Repository for both NEST and Elasticsearch.Net, the two official Elasticsearch .NET clients.
.NET Clients | Elasticsearch | Supported | Windows/Linux CI | Tests |
---|---|---|---|---|
0.x |
0.x |
❌ | ➖ | ➖ |
1.x |
1.x |
❌ | ➖ | ➖ |
2.x |
2.x |
❌ | ➖ | ➖ |
5.x |
5.x |
âś… | ||
6.x |
6.x |
âś… | ||
7.x |
7.x |
âś… | ||
master |
master |
❌ |
Can I use a 7.0.0
client against a 5.6
server (new against old), or a 6.0
client against a 7.2
server (old against new)?
No, this is not recommended.
No compatibility assurances are given between different major versions of the client and server. Major differences likely exist between major versions of the server, particularly around request and response object formats.
Both the server and the client are developed according to SemVer principles, so there should be no breaking changes in a minor version. A 7.0.0
client will work against a 7.2.0
server.
This can be illustrated with some examples;
Using a 7.0.0
client against a 7.0.0
server. There is client support for all features in the server. In some instances, we may decide to delay implementing new APIs or some server features until later minor versions of the client, but this is the exception and not the rule.
Using a 7.0.0
client against a 7.0.1
- 7.2.0
server. There is client support for all comparable features that are available in the 7.0.0
server. If you want to use new features introduced in 7.2.0
with a lower version client, then you will have to use the low level client DoRequest
method and perform the request/response (de)serialisation yourself.
When we release a client we will run the unit and integration tests against the latest minor patch version of Elasticsearch that matches the major.minor of the client release, and then any other latest minors within that major version.
Any incompatibilities between minor versions are documented against the release.
Always use the latest minor version of the client within that major version, so in this instance, at time of writing, this is version 6.8.0
. The reason being is that 6.8.0
will contain many bug fixes not present in the 6.0.0
version of the client.
master
reflects the latest server version, this is typically thecurrent latest major + 1
N.x
where N represents the major version component of the Elasticsearch server release its integrating with; e.g.7.x
N.Y
whereN
is the major version andY
is the minor component, typically opened as integration branch for a specific minor leavingN.x
free to do bug fixes.
All branches push new nuget packages on successful CI builds to https://ci.appveyor.com/nuget/elasticsearch-net
Please consult the current upgrading Elasticsearch guidelines to understand what you should consider when upgrading from an older version of Elasticsearch to a newer one.
Take a look at the blog post for details around the evolution of NEST 2.x, in addition to the list of breaking changes for NEST and Elasticsearch.Net.
Take a look at the blog post for the release of NEST 5.x, in addition to the list of breaking changes for NEST and Elasticsearch.Net.
Take a look at the blog post for the GA release of Elasticsearch.Net and NEST 6.0, in addition to the list of breaking changes for NEST and Elasticsearch.Net.
Take a look at the blog post for the GA release of Elasticsearch.Net and NEST 7.0. Please also see the 7.0.0 release notes.
NEST is the official high-level .NET client of Elasticsearch.
It aims to be a solid, strongly typed client with a very concise API. The client internally uses the low-level Elasticsearch.Net client. It maps requests and responses to strongly-typed objects with both fluent interface and object initializer syntax. It also provides a very powerful query DSL that maps 1-to-1 with the Elasticsearch API. This client takes advantage of .NET features where they make sense (e.g. type and index inference and inferred mapping from POCO properties). All client method calls have asynchronous variants with support for cancellation.
For a comprehensive, walkthrough-styled tutorial, check out the NuSearch example repository.
You can install NEST from the package manager console:
PM> Install-Package NEST
Alternatively, simply search for NEST
in the package manager UI.
You can connect to your Elasticsearch cluster via a single node, or by specifying multiple nodes using a connection pool. Using a connection pool has a few advantages over a single node connection, such as load balancing and cluster failover support.
Connecting to a single node
var node = new Uri("http://myserver:9200");
var settings = new ConnectionSettings(node);
var client = new ElasticClient(settings);
Connecting to multiple nodes using a connection pool
var nodes = new Uri[]
{
new Uri("http://myserver1:9200"),
new Uri("http://myserver2:9200"),
new Uri("http://myserver3:9200")
};
var pool = new StaticConnectionPool(nodes);
var settings = new ConnectionSettings(pool);
var client = new ElasticClient(settings);
Indexing a document is as simple as:
var tweet = new Tweet
{
Id = 1,
User = "kimchy",
PostDate = new DateTime(2009, 11, 15),
Message = "Trying out NEST, so far so good?"
