You can explicitly tell NEST to use multiple indices:
client.Search<MyObject>(s=>s
.Indices(new [] {"Index_A", "Index_B"})
...
)
If you want to search across all indices
client.Search<MyObject>(s=>s
.AllIndices()
...
)
Or if you want to search one index (thats not the default index)
client.Search<MyObject>(s=>s.
.Index("Index_A")
...
)
Remember since elasticsearch 19.8 you can also specify wildcards on index names
client.Search<MyObject>(s=>s
.Index("Index_*")
...
)
As for your indices_query
client.Search<MyObject>(s=>s
.AllIndices()
.Query(q=>q
.Indices(i=>i
.Indices(new [] { "INDEX_A", "INDEX_B"})
.Query(iq=>iq.Term("FIELD","VALUE"))
.NoMatchQuery(iq=>iq.Term("FIELD", "VALUE"))
)
)
);
UPDATE
These tests show off how you can make C#'s covariance work for you:
https://github.com/Mpdreamz/NEST/blob/master/src/Nest.Tests.Integration/Search/SubClassSupport/SubClassSupportTests.cs
In your case if all the types are not subclasses of a shared base you can still use 'object'
i.e:
.Search<object>(s=>s
.Types(typeof(Product),typeof(Category),typeof(Manufacturer))
.Query(...)
);
This will search on /yourdefaultindex/products,categories,manufacturers/_search
and setup a default ConcreteTypeSelector
that understands what type each returned document is.
Using ConcreteTypeSelector(Func<dynamic, Hit<dynamic>, Type>)
you can manually return a type based on some json value (on dynamic) or on the hit metadata.
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…