Spell Checking

The SpellCheck component is designed to provide inline query suggestions based on other, similar, terms.

The basis for these suggestions can be terms in a field in Solr, externally created text files, or fields in other Lucene indexes.

Configuring the SpellCheckComponent

Define Spell Check in solrconfig.xml

The first step is to specify the source of terms in solrconfig.xml. There are three approaches to spell checking in Solr, discussed below.

IndexBasedSpellChecker

The IndexBasedSpellChecker uses a Solr index as the basis for a parallel index used for spell checking. It requires defining a field as the basis for the index terms; a common practice is to copy terms from some fields (such as title, body, etc.) to another field created for spell checking. Here is a simple example of configuring solrconfig.xml with the IndexBasedSpellChecker:

<searchComponent name="spellcheck" class="solr.SpellCheckComponent">
  <lst name="spellchecker">
    <str name="classname">solr.IndexBasedSpellChecker</str>
    <str name="spellcheckIndexDir">./spellchecker</str>
    <str name="field">content</str>
    <str name="buildOnCommit">true</str>
    <!-- optional elements with defaults
    <str name="distanceMeasure">org.apache.lucene.search.spell.LevensteinDistance</str>
    <str name="accuracy">0.5</str>
    -->
 </lst>
</searchComponent>

The first element defines the searchComponent to use the solr.SpellCheckComponent. The classname is the specific implementation of the SpellCheckComponent, in this case solr.IndexBasedSpellChecker. Defining the classname is optional; if not defined, it will default to IndexBasedSpellChecker.

The spellcheckIndexDir defines the location of the directory that holds the spellcheck index, while the field defines the source field (defined in the Schema) for spell check terms. When choosing a field for the spellcheck index, it’s best to avoid a heavily processed field to get more accurate results. If the field has many word variations from processing synonyms and/or stemming, the dictionary will be created with those variations in addition to more valid spelling data.

Finally, buildOnCommit defines whether to build the spell check index at every commit (that is, every time new documents are added to the index). It is optional, and can be omitted if you would rather set it to false.

DirectSolrSpellChecker

The DirectSolrSpellChecker uses terms from the Solr index without building a parallel index like the IndexBasedSpellChecker. This spell checker has the benefit of not having to be built regularly, meaning that the terms are always up-to-date with terms in the index. Here is how this might be configured in solrconfig.xml

<searchComponent name="spellcheck" class="solr.SpellCheckComponent">
  <lst name="spellchecker">
    <str name="name">default</str>
    <str name="field">name</str>
    <str name="classname">solr.DirectSolrSpellChecker</str>
    <str name="distanceMeasure">internal</str>
    <float name="accuracy">0.5</float>
    <int name="maxEdits">2</int>
    <int name="minPrefix">1</int>
    <int name="maxInspections">5</int>
    <int name="minQueryLength">4</int>
    <float name="maxQueryFrequency">0.01</float>
    <float name="thresholdTokenFrequency">.01</float>
  </lst>
</searchComponent>

When choosing a field to query for this spell checker, you want one which has relatively little analysis performed on it (particularly analysis such as stemming). Note that you need to specify a field to use for the suggestions, so like the IndexBasedSpellChecker, you may want to copy data from fields like title, body, etc., to a field dedicated to providing spelling suggestions.

Many of the parameters relate to how this spell checker should query the index for term suggestions. The distanceMeasure defines the metric to use during the spell check query. The value "internal" uses the default Levenshtein metric, which is the same metric used with the other spell checker implementations.

Because this spell checker is querying the main index, you may want to limit how often it queries the index to be sure to avoid any performance conflicts with user queries. The accuracy setting defines the threshold for a valid suggestion, while maxEdits defines the number of changes to the term to allow. Since most spelling mistakes are only 1 letter off, setting this to 1 will reduce the number of possible suggestions (the default, however, is 2); the value can only be 1 or 2. minPrefix defines the minimum number of characters the terms should share. Setting this to 1 means that the spelling suggestions will all start with the same letter, for example.

The maxInspections parameter defines the maximum number of possible matches to review before returning results; the default is 5. minQueryLength defines how many characters must be in the query before suggestions are provided; the default is 4.

