Data Typesedit

Elasticsearch type

Elasticsearch SQL type

SQL type

SQL precision

Core types

null

null

NULL

0

boolean

boolean

BOOLEAN

1

byte

byte

TINYINT

3

short

short

SMALLINT

5

integer

integer

INTEGER

10

long

long

BIGINT

19

unsigned_long

[preview] This functionality is in technical preview and may be changed or removed in a future release. Elastic will work to fix any issues, but features in technical preview are not subject to the support SLA of official GA features. unsigned_long

BIGINT

20

double

double

DOUBLE

15

float

float

REAL

7

half_float

half_float

FLOAT

3

scaled_float

scaled_float

DOUBLE

15

keyword type family

keyword

VARCHAR

32,766

text

text

VARCHAR

2,147,483,647

binary

binary

VARBINARY

2,147,483,647

date

datetime

TIMESTAMP

29

ip

ip

VARCHAR

39

version

version

VARCHAR

32,766

Complex types

object

object

STRUCT

0

nested

nested

STRUCT

0

Unsupported types

types not mentioned above

unsupported

OTHER

0

Most of Elasticsearch data types are available in Elasticsearch SQL, as indicated above. As one can see, all of Elasticsearch data types are mapped to the data type with the same name in Elasticsearch SQL, with the exception of date data type which is mapped to datetime in Elasticsearch SQL. This is to avoid confusion with the ANSI SQL types DATE (date only) and TIME (time only), which are also supported by Elasticsearch SQL in queries (with the use of CAST/CONVERT), but don’t correspond to an actual mapping in Elasticsearch (see the table below).

Obviously, not all types in Elasticsearch have an equivalent in SQL and vice-versa hence why, Elasticsearch SQL uses the data type particularities of the former over the latter as ultimately Elasticsearch is the backing store.

In addition to the types above, Elasticsearch SQL also supports at runtime SQL-specific types that do not have an equivalent in Elasticsearch. Such types cannot be loaded from Elasticsearch (as it does not know about them) however can be used inside Elasticsearch SQL in queries or their results.

The table below indicates these types:

SQL type

SQL precision

date

29

time

18

interval_year

7

interval_month

7

interval_day

23

interval_hour

23

interval_minute

23

interval_second

23

interval_year_to_month

7

interval_day_to_hour

23

interval_day_to_minute

23

interval_day_to_second

23

interval_hour_to_minute

23

interval_hour_to_second

23

interval_minute_to_second

23

geo_point

52

geo_shape

2,147,483,647

shape

2,147,483,647

SQL and multi-fieldsedit

A core concept in Elasticsearch is that of an analyzed field, that is a full-text value that is interpreted in order to be effectively indexed. These fields are of type text and are not used for sorting or aggregations as their actual value depends on the analyzer used hence why Elasticsearch also offers the keyword type for storing the exact value.

In most case, and the default actually, is to use both types for strings which Elasticsearch supports through multi-fields, that is the ability to index the same string in multiple ways; for example index it both as text for search but also as keyword for sorting and aggregations.

As SQL requires exact values, when encountering a text field Elasticsearch SQL will search for an exact multi-field that it can use for comparisons, sorting and aggregations. To do that, it will search for the first keyword that it can find that is not normalized and use that as the original field exact value.

Consider the following string mapping:

{
  "first_name": {
    "type": "text",
    "fields": {
      "raw": {
        "type": "keyword"
      }
    }
  }
}

The following SQL query:

SELECT first_name FROM index WHERE first_name = 'John'

is identical to:

SELECT first_name FROM index WHERE first_name.raw = 'John'

as Elasticsearch SQL automatically picks up the raw multi-field from raw for exact matching.