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Mifluz

Mifluz is a full text indexing library.


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Introduction

First of all, mifluz is at beta stage.

This program is part of the GNU project, released under the aegis of GNU.

The purpose of mifluz is to provide a C++ library to store a full text inverted index. To put it briefly, it allows storage of occurrences of words in such a way that they can later be searched. The basic idea of an inverted index is to associate each unique word with a list of documents in which they appear. This list can then be searched to locate the documents containing a specific word.

Implementing a library that manages an inverted index is a very easy task when there is a small number of words and documents. It becomes a lot harder when dealing with a large number of words and documents. mifluz has been designed with the further upper limits in mind : 500 million documents, 100 giga words, 18 million document updates per day. In the present state of mifluz, it is possible to store 100 giga words using 600 giga bytes. The best average insertion rate observed as of today 4000 key/sec on a 1 giga byte index.

mifluz has two main characteristics : it is very simple (one might say stupidly simple :-) and uses 100% of the size of the indexed text for the index. It is simple because it provides only a few basic functions. It does not contain document parsers (HTML, PDF etc...). It does not contain a full text query parser. It does not provide result display functions or other user friendly stuff. It only provides functions to store word occurrences and retrieve them. The fact that it uses 100% of the size of the indexed text is rather atypical. Most well known full text indexing systems only use 30%. The advantage mifluz has over most full text indexing systems is that it is fully dynamic (update, delete, insert), uses only a controlled amount of memory while resolving a query, has higher upper limits and has a simple storage scheme. This is achieved by consuming more disk space.


Node:Architecture, Next:, Previous:Introduction, Up:Top

Architecture

In the following figure you can see the place of mifluz in an hypothetical full text indexing system. drawarchi1.png


Query
Resolve full text queries. The optimization makes sure the least frequent terms are scanned first and that redundant query specifications are merged together.
Mifluz
Manage efficient storage of the inverted index permanent data.
Parser Switch
Transform raw documents into list of terms.
Indexer
Call the Parser Switch to get a list of terms and feed it to mifluz.

Node:Constraints, Next:, Previous:Architecture, Up:Top

Constraints

The following list shows all the constraints imposed by mifluz. It can also be seen as a list of functions provided by mifluz that is more general than the API specification.


Now Available
  • In-place dynamic update of the index.
  • Use in memory cache to perform heavy index updates without stressing the disk too much.
  • The library can be linked in an C or C++ application, dynamically or statically.
  • The memory usage is completely controlled. The application can specify the maximum total memory usage. The application can specify that the memory cache will be shared among processes.
  • The library is thread safe.

Future
  • Transaction logs for backup recovery.
  • Index integrity check and repair function.
  • Indexing up to 500 million documents and support up to 18 million document updates per 24h. The average size of a document is 4 kilo bytes and contains 200 indexable words.

Constraints and Limitations
  • No atomic data is bigger than a size known in advance. This postulate is essential for disk storage optimization. If an atomic data may have a size of 10Mb, it is impossible to guarantee that a query/indexing process controls the memory it's using.

    An atomic datum is something that must be manipulated as whole, with no possibility of splitting it into smaller parts. For instance a posting (Word, document identifier and position) is an atomic datum: to manipulate it in memory it has to reside completely in memory. By contrast a postings list is not atomic. Manipulating a postings list can be done without loading all the postings list in memory.

  • The cost of an update is O(log m(N)) where m is the average number of entries in a page and N the total number of pages. This figure has to be considered when the pages are in memory or on disk.
  • The inverted index data is sorted to fit the most typical search pattern. The structure of the inverted index key can be defined at run time to fit a usage pattern.
  • No lock mechanism is provided beyond an individual word occurrence. It is assumed that the library is linked in a central server that serializes all the requests or in a program that provides its own lock mechanism.

Node:Document name scheme, Next:, Previous:Constraints, Up:Top

Document name scheme

In all of the literature dealing with full text indexing a collection of documents is considered to be a flat set of documents containing words. Each document has a unique name. The inverted index associates terms found in the documents with a list of unique document names. drawdoc1.png

We found it more interesting to consider that the document names have a hierarchical structure, just like path names in file systems. The main difference is that each component of the document name (think path name in file system) may contain terms.

