 1 if fuzzy_transpositions is true (swap “n” and “i”) and 2 if it is false (delete “n”, insert “n”). If fuzzy_transpositions is false, rewind and wnid have the same distance (2) from wind , despite the more human-centric opinion that wnid is an obvious typo. The default is a good choice for most use cases. |
fuzzy_max_expansions | Positive integer | The maximum number of terms the fuzzy query will match. Default is 50. |
lenient | Boolean | Setting lenient to true lets you ignore data type mismatches between the query and the document field. For example, a query string of “8.2” could match a field of type float . Default is false . |
max_determinized_states | Positive integer | The maximum number of “states” (a measure of complexity) that Lucene can create for query strings that contain regular expressions (for example, "query": "/wind.+?/" ). Larger numbers allow for queries that use more memory. Default is 10,000. |
time_zone | String | Specifies the number of hours to offset the desired time zone from UTC . You need to indicate the time zone offset number if the query string contains a date range. For example, set time_zone": "-08:00" for a query with a date range such as "query": "wind rises release_date[2012-01-01 TO 2014-01-01]" ). The default time zone format used to specify number of offset hours is UTC . |