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Home/ Questions/Q 9254243
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 18, 20262026-06-18T11:25:08+00:00 2026-06-18T11:25:08+00:00

Just reading through the search api documentation and have come across a stack overflow

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Just reading through the search api documentation and have come across a stack overflow question with an answer that mentions a default “per-document consistent” indexes (Appengine Search API – Globally Consistent).

I can’t find any mention of this term in the App Engine documentation for the Search API and was wondering what this meant (or point me in the right direction).

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-18T11:25:09+00:00Added an answer on June 18, 2026 at 11:25 am

    Globally consistent indexes were deprecated in Version 1.7.3 (See: https://code.google.com/p/googleappengine/wiki/SdkReleaseNotes#Version_1.7.3_-_October_23,_2012)

    The difference between consistency modes is explained in the source here: https://code.google.com/p/googleappengine/source/browse/trunk/python/google/appengine/api/search/search.py?r=281#2334

    Specifically:

    Consistency modes supported by indexes. When creating an index you
    may request whether the index is GLOBALLY_CONSISTENT or
    PER_DOCUMENT_CONSISTENT. An index with GLOBALLY_CONSISTENT mode set, when
    searched, returns results with all changes prior to the search request,
    committted. For an index with PER_DOCUMENT_CONSISTENT mode set, a search
    result may contain some out of date documents. However, any two changes
    to any document stored in such an index are applied in the correct order.
    The benefit of PER_DOCUMENT_CONSISTENT is that it provides much higher
    index document throughput than a globally consistent one.

    Typically, you would use GLOBALLY_CONSISTENT if organizing personal
    user information, to reflect all changes known to the user in any
    search results. PER_DOCUMENT_CONSISTENT should be used in indexes
    that amalgamate information from multiple sources, where no single
    user is aware of all collected data.

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