I am trying to query for documents that have dates within the body of the "content" field.
curl -XGET 'http://localhost:9200/index/_search' -d '{
"query": {
"regexp": {
"content": "^(0[1-9]|[12][0-9]|3[01])[- /.](0[1-9]|1[012])[- /.]((19|20)\\d\\d)$"
}
}
}'
Getting closer maybe?
curl -XGET 'http://localhost:9200/index/_search' -d '{
"filtered": {
"query": {
"match_all": {}
},
"filter": {
"regexp":{
"content" : "^(0[1-9]|[12][0-9]|3[01])[- /.](0[1-9]|1[012])[- /.]((19|20)\\d\\d)$"
}
}
}
}'
My regex seems to have been off. This regex has been validated on regex101.com The following query still returns nothing from the 175k documents I have.
curl -XPOST 'http://localhost:9200/index/_search?pretty=true' -d '{
"query": {
"regexp":{
"content" : "/[0-9]{4}-[0-9]{2}-[0-9]{2}|[0-9]{2}-[0-9]{2}-[0-9]{4}|[0-9]{2}/[0-9]{2}/[0-9]{4}|[0-9]{4}/[0-9]{2}/[0-9]{2}/g"
}
}
}'
I am starting to think that my index might not be set up for such a query. What type of field do you have to use to be able to use regular expressions?
mappings: {
doc: {
properties: {
content: {
type: string
}title: {
type: string
}host: {
type: string
}cache: {
type: string
}segment: {
type: string
}query: {
properties: {
match_all: {
type: object
}
}
}digest: {
type: string
}boost: {
type: string
}tstamp: {
format: dateOptionalTimetype: date
}url: {
type: string
}fields: {
type: string
}anchor: {
type: string
}
}
}
I want to find any record that has a date and graph the volume of documents by that date. Step 1. is to get this query working. Step 2. will be to pull the dates out and group them by them accordingly. Can someone suggest a way to get the first part working as I know the second part will be really tricky.
Thanks!
You should read Elasticsearch's Regexp Query documentation carefully, you are making some incorrect assumptions about how the regexp query works.
Probably the most important thing to understand here is what the string you are trying to match is. You are trying to match terms, not the entire string. If this is being indexed with StandardAnalyzer, as I would suspect, your dates will be separated into multiple terms:
"01/01/1901" becomes tokens "01", "01" and "1901"
"01 01 1901" becomes tokens "01", "01" and "1901"
"01-01-1901" becomes tokens "01", "01" and "1901"
"01.01.1901" actually will be a single token: "01.01.1901" (Due to decimal handling, see UAX #29)
You can only match a single, whole token with a regexp query.
Elasticsearch (and lucene) don't support full Perl-compatible regex syntax.
In your first couple of examples, you are using anchors, ^ and $. These are not supported. Your regex must match the entire token to get a match anyway, so anchors are not needed.
Shorthand character classes like \d (or \\d) are also not supported. Instead of \\d\\d, use [0-9]{2}.
In your last attempt, you are using /{regex}/g, which is also not supported. Since your regex needs to match the whole string, the global flag wouldn't even make sense in context. Unless you are using a query parser which uses them to denote a regex, your regex should not be wrapped in slashes.
(By the way: How did this one validate on regex101? You have a bunch of unescaped /s. It complains at me when I try it.)
To support this sort of query on such an analyzed field, you'll probably want to look to span queries, and particularly Span Multiterm and Span Near. Perhaps something like:
{
"span_near" : {
"clauses" : [
{ "span_multi" : {
"match": {
"regexp": {"content": "0[1-9]|[12][0-9]|3[01]"}
}
}},
{ "span_multi" : {
"match": {
"regexp": {"content": "0[1-9]|1[012]"}
}
}},
{ "span_multi" : {
"match": {
"regexp": {"content": "(19|20)[0-9]{2}"}
}
}}
],
"slop" : 0,
"in_order" : true
}
}
For newer elasticsearch versions (tested 8.5).
We can use .keyword in the field. It will match the whole sentence.
{
"size": 10,
"_source": [
"load",
"unload"
],
"query": {
"bool": {
"should": [
{
"regexp": {
"load.keyword": {
"value": ".*Search Term.*",
"flags": "ALL"
}
}
}
]
}
}
}
Related
I am struggling with a simple query that is supposed to work based on many tutorials but cannot make it work. Havin log field
Request sent, method=GET, headers={}, queryParams={forceArray=[true]}, entity=null, payload length=null} playerId=102
I am trying to get playerId with 3 digits value. Following query fails
log: /playerId=[0-9]{1,3}/
with KQLSyntaxError: Expected AND, OR, end of input, whitespace but "{" found. and log: /playerId=[0-9]{1,3}/
but supposed to work according to https://dzone.com/articles/getting-started-with-kibana-advanced-searches
This log: /playerId=[0-9][0-9][0-9]/returns basically everything with a single '0' character
This log: /playerId=*/ for some mysterious reasons returns nothing.
Edit
regular elastic search lucene based query does not work either
{
"query": {
"regexp": {
"log": {
"value": "*playerId*"
}
}
}
}
mapping:
{
"my-index" : {
"mappings" : {
"log" : {
"full_name" : "log",
"mapping" : {
"log" : {
"type" : "text",
"fields" : {
"keyword" : {
"type" : "keyword",
"ignore_above" : 256
}
}
}
}
}
}
}
}
any help appreciated
Edit
I validated my regex queries in https://regex101.com/
and they all work.
