A Datastore query retrieves entities from Cloud Datastore that meet a specified set of conditions.
A typical query includes the following:
- An entity kind to which the query applies
- Optional filters based on the entities' property values, keys, and ancestors
- Optional sort orders to sequence the results
This page describes the structure and kinds of queries used within App Engine to retrieve data from Cloud Datastore.
Filters
A query's filters set constraints on the properties, keys, and ancestors of the entities to be retrieved.
Property filters
A property filter specifies
- A property name
- A comparison operator
- A property value
The property value must be supplied by the application; it cannot refer to or be calculated in terms of other properties. An entity satisfies the filter if it has a property of the given name whose value compares to the value specified in the filter in the manner described by the comparison operator.
The comparison operator can be any of the following (defined as enumerated constants in the nested class
Query.FilterOperator
):
Operator | Meaning |
---|---|
EQUAL |
Equal to |
LESS_THAN |
Less than |
LESS_THAN_OR_EQUAL |
Less than or equal to |
GREATER_THAN |
Greater than |
GREATER_THAN_OR_EQUAL |
Greater than or equal to |
NOT_EQUAL |
Not equal to |
IN |
Member of (equal to any of the values in a specified list) |
The
NOT_EQUAL
operator actually performs two queries: one in which all other filters are
unchanged and the
NOT_EQUAL
filter is replaced with a
LESS_THAN
filter, and one where it is replaced with a
GREATER_THAN
filter. The results are then merged, in order. A query can have no more than one
NOT_EQUAL
filter, and a query that has one cannot have any other inequality filters.
The IN
operator also performs multiple
queries: one for each item in the specified list, with all other filters
unchanged and the IN
filter replaced with an
EQUAL
filter. The results are merged in order of the items in the list. If a query has
more than one IN
filter, it is performed as
multiple queries, one for each possible combination of values in the
IN
lists.
A single query containing
NOT_EQUAL
or IN
operators is limited to a maximum of 30 subqueries.
For more information about how
NOT_EQUAL
and IN
queries translate to multiple queries in a JDO/JPA framework, see the article
Queries with != and IN filters.
Key filters
To filter on the value of an entity's key, use the special property Entity.KEY_RESERVED_PROPERTY
:
Ascending sorts on Entity.KEY_RESERVED_PROPERTY
are also supported.
When comparing for inequality, keys are ordered by the following criteria, in order:
- Ancestor path
- Entity kind
- Identifier (key name or numeric ID)
Elements of the ancestor path are compared similarly: by kind (string), then by key name or numeric ID. Kinds and key names are strings and are ordered by byte value; numeric IDs are integers and are ordered numerically. If entities with the same parent and kind use a mix of key name strings and numeric IDs, those with numeric IDs precede those with key names.
Queries on keys use indexes just like queries on properties and require custom indexes in the same cases, with a couple of exceptions: inequality filters or an ascending sort order on the key do not require a custom index, but a descending sort order on the key does. As with all queries, the development web server creates appropriate entries in the index configuration file when a query that needs a custom index is tested.
Ancestor filters
You can filter your Datastore queries to a specified ancestor, so that the results returned will include only entities descended from that ancestor:
Special query types
Some specific types of query deserve special mention:
Kindless queries
A query with no kind and no ancestor filter retrieves all of the entities of an application from Datastore. This includes entities created and managed by other App Engine features, such as statistics entities and Blobstore metadata entities (if any). Such kindless queries cannot include filters or sort orders on property values. They can, however, filter on entity keys by specifying Entity.KEY_RESERVED_PROPERTY
as the property name:
Ancestor queries
A query with an ancestor filter limits its results to the specified entity and its descendants:
Kindless ancestor queries
A kindless query that includes an ancestor filter will retrieve the specified ancestor and all of its descendants, regardless of kind. This type of query does not require custom indexes. Like all kindless queries, it cannot include filters or sort orders on property values, but can filter on the entity's key:
The following example illustrates how to retrieve all entities descended from a given ancestor:
Keys-only queries
A keys-only query returns just the keys of the result entities instead of the entities themselves, at lower latency and cost than retrieving entire entities:
It is often more economical to do a keys-only query first, and then fetch a subset of entities from the results, rather than executing a general query which may fetch more entities than you actually need.
Projection queries
Sometimes all you really need from the results of a query are the values of a few specific properties. In such cases, you can use a projection query to retrieve just the properties you're actually interested in, at lower latency and cost than retrieving the entire entity; see the Projection Queries page for details.
Sort orders
A query sort order specifies
- A property name
- A sort direction (ascending or descending)
For example:
If a query includes multiple sort orders, they are applied in the sequence specified. The following example sorts first by ascending last name and then by descending height:
If no sort orders are specified, the results are returned in the order they are retrieved from Datastore.
Note: Because of the way Datastore executes queries, if a query specifies inequality filters on a property and sort orders on other properties, the property used in the inequality filters must be ordered before the other properties.
Indexes
Every Datastore query computes its results using one or more indexes, which contain entity keys in a sequence specified by the index's properties and, optionally, the entity's ancestors. The indexes are updated incrementally to reflect any changes the application makes to its entities, so that the correct results of all queries are available with no further computation needed.
App Engine predefines a simple index on each property of an entity.
An App Engine application can define further custom indexes in an
index
configuration file named
datastore-indexes.xml
,
which is generated in your application's /war/WEB-INF/appengine-generated
directory
. The development server automatically
adds suggestions to this file as it encounters queries that cannot be executed with the existing indexes.
You can tune indexes manually by editing the file before uploading the application.
Query interface example
The low-level Java Datastore API provides class Query
for constructing queries and the PreparedQuery
interface for retrieving entities from Datastore:
Notice the use of FilterPredicate
and CompositeFilter
to construct filters. If you're setting only one filter on a query, you can just use FilterPredicate
by itself:
However, if you want to set more than one filter on a query, you must use CompositeFilter
, which requires at least two filters. The example above uses the shortcut helper CompositeFilterOperator.and
; the following example shows one way of constructing a composite OR filter:
What's next?
- Learn how to specify what a query returns and further control query results.
- Learn the common restrictions for queries on Cloud Datastore.
- Learn about query cursors, which allow an application to retrieve a query's results in convenient batches.
- Understand data consistency and how data consistency works with different types of queries on Cloud Datastore.