};
var response = client.Index(tweet, idx => idx.Index("mytweetindex")); //or specify index via settings.DefaultIndex("mytweetindex");
All the calls have async variants:
var response = client.IndexAsync(tweet, idx => idx.Index("mytweetindex")); // returns a Task<IndexResponse>
// Or, in an async-context
var response = await client.IndexAsync(tweet, idx => idx.Index("mytweetindex")); // awaits a Task<IndexResponse>
var response = client.Get<Tweet>(1, idx => idx.Index("mytweetindex")); // returns an IGetResponse mapped 1-to-1 with the Elasticsearch JSON response
var tweet = response.Source; // the original document
NEST exposes a fluent interface and a powerful query DSL
var response = client.Search<Tweet>(s => s
.From(0)
.Size(10)
.Query(q => q
.Term(t => t.User, "kimchy") || q
.Match(mq => mq.Field(f => f.User).Query("nest"))
)
);
As well as an object initializer syntax if lambdas aren't your thing:
var request = new SearchRequest
{
From = 0,
Size = 10,
Query = new TermQuery { Field = "user", Value = "kimchy" } ||
new MatchQuery { Field = "description", Query = "nest" }
};
var response = client.Search<Tweet>(request);
NEST also includes and exposes the low-level Elasticsearch.Net client that you can fall back to in case anything is missing:
//.LowLevel is of type IElasticLowLevelClient
// Generic parameter of Search<> is the type of .Body on response
var response = client.LowLevel.Search<SearchResponse<Tweet>>("myindex", PostData.Serializable(new
{
from = 0,
size = 10,
fields = new [] {"id", "name"},
query = new {
term = new {
name = new {
value= "NEST",
boost = 2.0
}
}
}
}));
Full documentation at https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/client/net-api/current/nest.html
A low-level, dependency free client that has no opinions how you build and represent your requests and responses.
It provides a one-to-one mapping with the Elasticsearch REST API. The client is almost completely generated from the official REST API specification, which makes it easy to keep up-to-date. The client also has support for load balancing and cluster failover and all client method calls have both synchronous and asynchronous variants
You can install Elasticsearch.Net from the package manager console:
PM> Install-Package Elasticsearch.Net
Alternatively, search for Elasticsearch.Net
in the package manager UI.
Connecting using the low-level client is very similar to how you would connect using NEST. In fact, the connection constructs that NEST use are actually Elasticsearch.Net constructs. Thus, single node connections and connection pooling still apply when using Elasticsearch.Net.
var node = new Uri("http://myserver:9200");
var config = new ConnectionConfiguration(node);
var client = new ElasticLowLevelClient(config);
Note the main difference here is that we are instantiating an ElasticLowLevelClient
rather than ElasticClient
, and ConnectionConfiguration
instead of ConnectionSettings
.
Elasticsearch.Net is generated from the official REST specification, and thus maps to all Elasticsearch API endpoints.
client.GetSource("myindex","mytype","1",qs=>qs
.Routing("routingvalue")
);
This will execute a GET
to /myindex/mytype/1/_source?routing=routingvalue
. All the methods and arguments are fully documented based on the documentation of the specification.
As you can see, Elasticsearch.Net also strongly types the query string parameters that it knows exist on an endpoint with full Intellisense documentation. However, unknown query string parameters can still be added:
client.Source<StringResponse>("myindex", "1", new SourceRequestParameters
{
Routing = "routingvalue",
QueryString =
{
{ "key", "value" }
}
});
The query string parameter is always optional.
You can specify a request body directly with a string:
var myJson = @"{ ""hello"" : ""world"" }";
client.Index<StringResponse>("myindex", "1", myJson);
This will execute a POST
to /myindex/mytype/1
with the provided string myJson
passed verbatim as the request body.
Alternatively, you can specify an anonymous object:
var myJson = new { hello = "world" };
client.Index<BytesResponse>("myindex", "1", PostData.Serializable(myJson));
This will execute the same request, but this time myJson
will be serialized by the registered IElasticsearchSerializer
.
Full documentation at https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/client/net-api/current/elasticsearch-net.html
Pull requests and issues are very much welcomed and appreciated. If you'd like to report a bug or submit a feature/bug fix then please read our contributing guide first!
All Elasticsearch.Net and NEST documentation on elastic.co is generated from code within the Tests project using Roslyn; multi-line comments serve as the main bodies of text, intermixed with code samples that test the documented components. The intention is to reduce the likelihood of documentation becoming outdated as the source changes.
Text within multi-line comments conforms to asciidoc, a lightweight markdown style text format well suited to technical documentation. To generate the asciidoc files from the test files, you need to run the DocGenerator console application which will output the documentation files in the docs output directory. To verify that the generated asciidoc files can generate the documentation for the website, clone the elastic docs repo and follow the instructions there for building documentation locally. As an example, suppose I have cloned the elastic docs to c:\source\elastic-docs
, then to verify the generated asciidoc files for NEST are valid would be as follows (using Cygwin on Windows):
cd /cygdrive/c/source/elastic-docs
./build_docs.pl --doc /cygdrive/c/source/elasticsearch-net-master/docs/index.asciidoc --chunk=1 --open
The result of running this for a successful build will be:
Building HTML from /cygdrive/c/source/elasticsearch-net-master/docs/index.asciidoc
Done
See: /cygdrive/c/source/elasticsearch-docs/html_docs/index.html
A small HTTP server will be spun up locally on port 8000 through which you can view the documentation.
Pull Requests are most welcome for areas of documentation that need improving.
- Q42 for supporting the development of NEST
- redgate for supplying @Mpdreamz with an ANTS Memory Profiler 8 & ANTS Performance Profiler 8 licenses
- jetBrains for supplying @Mpdreamz with a dotTrace profiler and Resharper license
- CodeBetter for hosting the continuous integration for NEST
- Everyone who has been awesome enough to contribute back to NEST (You're listed automatically on the documentation page)
This software is Copyright (c) 2014-2019 by Elasticsearch BV.
This is free software, licensed under: The Apache License Version 2.0.