The ES|QL documentation is composed of static content and generated content.
The static content exists in this directory and can be edited by hand.
However, the subdirectories _snippets
, images
and kibana
contain a mix
of static and generated content, and so updating them is a bit more involved.
The root esql
directory and the following two subdirectories contain static content:
commands
- contains the static content for the ES|QL commands. This content will typically contain mostlyinclude
directives for content in the_snippets
orimages
directories.functions-operators
- contains the static content for the ES|QL functions and operators. Again this will contain mostlyinclude
directives for content in the_snippets
orimages
directories.
Generated content is created by running the ESQL tests in the x-pack/plugin/esql
module.
It will be written into three subdirectories of the esql
directory:
In _snippets
there are files that can be included within other files using the
File Inclusion
feature of the Elastic Docs V3 system.
Most, but not all, files in this directory are generated.
In particular the directories _snippets/functions/*
and _snippets/operators/*
contain subdirectories that are mostly generated:
description
- description of each function scraped from@FunctionInfo#description
examples
- examples of each function scraped from@FunctionInfo#examples
parameters
- description of each function's parameters scraped from@Param
signature
- railroad diagram of the syntax to invoke each functiontypes
- a table of each combination of support type for each parameter. These are generated from tests.layout
- a fully generated description for each function
Most functions can use the generated docs generated in the layout
directory.
If we need something more custom for the function we can make a file in this
directory that can include
any parts of the files above.
To regenerate the files for a function run its tests using gradle.
For example to generate docs for the CASE
function:
./gradlew :x-pack:plugin:esql:test -Dtests.class='CaseTests'
To regenerate the files for all functions run all of ESQL's tests using gradle:
./gradlew :x-pack:plugin:esql:test
The _snippets/lists
directory contains re-usable content for lists of commands, functions or operators.
Whenever adding a command, function or operator, you usually need to add it to one of these lists.
The lists should also match natural groupings of the commands, functions or operators.
For example, when adding an aggregation function, add to the aggregation-functions.md
file.
The _snippets/commands
directory contains the content for the ES|QL commands.
There are two subdirectories, one static and one generated:
layout
- contains the static content for the ES|QL commands. The files in this directory are the main content for the documentation for the commands. They are not generated, and so this is the primary place to edit the content, or add new commands.examples
- contains the generated content for the ES|QL commands. The files in this directory are generated from the testCommandDocsTests
in thex-pack/plugin/esql
module. The structure of the subdirectories mimics the csv-spec files and test tags used in the tests.
Including generated examples in the command documentation is done by using the include directive.
The images
directory contains functions
and operators
subdirectories with
the *.svg
files used to describe the syntax of each function or operator.
These are all generated by the same tests that generate the functions and operators docs above.
The kibana
directory contains definition
and docs
subdirectories that are generated:
kibana/definition
- function definitions for kibana's ESQL editorkibana/docs
- the inline docs for kibana
These are also generated as part of the unit tests described above.
There are three overlapping mechanisms for generating the content:
- The
AbstractFunctionTestCase
class generates the content for all the functions and most operators. This class makes use of theDocsV3Support
class to generate the content. It uses the@FunctionInfo
and@Param
annotations on function and operator classes to know what content should be generated. All tests that extend this class will automatically generate the content for the functions they test. - Some operators do not have a clear class or test class, and so the content is generated by custom
tests that do not extend the
AbstractOperatorTestCase
class. See, for example, operators such asCast ::
, which usesCastOperatorTests
to call directly into theDocsV3Support
class to generate the content. - Commands do not have dedicated classes or test classes with annotation that can be used.
For this reason, the command documentation is generated by the
CommandDocsTests
class. Currently, this only covers tested examples used in the documentation, and all other commands content is static. Since there are no annotations to mark which examples to use, the command documentation relies on the docs author providing the knowledge of which examples to use by creating subdirectories and examples files that match the csv-spec files and tags to include.
To help differentiate between the static and generated content, the generated content is prefixed with a comment:
% This is generated by ESQL's AbstractFunctionTestCase. Do no edit it. See ../README.md for how to regenerate it.
When adding a new command, for example adding the CHANGE_POINT
command, do the following:
- Create a new file in the
_snippets/commands/layout
directory with the name of the command, for examplechange_point.md
. - Add the content for the command to the file. See other files in this directory for examples.
- Add the command to the list in
_snippets/lists/processing-commands.md
. - Add an include directive to the
commands/processing-commands.md
file to include the new command. - Add tested examples to the
_snippets/commands/examples
directory. See below for details.
When adding tested examples to a command, for example adding an example to the CHANGE_POINT
command, do the following:
- Make sure you have an example in an appropriate csv-spec file in the
x-pack/plugin/esql/qa/testFixtures/src/main/resources/
directory. - Make sure the example has a tag that is unique in that file, and matches the intent of the test, or the docs reason for including that test.
- If you only want to show the query, and no results, then do not tag the results table,
otherwise tag the results table with a tag that has the same name as the query tag, but with the suffix
-result
. - Create a file with the name of the tag in a subdirectory with the name of the csv-spec file
in the
_snippets/commands/examples
directory. While you could add the content to that file, it is not necessary, merely that the file exists - Run the test
CommandDocsTests
in thex-pack/plugin/esql
module to generate the content.
For example, we tag the following test in change_point.csv-spec:
example for docs
required_capability: change_point
// tag::changePointForDocs[]
ROW key=[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25]
| MV_EXPAND key
| EVAL value = CASE(key<13, 0, 42)
| CHANGE_POINT value ON key
| WHERE type IS NOT NULL
// end::changePointForDocs[]
;
// tag::changePointForDocs-result[]
key:integer | value:integer | type:keyword | pvalue:double
13 | 42 | step_change | 0.0
// end::changePointForDocs-result[]
;
Then we create the file _snippets/commands/examples/change_point.csv-spec/changePointForDocs.md
with the content:
This should be overwritten
Then we run the test CommandDocsTests
in the x-pack/plugin/esql
module to generate the content.
Now the content of the changePointForDocs.md file should have been updated:
% This is generated by ESQL's AbstractFunctionTestCase. Do no edit it. See ../README.md for how to regenerate it.
\```esql
ROW key=[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25]
| MV_EXPAND key
| EVAL value = CASE(key<13, 0, 42)
| CHANGE_POINT value ON key
| WHERE type IS NOT NULL
\```
| key:integer | value:integer | type:keyword | pvalue:double |
| --- | --- | --- | --- |
| 13 | 42 | step_change | 0.0 |
Finally include this file in the CHANGE_POINT
command file _snippets/commands/layout/change_point.md
:
**Examples**
The following example shows the detection of a step change:
:::{include} ../examples/change_point.csv-spec/changePointForDocs.md
:::