Using asyncio with Elasticsearch DSL
The elasticsearch-dsl package supports async/await with asyncio.
To ensure that you have all the required dependencies, install the [async] extra:
$ python -m pip install elasticsearch-dsl[async]
Connections
Use the async_connections module to manage your asynchronous connections.
from elasticsearch_dsl import async_connections async_connections.create_connection(hosts=['localhost'], timeout=20)
All the options available in the connections module can be used with async_connections.
How to avoid ‘Unclosed client session / connector’ warnings on exit
These warnings come from the aiohttp package, which is used internally by the
AsyncElasticsearch client. They appear often when the application exits and
are caused by HTTP connections that are open when they are garbage collected. To
avoid these warnings, make sure that you close your connections.
es = async_connections.get_connection() await es.close()
Search DSL
Use the AsyncSearch class to perform asynchronous searches.
from elasticsearch_dsl import AsyncSearch s = AsyncSearch().query("match", title="python") async for hit in s: print(hit.title)
Instead of using the AsyncSearch object as an asynchronous iterator, you can
explicitly call the execute() method to get a Response object.
s = AsyncSearch().query("match", title="python") response = await s.execute() for hit in response: print(hit.title)
An AsyncMultiSearch is available as well.
from elasticsearch_dsl import AsyncMultiSearch ms = AsyncMultiSearch(index='blogs') ms = ms.add(AsyncSearch().filter('term', tags='python')) ms = ms.add(AsyncSearch().filter('term', tags='elasticsearch')) responses = await ms.execute() for response in responses: print("Results for query %r." % response.search.query) for hit in response: print(hit.title)
Asynchronous Documents, Indexes, and more
The Document, Index, IndexTemplate, Mapping, UpdateByQuery and
FacetedSearch classes all have asynchronous versions that use the same name
with an Async prefix. These classes expose the same interfaces as the
synchronous versions, but any methods that perform I/O are defined as coroutines.
Auxiliary classes that do not perform I/O do not have asynchronous versions. The same classes can be used in synchronous and asynchronous applications.
When using a custom analyzer in an asynchronous application, use
the async_simulate() method to invoke the Analyze API on it.
Consult the API Documentation section for details about each specific method.