As shown in the figure above we can consider that the first component of the document name is the name of a collection, the second the logical name of a set of documents within the collection, the third the name of the document, the fourth the name of a part of the document. drawdoc2.png

This logical structure may be applied to URLs in the following way : there is only one collection, it contains servers (document sets) containing URLs (documents) containing tags such as TITLE (document parts). drawdoc3.png

This logical structure may be also be applied to databases in the following way : there is one collection for each database, it contains tables (document set) containing fields (document) containing records (document part).

What does this imply for full text indexing ? Instead of having only one dictionary to map the document name to a numerical identifier (this is needed to compress the postings for a term), we must have a dictionary for each level of the hierarchy.

Using the database example again:

  • A dictionary for database names
  • A dictionary for table names
  • A dictionary for field names
  • Since records are already identified by a number, no dictionary is needed.

When coding the document identifier in the postings for a term, we have to code a list of numerical identifiers instead of a single numerical identifier. Alternatively one could see the document identifier as an aribtrary precision number sliced in parts.

The advantage of this document naming scheme are:

  • A uniq query operator can be trivially implemented. This is mostly useful to answer a query such as : I want URLs matching the word foo but I only want to see one URL for a given server (avoid the problem of having the first 40 URLs for a request on the same server).
  • The posting lists are traditionally ordered according to the document number. This is a must to have an efficient query mechanism. With a hierachical document name, each level of the hierarchy is sorted. Therefore the postings are sorted in multiple ways: sorted by collection first, then document set, then document part.
  • Searching document paths is facilitated by the structure of the key. For instance: I only want to search TITLEs.

Of course, the suggested hierarchy semantic is not mandatory and may be redefined according to sorting needs. For instance a relevance ranking algorithm can lead to a relevance ranking number being inserted into the hierarchy.

The space overhead implied by this name scheme is quite small for databases and URL pools. The big dictionary for URL pools maps URL to identifiers. The dictionary for tags (TITLE etc..) is only 10-50 at most. The dictionary for site names (www.domain.com) will be ~1/100 of the dictionary for URLs, assuming you have 100 URLs for a given site. For databases the situation is even better: the big dictionary would be the dictionary mapping rowids to numerical identifiers. But since rowids are already numerical we don't need this. We only need the database name, field name and table name dictionaries and they are small. Since we are able to encode small numbers using only a few bits in postings, the overhead of hierarchical names is acceptable.


Node:Data Storage Spec, Next:, Previous:Document name scheme, Up:Top

Data Storage Spec

Efficient management of the data storage space is an important issue of the management of inverted indexes. The needs of an inverted index are very similar to the needs of a regular file system. We need:

  • A cache associated with an LRU list to keep the most frequently used entries in memory.
  • To group postings into pages of fixed size to optimize I/O on disk.
  • A locking mechanism to prevent race conditions between threads or multiple processes accessing the same data.
  • A transaction system to ensure data integrity and atomicity of logical operations.
  • Transparent compression of pages to reduce I/O bottleneck for large volumes of data and reduce disk usage as a bonus.
  • To create indexes using up to 1 tera bytes.

All these functionalities are provided by file systems and kernel services. Since we also wanted the mifluz library to be portable we chose the Berkeley DB library that implements all the services above. The transparent compression is not part of Berkeley DB and is implemented as a patch to Berkeley DB (version 3.1.14).

Based on these low level services, Bekeley DB also implements a Btree structure that mifluz used to store the postings. Each posting is an entry in the Btree structure. Indexing 100 million words implies creating 100 million entries in the Btree. When transparent compression is used and assuming we have 6 byte words and a document identifier using 7 * 8 bits, the average disk size used per entry is 6 bytes.

Unique word statistics are also stored in the inverted index. For each unique word, an entry is created in a dictionnary and associated with a serial number (the word identifier and the total number of occurrences.


Node:Cache tuning, Next:, Previous:Data Storage Spec, Up:Top

Cache tuning

The cache memory used by mifluz has a tremendous impact on performance. It is set by the wordlist_cache_size attribute (see WordList(3) and mifluz(3)). It holds pages from the inverted index in memory (uncompressed if the file is compressed) to reduce disk access. Pages migrate from disk to memory using a LRU.

Each page in the cache is really a node of the B-Tree used to store the inverted index entries. The internal pages are intermediate nodes that mifluz must traverse each time a key is searched. It is therefore very important to keep them in memory. Fortunately they only count for 1% of the total size of the index, at most. The size of the cache must at least include enough space for the internal pages.

