305

What is the difference between must and should in a bool query in Elasticsearch?

If I ONLY want results that contain my terms, should I then use must ?

For example, I have a query that should only contain certain values, and should also have no results that has a date/timestamp lower than today's (time/date - NOW). Also, can I use multiple filters inside a must query like the following code?

"filtered": {
"filter": {
"bool" : {
        "must" : {
            "term" : { "type" : 1 }
            "term" : { "totals" : 14 }
            "term" : { "groupId" : 3 }
            "range" : {
                "expires" : {
                    "gte": "now"
                }
            }
        },
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  • 2
    Don't know why they just can't make it commonly used linq/lambda expression style, but instead introducing so much complexities.
    – Nico
    Commented Oct 26, 2021 at 9:37

3 Answers 3

476

must means: The clause (query) must appear in matching documents. These clauses must match, like logical AND.

should means: At least one of these clauses must match, like logical OR.

Basically they are used like logical operators AND and OR. See this.

Now in a bool query:

must means: Clauses that must match for the document to be included.

should means: If these clauses match, they increase the _score; otherwise, they have no effect. They are simply used to refine the relevance score for each document.


Yes you can use multiple filters inside must.

10
  • A bit late to the party, but how about must for categories, or pricing, and should for attributes, like size and colour. Now, if size L and XL are selected, it's a should between those two, but if colour green is also selected, it has to be a must have for (sizes L OR XL) AND (colour green). Is that possible?
    – Mave
    Commented Apr 30, 2015 at 18:03
  • 1
    I believe in that case filters might be a better approach for attributes. They're geared towards exact matches and not relevance based searches. See queries and filters in the docs for more info.
    – Jim K.
    Commented May 7, 2015 at 10:53
  • 24
    I think you need to have minimum_number_should_match = 1 in order to enforce the idea that "at least one of these clauses must match".
    – Jim K.
    Commented May 7, 2015 at 10:54
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    Good answer! I just want to share a part of the documentation that was very helpful for me to understand this. elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/guide/current/…
    – ba0708
    Commented Dec 13, 2015 at 16:30
  • 3
    JimK - or no must clause. When there is no must clause, the minimum_number_should_match is implied.
    – LizH
    Commented Jan 31, 2017 at 17:40
29

Since this is a popular question, I would like to add that in Elasticsearch version 2 things changed a bit.

Instead of filtered query, one should use bool query in the top level.

If you don't care about the score of must parts, then put those parts into filter key. No scoring means faster search. Also, Elasticsearch will automatically figure out, whether to cache them, etc. must_not is equally valid for caching.

Reference: https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/query-dsl-bool-query.html

Also, mind that "gte": "now" cannot be cached, because of millisecond granularity. Use two ranges in a must clause: one with now/1h and another with now so that the first can be cached for a while and the second for precise filtering accelerated on a smaller result set.

29

As said in the documentation:

Must: The clause (query) must appear in matching documents.

Should: The clause (query) should appear in the matching document. In a boolean query with no must clauses, one or more should clauses must match a document. The minimum number of should clauses to match can be set using the minimum_should_match parameter.

In other words, results will have to be matched by all the queries present in the must clause ( or match at least one of the should clauses if there is no must clause.

Since you want your results to satisfy all the queries, you should use must.


You can indeed use filters inside a boolean query.

2
  • 36
    I think you mean "you must use must" rather than "you should use must" ;-)
    – jarmod
    Commented Jul 27, 2017 at 21:28
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    i wish it were called any and NOT should :( Would be less ambiguous
    – Sashank
    Commented May 23, 2023 at 22:12

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