At first, spellchecker analyses incoming query words by looking up them in the index. Only query words, which are absent in index or too rare ones (below maxQueryFrequency) are considered as misspelled and used for finding suggestions. Words which are frequent than maxQueryFrequency bypass spellchecker unchanged. After suggestions for every misspelled word are found they are filtered for enough frequency with thresholdTokenFrequency as boundary value. These parameters (maxQueryFrequency and thresholdTokenFrequency) can be a percentage (such as .01, or 1%) or an absolute value (such as 4).

FileBasedSpellChecker

The FileBasedSpellChecker uses an external file as a spelling dictionary. This can be useful if using Solr as a spelling server, or if spelling suggestions don’t need to be based on actual terms in the index. In solrconfig.xml, you would define the searchComponent as so:

<searchComponent name="spellcheck" class="solr.SpellCheckComponent">
  <lst name="spellchecker">
    <str name="classname">solr.FileBasedSpellChecker</str>
    <str name="name">file</str>
    <str name="sourceLocation">spellings.txt</str>
    <str name="characterEncoding">UTF-8</str>
    <str name="spellcheckIndexDir">./spellcheckerFile</str>
    <!-- optional elements with defaults
    <str name="distanceMeasure">org.apache.lucene.search.spell.LevensteinDistance</str>
    <str name="accuracy">0.5</str>
    -->
 </lst>
</searchComponent>

The differences here are the use of the sourceLocation to define the location of the file of terms and the use of characterEncoding to define the encoding of the terms file.

In the previous example, name is used to name this specific definition of the spellchecker. Multiple definitions can co-exist in a single solrconfig.xml, and the name helps to differentiate them. If only defining one spellchecker, no name is required.

WordBreakSolrSpellChecker

WordBreakSolrSpellChecker offers suggestions by combining adjacent query terms and/or breaking terms into multiple words. It is a SpellCheckComponent enhancement, leveraging Lucene’s WordBreakSpellChecker. It can detect spelling errors resulting from misplaced whitespace without the use of shingle-based dictionaries and provides collation support for word-break errors, including cases where the user has a mix of single-word spelling errors and word-break errors in the same query. It also provides shard support.

Here is how it might be configured in solrconfig.xml:

<searchComponent name="spellcheck" class="solr.SpellCheckComponent">
  <lst name="spellchecker">
    <str name="name">wordbreak</str>
    <str name="classname">solr.WordBreakSolrSpellChecker</str>
    <str name="field">lowerfilt</str>
    <str name="combineWords">true</str>
    <str name="breakWords">true</str>
    <int name="maxChanges">10</int>
  </lst>
</searchComponent>

Some of the parameters will be familiar from the discussion of the other spell checkers, such as name, classname, and field. New for this spell checker is combineWords, which defines whether words should be combined in a dictionary search (default is true); breakWords, which defines if words should be broken during a dictionary search (default is true); and maxChanges, an integer which defines how many times the spell checker should check collation possibilities against the index (default is 10).

The spellchecker can be configured with a traditional checker (i.e., DirectSolrSpellChecker). The results are combined and collations can contain a mix of corrections from both spellcheckers.

Add It to a Request Handler

Queries will be sent to a RequestHandler. If every request should generate a suggestion, then you would add the following to the requestHandler that you are using:

<str name="spellcheck">true</str>

One of the possible parameters is the spellcheck.dictionary to use, and multiples can be defined. With multiple dictionaries, all specified dictionaries are consulted and results are interleaved. Collations are created with combinations from the different spellcheckers, with care taken that multiple overlapping corrections do not occur in the same collation.

Here is an example with multiple dictionaries:

<requestHandler name="spellCheckWithWordbreak" class="org.apache.solr.handler.component.SearchHandler">
  <lst name="defaults">
    <str name="spellcheck.dictionary">default</str>
    <str name="spellcheck.dictionary">wordbreak</str>
    <str name="spellcheck.count">20</str>
  </lst>
  <arr name="last-components">
    <str>spellcheck</str>
  </arr>
</requestHandler>

Spell Check Parameters

The SpellCheck component accepts the parameters described below.

spellcheck

This parameter turns on SpellCheck suggestions for the request. If true, then spelling suggestions will be generated. This is required if spell checking is desired.

spellcheck.q or q

This parameter specifies the query to spellcheck.