The other factors that must be taken into account in sizing the cache are highly dependant on the application. A typical case is insertion of many random words in the index. In this case two factors are of special importance:


repartition of unique words
When filling an inverted index it is very likely that the dictionary of unique words occuring in the index is limited. Let's say you have 1 000 000 unique words in a 100 000 000 occurrences index. Now assume that 90 000 000 occurrences are only using 20 000 unique words, that is 90% of the index is filled with 2% of the complete vocabulary. If you are in this situation, the indexing process will spend 90% of its time updating 20 000 pages. If you can afford 20 000 * pagesize bytes of cache, you will have the maximum insertion rate.

The general rule is : estimate or calculate how many unique words fill 90% of your index. Multiply this number by the pagesize and increase your cache by that amount. See wordlist_page_size attribute in WordList(3) or mifluz(3).

order of numbers following the key
The cache calculation above is fine as long as the words inserted are associated with increasing numbers in the key. If the numbers following the word in the key are random, the cache efficiency will be reduced. Where possible the application should therefore make sure that when inserting two identical words, the first is followed by a number that is lower than the second. In other words, insert
foo 100
foo 103

rather than

foo 103
foo 100

This hint must not be considered in isolation but with careful analysis of the distribution of the key components (word and numbers). For instance it does not matter much if a random key follows the word as long as the range of values of the number is small.

The conclusion is that the cache size should be at least 1% of the total index size (uncompressed) plus a number of bytes that depends on the usage pattern.


Node:Key Specification, Next:, Previous:Cache tuning, Up:Top

Key Specification

The key structure is what uniquely identifies each word that is inserted in the inverted index. A key is made of a string (which is the word being indexed), and a document identifier (which is really a list of numbers), as discussed above.

The exact structure of the inverted index key must be specified in the configuration parameter "wordlist_wordkey_description". See the WordKeyInfo(3) manual page for more information on the format.

We will focus on three examples that illustrate common usage.

First example: a very simple inverted index would be to associate each word occurrence to an URL (coded as a 32 bit number). The key description would be:

Word 8/URL 32

Second example: if building a full text index of the content of a database, you need to know in which field, table and record the word appeared. This makes three numbers for the document id.

Only a few bits are needed to encode the field and table name (let's say you have a maximum of 16 field names and 16 table names, 4 bits each is enough). The record number uses 24 bits because we know we won't have more than 16 M records.

The structure of the key would then be:

Word 8/Table 4/Field 4/Record 32

When you have more than one field involved in a key you must chose the order in which they appear. It is mandatory that the Word is first. It is the part of the key that has highest precedence when sorting. The fields that follow have lower and lower precedence.

Third example: we go back to the first example and imagine we have a relevance ranking function that calculates a value for each word occurrence. By inserting this relevance ranking value in the inverted index key, all the occurrences will be sorted with the most relevant first.

Word 8/Rank 5/URL 32

Node:Internals, Next:, Previous:Key Specification, Up:Top

Internals


Node:Compression, Previous:Internals, Up:Internals

Compression

Compressing the index reduces disk space consumption and speeds up the indexing by reducing I/O.

Compressing at the mifluz level would imply choosing complicated key structures, slowing down and complexifying insert and delete operations. We have chosen to do the compression within Berkeley DB in the memory pool subsystem. Berkeley DB keeps fixed size pages in a memory cache, when it is full it writes the least recently used pages to disk. When a page is needed Berkeley DB looks for it in memory and retrieves it from disk if its not in memory. The compression/uncompression occurs when a page moves between the memory pool and the disk. cmprinfo-1.png


Node:Berkeley DB Compression, Next:, Previous:Compression, Up:Compression

Compression inside Berekeley DB

Berkeley DB uses fixed size pages. Suppose, for example that our compression algorithm can compress by a factor of 8 in most cases, we use a disk page size that's 1/8 of the memory page size. However there are exceptions. Some pages won't compress well and therefore won't fit on one disk page. Extra pages are therefore allocated and are linked into a chained list. Allocating extra pages implies that some pages may become free as a result of a better compression. dbcompress-1.png dbcompress-2.png dbcompress-3.png dbcompress-4.png


Node:Page compression in Mifluz, Previous:Berkeley DB Compression, Up:Compression

Page compression in Mifluz

The mifluz classes WordDBCompress and WordBitCompress do the compression/decompression work. From the list of keys stored in a page it extracts several lists of numbers. Each list of numbers has common statistical properties that allow good compression.