Edit 2
this works
"query": {
"match": {
"log": "playerId"
}
}
this return empty hits
"query": {
"regexp": {
"log": "playerId"
}
}
regards
This is because Kibana uses KQL (Kibana Query Language) by default and that doesn't support regular expressions.
You need to switch to the Lucene Query Language with the query string syntax which supports the regular expression you're trying.
Just click on KQL at the right end of the search bar to change the search syntax.
Also worth noting that regular expression queries are real performance hogger. You should really parse your logs before ingesting them so you can query the playerId field independently.
In any case, if you really want to do it that way, your query is not that far off from the real thing. Here is the correct version that will work for your case:
{
"query": {
"query_string": {
"query": "/.*playerId=[0-9]{3}/",
"default_field": "log.keyword"
}
}
}
So far I've used a query that would match paths and get aggregations of those paths:
{
"query": {
"terms": {
"path.keyword": [
"/api/v1.0/cc-dashboard/aggregated",
"/api/v1.1/cc-dashboard/aggregated",
"/api/v1.2/cc-dashboard/aggregated",
"/api/v1.3/cc-dashboard/aggregated"
]
}
},
"size": 0,
"aggs": { ...
Since the only difference between the paths is the version number (which keeps changing) I thought about using Regexp query.
In a normal regex I would search for \/api\/v1\.\d\/cc-dashboard\/aggregated.
I know ElasticSearch uses different reserved characters for this and I've tried everything I know, but the search comes back without hits.
Any Thoughts?
I think there are a couple of things to watch out for here. First make sure that path.keyword is actually of the type "keyword" or else you will have problem matching b/c you are actually trying to match against tokens and Elasticsearch will split on /. Second it doesn't look like Elasticsearch supports \d to escape for a digit, but it does allow [0-9]. Third to escape the . I had to use two backslashes \\.
So all together now:
PUT /stackoverflow
{
"mappings": {
"properties": {
"path.keyword": {
"type": "keyword"
}
}
}
}
POST /stackoverflow/_doc/1
{
"path.keyword": "/api/v1.0/cc-dashboard/aggregated"
}
POST /stackoverflow/_doc/2
{
"path.keyword": "/api/v1.1/cc-dashboard/aggregated"
}
POST /stackoverflow/_doc/3
{
"path.keyword": "/api/not/cc-dashboard/aggregated"
}
GET /stackoverflow/_search
GET /stackoverflow/_search
{
"query": {
"regexp": {
"path.keyword": {
"value": "/api/v1\\.[0-9]/cc-dashboard/aggregated"
}
}
}
}
DELETE /stackoverflow
I am using Elasticsearch to store sentences. I want to find sentences matching a regular expression. I tried query_string for this, though it does not return the required sentence.
Query:
{
"_source": "doc.sent",
"query": {
"query_string" : {
"query" : "/food.*table/",
"default_field" : "doc.sent"
}
}
}
Example sentence:
My food is left at the table right now.
You do not need regex for this, but if you want to match multiple words or multiple patterns, you can use & symbol
Intersection
The ampersand "&" joins two patterns in a way that both of them have
to match. For string "aaabbb":
aaa.+&.+bbb # match aaa&bbb # no match Using this feature
usually means that you should rewrite your regular expression.
Enabled with the INTERSECTION or ALL flags.
For your purpose, the query would look like:
{
"_source": "doc.sent",
"query": {
"query_string" : {
"query" : "food&table",
"default_field" : "doc.sent"
}
}
}
Or you could also use ANDor OR operators
{
"_source": "doc.sent",
"query": {
"query_string" : {
"query" : "food AND table",
"default_field" : "doc.sent"
}
}
}
I am searching for records which contain an array field payload.params
I would like to display all the fields which contain the string aabb
example: payload.params = [3raabb, 44aabb66, grgeg]
display: 3raabb, 44aabb66
how do I use regex on arrays?
{
"query": {
"regexp": {
"payload.params": "aabb"
}
}
}
get no results.
See the Elasticsearch regex documentation:
Lucene’s patterns are always anchored. The pattern provided must match the entire string.
Thus, use
{
"query": {
"regexp": {
"payload.params": ".*aabb.*"
}
}
}
I want find all items filtered by ID match some regular expression like
*TEST123* //pattern for regexp
So expected result are items
ATEST123001
ATEST123002
ATEST123003
TTTTEST123001
...
I can create some script which scan full storage and save IDs in log-file which can check later. But I want to find some better solution
Updated
I tried
"query" : { "match_all" : { }, "filtered" : { "filter" : { "regexp": { "id":".test123." } } } }, }
I receive
//nested: ElasticsearchParseException[Expected field name but got START_OBJECT \"filtered\"]
When I tried
{
"regexp": {
"id": "test123"
}
}
//Parse Failure [No parser for element [regexp]]]
ES 1.7.4 and Lucene 4.10.4
You can use regular expression queries. The regexp query allows you to use regular expression term queries.
Ref:
https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/query-dsl-regexp-query.html
Sample regex query :
{
"regexp":{
"id": "*test123*"
}
}
Update:
In 2.0 regexp filter has been replaced by regexp query.
{
"query": {
"filtered": {
"filter": {
"regexp":{
"id":".*TEST123.*"
}
}
}
}
}
You can try Query String.
{
"query": {
"query_string": {
"default_field": "if",
"query": "*test123*"
}
}
}