If spellcheck.q is defined, then it is used; otherwise the original input query is used. The spellcheck.q parameter is intended to be the original query, minus any extra markup like field names, boosts, and so on. If the q parameter is specified, then the SpellingQueryConverter class is used to parse it into tokens; otherwise the WhitespaceTokenizer is used.

The choice of which one to use is up to the application. Essentially, if you have a spelling "ready" version in your application, then it is probably better to use spellcheck.q. Otherwise, if you just want Solr to do the job, use the q parameter.

The SpellingQueryConverter class does not deal properly with non-ASCII characters. In this case, you have either to use spellcheck.q, or implement your own QueryConverter.
spellcheck.build

If set to true, this parameter creates the dictionary to be used for spell-checking. In a typical search application, you will need to build the dictionary before using the spell check. However, it’s not always necessary to build a dictionary first. For example, you can configure the spellchecker to use a dictionary that already exists.

The dictionary will take some time to build, so this parameter should not be sent with every request.

spellcheck.reload

If set to true, this parameter reloads the spellchecker. The results depend on the implementation of SolrSpellChecker.reload(). In a typical implementation, reloading the spellchecker means reloading the dictionary.

spellcheck.count

This parameter specifies the maximum number of suggestions that the spellchecker should return for a term. If this parameter isn’t set, the value defaults to 1. If the parameter is set but not assigned a number, the value defaults to 5. If the parameter is set to a positive integer, that number becomes the maximum number of suggestions returned by the spellchecker.

spellcheck.onlyMorePopular

If true, Solr will return suggestions that result in more hits for the query than the existing query. Note that this will return more popular suggestions even when the given query term is present in the index and considered "correct".

spellcheck.maxResultsForSuggest

If, for example, this is set to 5 and the user’s query returns 5 or fewer results, the spellchecker will report "correctlySpelled=false" and also offer suggestions (and collations if requested). Setting this greater than zero is useful for creating "did-you-mean?" suggestions for queries that return a low number of hits.

spellcheck.alternativeTermCount

Defines the number of suggestions to return for each query term existing in the index and/or dictionary. Presumably, users will want fewer suggestions for words with docFrequency>0. Also, setting this value enables context-sensitive spell suggestions.

spellcheck.extendedResults

If true, this parameter causes to Solr to return additional information about spellcheck results, such as the frequency of each original term in the index (origFreq) as well as the frequency of each suggestion in the index (frequency). Note that this result format differs from the non-extended one as the returned suggestion for a word is actually an array of lists, where each list holds the suggested term and its frequency.

spellcheck.collate

If true, this parameter directs Solr to take the best suggestion for each token (if one exists) and construct a new query from the suggestions.

For example, if the input query was "jawa class lording" and the best suggestion for "jawa" was "java" and "lording" was "loading", then the resulting collation would be "java class loading".

The spellcheck.collate parameter only returns collations that are guaranteed to result in hits if re-queried, even when applying original fq parameters. This is especially helpful when there is more than one correction per query.

This only returns a query to be used. It does not actually run the suggested query.
spellcheck.maxCollations

The maximum number of collations to return. The default is 1. This parameter is ignored if spellcheck.collate is false.

spellcheck.maxCollationTries

This parameter specifies the number of collation possibilities for Solr to try before giving up. Lower values ensure better performance. Higher values may be necessary to find a collation that can return results. The default value is 0, which is equivalent to not checking collations. This parameter is ignored if spellcheck.collate is false.

spellcheck.maxCollationEvaluations

This parameter specifies the maximum number of word correction combinations to rank and evaluate prior to deciding which collation candidates to test against the index. This is a performance safety-net in case a user enters a query with many misspelled words. The default is 10000 combinations, which should work well in most situations.

spellcheck.collateExtendedResults

If true, this parameter returns an expanded response format detailing the collations Solr found. The default value is false and this is ignored if spellcheck.collate is false.

spellcheck.collateMaxCollectDocs

This parameter specifies the maximum number of documents that should be collected when testing potential collations against the index. A value of 0 indicates that all documents should be collected, resulting in exact hit-counts. Otherwise an estimation is provided as a performance optimization in cases where exact hit-counts are unnecessary – the higher the value specified, the more precise the estimation.

