Working with Indexes

Index Identifiers and Handles

An index handle uniquely identifies an index in the database. It is a string and consists of the collection name and an index identifier separated by a /. The index identifier part is a numeric value that is auto-generated by ArangoDB.

A specific index of a collection can be accessed using its index handle or index identifier as follows:

db.collection.index("<index-handle>");
db.collection.index("<index-identifier>");
db._index("<index-handle>");

For example: Assume that the index handle, which is stored in the _id attribute of the index, is demo/362549736 and the index was created in a collection named demo. Then this index can be accessed as:

db.demo.index("demo/362549736");

Because the index handle is unique within the database, you can leave out the collection and use the shortcut:

db._index("demo/362549736");

Collection Methods

Listing all indexes of a collection

returns information about the indexes getIndexes()

Returns an array of all indexes defined for the collection.

Note that _key implicitly has an index assigned to it.

arangosh> db.test.ensureHashIndex("hashListAttribute",
........> "hashListSecondAttribute.subAttribute");
arangosh> db.test.getIndexes();
show execution results

Creating an index

Indexes should be created using the general method ensureIndex. This method obsoletes the specialized index-specific methods ensureHashIndex, ensureSkiplist, ensureUniqueConstraint etc.

ensures that an index exists collection.ensureIndex(index-description)

Ensures that an index according to the index-description exists. A new index will be created if none exists with the given description.

The index-description must contain at least a type attribute. Other attributes may be necessary, depending on the index type.

type can be one of the following values:

  • hash: hash index
  • skiplist: skiplist index
  • fulltext: fulltext index
  • geo1: geo index, with one attribute
  • geo2: geo index, with two attributes

sparse can be true or false.

For hash, and skiplist the sparsity can be controlled, fulltext and geo are sparse by definition.

unique can be true or false and is supported by hash or skiplist

Calling this method returns an index object. Whether or not the index object existed before the call is indicated in the return attribute isNewlyCreated.

deduplicate can be true or false and is supported by array indexes of type hash or skiplist. It controls whether inserting duplicate index values from the same document into a unique array index will lead to a unique constraint error or not. The default value is true, so only a single instance of each non-unique index value will be inserted into the index per document. Trying to insert a value into the index that already exists in the index will always fail, regardless of the value of this attribute.

Examples

arangosh> db.test.ensureIndex({ type: "hash", fields: [ "a" ], sparse: true });
arangosh> db.test.ensureIndex({ type: "hash", fields: [ "a", "b" ], unique: true });
show execution results

Dropping an index

drops an index collection.dropIndex(index)

Drops the index. If the index does not exist, then false is returned. If the index existed and was dropped, then true is returned. Note that you cannot drop some special indexes (e.g. the primary index of a collection or the edge index of an edge collection).

collection.dropIndex(index-handle)

Same as above. Instead of an index an index handle can be given.

arangosh> db.example.ensureSkiplist("a", "b");
arangosh> var indexInfo = db.example.getIndexes();
arangosh> indexInfo;
arangosh> db.example.dropIndex(indexInfo[0])
arangosh> db.example.dropIndex(indexInfo[1].id)
arangosh> indexInfo = db.example.getIndexes();
show execution results

Load Indexes into Memory

Loads all indexes of this collection into Memory. collection.loadIndexesIntoMemory()

This function tries to cache all index entries of this collection into the main memory. Therefore it iterates over all indexes of the collection and stores the indexed values, not the entire document data, in Memory. All lookups that could be found in the cache are much faster than lookups not stored in the cache so you get a nice performance boost. It is also guaranteed that the cache is consistent with the stored data.

For the time being this function is only useful on RocksDB storage engine, as in MMFiles engine all indexes are in memory anyways.

On RocksDB this function honors all memory limits, if the indexes you want to load are smaller than your memory limit this function guarantees that most index values are cached. If the index is larger than your memory limit this function will fill up values up to this limit and for the time being there is no way to control which indexes of the collection should have priority over others.

arangosh> db.example.loadIndexesIntoMemory();

Database Methods

Fetching an index by handle

finds an index db._index(index-handle)

Returns the index with index-handle or null if no such index exists.

arangosh> db.example.ensureIndex({ type: "skiplist", fields: [ "a", "b" ] });
arangosh> var indexInfo = db.example.getIndexes().map(function(x) { return x.id; });
arangosh> indexInfo;
arangosh> db._index(indexInfo[0])
arangosh> db._index(indexInfo[1])
show execution results

Dropping an index

drops an index db._dropIndex(index)

Drops the index. If the index does not exist, then false is returned. If the index existed and was dropped, then true is returned.

db._dropIndex(index-handle)

Drops the index with index-handle.

arangosh> db.example.ensureIndex({ type: "skiplist", fields: [ "a", "b" ] });
arangosh> var indexInfo = db.example.getIndexes();
arangosh> indexInfo;
arangosh> db._dropIndex(indexInfo[0])
arangosh> db._dropIndex(indexInfo[1].id)
arangosh> indexInfo = db.example.getIndexes();
show execution results

Revalidating whether an index is used

finds an index

So you've created an index, and since its maintainance isn't for free, you definitely want to know whether your query can utilize it.

You can use explain to verify whether skiplists or hash indexes are used (if you omit colors: false you will get nice colors in ArangoShell):

arangosh> var explain = require("@arangodb/aql/explainer").explain;
arangosh> db.example.ensureIndex({ type: "skiplist", fields: [ "a", "b" ] });
arangosh> explain("FOR doc IN example FILTER doc.a < 23 RETURN doc", {colors:false});
show execution results