The WordDBCompress_compress_c and WordDBCompress_uncompress_c functions are C callbacks that are called by the the page compression code in BerkeleyDB. The C callbacks then call the WordDBCompress compress/uncompress methods. The WordDBCompress creates a WordBitCompress object that acts as a buffer holding the compressed stream.

Compression algorithm.

Most DB pages contain redundant data because mifluz chose to store one word occurrence per entry. Because of this choice the pages have a very simple structure.

Here is a real world example of what a page can look like: (key structure: word identifier + 4 numerical fields)

756     1 4482    1  10b
756     1 4482    1  142
756     1 4484    1   40
756     1 449f    1  11e
756     1 4545    1   11
756     1 45d3    1  545
756     1 45e0    1  7e5
756     1 45e2    1  830
756     1 45e8    1  545
756     1 45fe    1   ec
756     1 4616    1  395
756     1 461a    1  1eb
756     1 4631    1   49
756     1 4634    1   48
.... etc ....

To compress we chose to only code differences between adjacent entries. A flag is stored for each entry indicating which fields have changed. When a field is different from the previous one, the compression stores the difference which is likely to be small since the entries are sorted.

The basic idea is to build columns of numbers, one for each field, and then compress them individually. One can see that the first and second columns will compress very well since all the values are the same. The third column will also compress well since the differences between the numbers are small, leading to a small set of numbers.


Node:Development, Next:, Previous:Internals, Up:Top

Development

The development of mifluz is shared between Senga (www.senga.org) and the Ht://dig Group (dev.htdig.org). Part of the distribution comes from the Ht://dig CVS tree and part from the Senga CVS tree. The idea is to share efforts between two development groups that have very similar needs. Since Senga and Ht://dig are both developped under the GPL licence, such cooperation occurs naturally.

To compile a program using the mifluz library use something that looks like the following:

gcc -o word -I/usr/local/include -L/usr/local/lib -lmifluz word.cc

Node:Reference, Next:, Previous:Development, Up:Top

Reference


Node:htdb_dump, Next:, Previous:Reference, Up:Reference

htdb_dump


Node:htdb_dump NAME, Next:, Previous:htdb_dump, Up:htdb_dump

htdb_dump NAME

dump the content of an inverted index in Berkeley DB fashion


Node:htdb_dump SYNOPSIS, Next:, Previous:htdb_dump NAME, Up:htdb_dump

htdb_dump SYNOPSIS

htdb_dump [-klNpWz] [-S pagesize] [-C cachesize] [-d ahr] [-f file] [-h home] [-s subdb] db_file

Node:htdb_dump DESCRIPTION, Next:, Previous:htdb_dump SYNOPSIS, Up:htdb_dump

htdb_dump DESCRIPTION

htdb_dump is a slightly modified version of the standard Berkeley DB db_dump utility.

The htdb_dump utility reads the database file db_file and writes it to the standard output using a portable flat-text format understood by the htdb_load utility. The argument db_file must be a file produced using the Berkeley DB library functions.


Node:htdb_dump OPTIONS, Next:, Previous:htdb_dump DESCRIPTION, Up:htdb_dump

htdb_dump OPTIONS

-W

Initialize WordContext(3) before dumping. With the -z flag allows to dump inverted indexes using the mifluz(3) specific compression scheme. The MIFLUZ_CONFIG environment variable must be set to a file containing the mifluz(3) configuration.

-z

The db_file is compressed. If -W is given the mifluz(3) specific compression scheme is used. Otherwise the default gzip compression scheme is used.

-d

Dump the specified database in a format helpful for debugging the Berkeley DB library routines.

a

Display all information.

h

Display only page headers.

r

Do not display the free-list or pages on the free list. This mode is used by the recovery tests.

The output format of the -d option is not standard and may change, without notice, between releases of the Berkeley DB library.
-f

Write to the specified file instead of to the standard output.

-h

Specify a home directory for the database. As Berkeley DB versions before 2.0 did not support the concept of a database home.

-k

Dump record numbers from Queue and Recno databases as keys.

-l

List the subdatabases stored in the database.

-N

Do not acquire shared region locks while running. Other problems such as potentially fatal errors in Berkeley DB will be ignored as well. This option is intended only for debugging errors and should not be used under any other circumstances.

-p

If characters in either the key or data items are printing characters (as defined by isprint (3)), use printing characters in file to represent them. This option permits users to use standard text editors and tools to modify the contents of databases.

Note, different systems may have different notions as to what characters are considered printing characters , and databases dumped in this manner may be less portable to external systems.

