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Package org.apache.lucene.index

Code to maintain and access indices.

See: Description

Package org.apache.lucene.index Description

Code to maintain and access indices.

Table Of Contents

  1. Index APIs
  2. Field types
  3. Postings APIs
  4. Index Statistics

Index APIs

IndexWriter

IndexWriter is used to create an index, and to add, update and delete documents. The IndexWriter class is thread safe, and enforces a single instance per index. Creating an IndexWriter creates a new index or opens an existing index for writing, in a Directory, depending on the configuration in IndexWriterConfig. A Directory is an abstraction that typically represents a local file-system directory (see various implementations of FSDirectory), but it may also stand for some other storage, such as RAM.

IndexReader

IndexReader is used to read data from the index, and supports searching. Many thread-safe readers may be DirectoryReader.open(org.apache.lucene.store.Directory) concurrently with a single (or no) writer. Each reader maintains a consistent "point in time" view of an index and must be explicitly refreshed (see DirectoryReader.openIfChanged(org.apache.lucene.index.DirectoryReader)) in order to incorporate writes that may occur after it is opened.

Segments and docids

Lucene's index is composed of segments, each of which contains a subset of all the documents in the index, and is a complete searchable index in itself, over that subset. As documents are written to the index, new segments are created and flushed to directory storage. Segments are immutable; updates and deletions may only create new segments and do not modify existing ones. Over time, the writer merges groups of smaller segments into single larger ones in order to maintain an index that is efficient to search, and to reclaim dead space left behind by deleted (and updated) documents.

Each document is identified by a 32-bit number, its "docid," and is composed of a collection of Field values of diverse types (postings, stored fields, doc values, and points). Docids come in two flavors: global and per-segment. A document's global docid is just the sum of its per-segment docid and that segment's base docid offset. External, high-level APIs only handle global docids, but internal APIs that reference a LeafReader, which is a reader for a single segment, deal in per-segment docids.

Docids are assigned sequentially within each segment (starting at 0). Thus the number of documents in a segment is the same as its maximum docid; some may be deleted, but their docids are retained until the segment is merged. When segments merge, their documents are assigned new sequential docids. Accordingly, docid values must always be treated as internal implementation, not exposed as part of an application, nor stored or referenced outside of Lucene's internal APIs.

Field Types

Lucene supports a variety of different document field data structures. Lucene's core, the inverted index, is comprised of "postings." The postings, with their term dictionary, can be thought of as a map that provides efficient lookup given a Term (roughly, a word or token), to (the ordered list of) Documents containing that Term. Codecs may additionally record impacts alongside postings in order to be able to skip over low-scoring documents at search time. Postings do not provide any way of retrieving terms given a document, short of scanning the entire index.

Stored fields are essentially the opposite of postings, providing efficient retrieval of field values given a docid. All stored field values for a document are stored together in a block. Different types of stored field provide high-level datatypes such as strings and numbers on top of the underlying bytes. Stored field values are usually retrieved by the searcher using an implementation of StoredFieldVisitor.

DocValues fields are what are sometimes referred to as columnar, or column-stride fields, by analogy to relational database terminology, in which documents are considered as rows, and fields, columns. DocValues fields store values per-field: a value for every document is held in a single data structure, providing for rapid, sequential lookup of a field-value given a docid. These fields are used for efficient value-based sorting, and for faceting, but they are not useful for filtering.

PointValues represent numeric values using a kd-tree data structure. Efficient 1- and higher dimensional implementations make these the choice for numeric range and interval queries, and geo-spatial queries.

Postings APIs

Fields

Fields is the initial entry point into the postings APIs, this can be obtained in several ways:

 // access indexed fields for an index segment
 Fields fields = reader.fields();
 // access term vector fields for a specified document
 Fields fields = reader.getTermVectors(docid);
 
Fields implements Java's Iterable interface, so it's easy to enumerate the list of fields:
 // enumerate list of fields
 for (String field : fields) {
   // access the terms for this field
   Terms terms = fields.terms(field);
 }
 

Terms

Terms represents the collection of terms within a field, exposes some metadata and statistics, and an API for enumeration.

 // metadata about the field
 System.out.println("positions? " + terms.hasPositions());
 System.out.println("offsets? " + terms.hasOffsets());
 System.out.println("payloads? " + terms.hasPayloads());
 // iterate through terms
 TermsEnum termsEnum = terms.iterator(null);
 BytesRef term = null;
 while ((term = termsEnum.next()) != null) {
   doSomethingWith(termsEnum.term());
 }
 
TermsEnum provides an iterator over the list of terms within a field, some statistics about the term, and methods to access the term's documents and positions.
 // seek to a specific term
 boolean found = termsEnum.seekExact(new BytesRef("foobar"));
 if (found) {
   // get the document frequency
   System.out.println(termsEnum.docFreq());
   // enumerate through documents
   PostingsEnum docs = termsEnum.postings(null, null);
   // enumerate through documents and positions
   PostingsEnum docsAndPositions = termsEnum.postings(null, null, PostingsEnum.FLAG_POSITIONS);
 }
 

Documents

PostingsEnum is an extension of DocIdSetIteratorthat iterates over the list of documents for a term, along with the term frequency within that document.

 int docid;
 while ((docid = docsEnum.nextDoc()) != DocIdSetIterator.NO_MORE_DOCS) {
   System.out.println(docid);
   System.out.println(docsEnum.freq());
  }
 

Positions

PostingsEnum also allows iteration of the positions a term occurred within the document, and any additional per-position information (offsets and payload). The information available is controlled by flags passed to TermsEnum#postings

 int docid;
 PostingsEnum postings = termsEnum.postings(null, null, PostingsEnum.FLAG_PAYLOADS | PostingsEnum.FLAG_OFFSETS);
 while ((docid = postings.nextDoc()) != DocIdSetIterator.NO_MORE_DOCS) {
   System.out.println(docid);
   int freq = postings.freq();
   for (int i = 0; i < freq; i++) {
    System.out.println(postings.nextPosition());
    System.out.println(postings.startOffset());
    System.out.println(postings.endOffset());
    System.out.println(postings.getPayload());
   }
 }
 

Index Statistics

Term statistics

Field statistics

Segment statistics

Document statistics

Document statistics are available during the indexing process for an indexed field: typically a Similarity implementation will store some of these values (possibly in a lossy way), into the normalization value for the document in its Similarity.computeNorm(org.apache.lucene.index.FieldInvertState) method.

Additional user-supplied statistics can be added to the document as DocValues fields and accessed via LeafReader.getNumericDocValues(java.lang.String).

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