The default value for this parameter is 0, but when spellcheck.collateExtendedResults is false, the optimization is always used as if 1 had been specified.

spellcheck.collateParam.* Prefix

This parameter prefix can be used to specify any additional parameters that you wish to the Spellchecker to use when internally validating collation queries. For example, even if your regular search results allow for loose matching of one or more query terms via parameters like q.op=OR and mm=20% you can specify override params such as spellcheck.collateParam.q.op=AND&spellcheck.collateParam.mm=100% to require that only collations consisting of words that are all found in at least one document may be returned.

spellcheck.dictionary

This parameter causes Solr to use the dictionary named in the parameter’s argument. The default setting is default. This parameter can be used to invoke a specific spellchecker on a per request basis.

spellcheck.accuracy

Specifies an accuracy value to be used by the spell checking implementation to decide whether a result is worthwhile or not. The value is a float between 0 and 1. Defaults to Float.MIN_VALUE.

spellcheck.<DICT_NAME>.key

Specifies a key/value pair for the implementation handling a given dictionary. The value that is passed through is just key=value (spellcheck.<DICT_NAME>. is stripped off).

For example, given a dictionary called foo, spellcheck.foo.myKey=myValue would result in myKey=myValue being passed through to the implementation handling the dictionary foo.

Spell Check Example

Using Solr’s bin/solr -e techproducts example, this query shows the results of a simple request that defines a query using the spellcheck.q parameter, and forces the collations to require all input terms must match:

http://localhost:8983/solr/techproducts/spell?df=text&spellcheck.q=delll+ultra+sharp&spellcheck=true&spellcheck.collateParam.q.op=AND&wt=xml

Results:

<lst name="spellcheck">
  <lst name="suggestions">
    <lst name="delll">
      <int name="numFound">1</int>
      <int name="startOffset">0</int>
      <int name="endOffset">5</int>
      <int name="origFreq">0</int>
      <arr name="suggestion">
        <lst>
          <str name="word">dell</str>
          <int name="freq">1</int>
        </lst>
      </arr>
    </lst>
    <lst name="ultra sharp">
      <int name="numFound">1</int>
      <int name="startOffset">6</int>
      <int name="endOffset">17</int>
      <int name="origFreq">0</int>
      <arr name="suggestion">
        <lst>
          <str name="word">ultrasharp</str>
          <int name="freq">1</int>
        </lst>
      </arr>
    </lst>
  </lst>
  <bool name="correctlySpelled">false</bool>
  <lst name="collations">
    <lst name="collation">
      <str name="collationQuery">dell ultrasharp</str>
      <int name="hits">1</int>
      <lst name="misspellingsAndCorrections">
        <str name="delll">dell</str>
        <str name="ultra sharp">ultrasharp</str>
      </lst>
    </lst>
  </lst>
</lst>

Distributed SpellCheck

The SpellCheckComponent also supports spellchecking on distributed indexes. If you are using the SpellCheckComponent on a request handler other than "/select", you must provide the following two parameters:

shards

Specifies the shards in your distributed indexing configuration. For more information about distributed indexing, see Distributed Search with Index Sharding

shards.qt

Specifies the request handler Solr uses for requests to shards. This parameter is not required for the /select request handler.

For example:

http://localhost:8983/solr/techproducts/spell?spellcheck=true&spellcheck.build=true&spellcheck.q=toyata&shards.qt=/spell&shards=solr-shard1:8983/solr/techproducts,solr-shard2:8983/solr/techproducts

In case of a distributed request to the SpellCheckComponent, the shards are requested for at least five suggestions even if the spellcheck.count parameter value is less than five. Once the suggestions are collected, they are ranked by the configured distance measure (Levenstein Distance by default) and then by aggregate frequency.

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