-s

Specify a subdatabase to dump. If no subdatabase is specified, all subdatabases found in the database are dumped.

-V

Write the version number to the standard output and exit.

Dumping and reloading Hash databases that use user-defined hash functions will result in new databases that use the default hash function. While using the default hash function may not be optimal for the new database, it will continue to work correctly.

Dumping and reloading Btree databases that use user-defined prefix or comparison functions will result in new databases that use the default prefix and comparison functions. In this case, it is quite likely that the database will be damaged beyond repair permitting neither record storage or retrieval.

The only available workaround for either case is to modify the sources for the htdb_load utility to load the database using the correct hash, prefix and comparison functions.


Node:htdb_dump ENVIRONMENT, Previous:htdb_dump OPTIONS, Up:htdb_dump

htdb_dump ENVIRONMENT

DB_HOME If the -h option is not specified and the environment variable DB_HOME is set, it is used as the path of the database home.

MIFLUZ_CONFIG file name of configuration file read by WordContext(3). Defaults to ~/.mifluz.


Node:htdb_stat, Next:, Previous:htdb_dump, Up:Reference

htdb_stat


Node:htdb_stat NAME, Next:, Previous:htdb_stat, Up:htdb_stat

htdb_stat NAME

displays statistics for Berkeley DB environments.


Node:htdb_stat SYNOPSIS, Next:, Previous:htdb_stat NAME, Up:htdb_stat

htdb_stat SYNOPSIS

htdb_stat [-celmNtzW] [-C Acfhlmo] [-d file [-s file]] [-h home] [-M Ahlm]

Node:htdb_stat DESCRIPTION, Next:, Previous:htdb_stat SYNOPSIS, Up:htdb_stat

htdb_stat DESCRIPTION

htdb_stat is a slightly modified version of the standard Berkeley DB db_stat utility which displays statistics for Berkeley DB environments.


Node:htdb_stat OPTIONS, Next:, Previous:htdb_stat DESCRIPTION, Up:htdb_stat

htdb_stat OPTIONS

-W

Initialize WordContext(3) before gathering statistics. With the -z flag allows to gather statistics on inverted indexes generated with the mifluz(3) specific compression scheme. The MIFLUZ_CONFIG environment variable must be set to a file containing the mifluz(3) configuration.

-z

The file is compressed. If -W is given the mifluz(3) specific compression scheme is used. Otherwise the default gzip compression scheme is used.

-C

Display internal information about the lock region. (The output from this option is often both voluminous and meaningless, and is intended only for debugging.)

A

Display all information.

c

Display lock conflict matrix.

f

Display lock and object free lists.

l

Display lockers within hash chains.

m

Display region memory information.

o

Display objects within hash chains.


-c

Display lock region statistics.

-d

Display database statistics for the specified database. If the database contains subdatabases, the statistics are for the database or subdatabase specified, and not for the database as a whole.

-e

Display current environment statistics.

-h

Specify a home directory for the database.

-l

Display log region statistics.

-M

Display internal information about the shared memory buffer pool. (The output from this option is often both voluminous and meaningless, and is intended only for debugging.)

A

Display all information.

h

Display buffers within hash chains.

l

Display buffers within LRU chains.

m

Display region memory information.


-m

Display shared memory buffer pool statistics.

-N

Do not acquire shared region locks while running. Other problems such as potentially fatal errors in Berkeley DB will be ignored as well. This option is intended only for debugging errors and should not be used under any other circumstances.

-s

Display database statistics for the specified subdatabase of the database specified with the -d flag.

-t

Display transaction region statistics.

-V

Write the version number to the standard output and exit.

Only one set of statistics is displayed for each run, and the last option specifying a set of statistics takes precedence.

Values smaller than 10 million are generally displayed without any special notation. Values larger than 10 million are normally displayed as <number>M .

The htdb_stat utility attaches to one or more of the Berkeley DB shared memory regions. In order to avoid region corruption, it should always be given the chance to detach and exit gracefully. To cause htdb_stat to clean up after itself and exit, send it an interrupt signal (SIGINT).


Node:htdb_stat ENVIRONMENT, Previous:htdb_stat OPTIONS, Up:htdb_stat

htdb_stat ENVIRONMENT

DB_HOME If the -h option is not specified and the environment variable DB_HOME is set, it is used as the path of the database home.

MIFLUZ_CONFIG file name of configuration file read by WordContext(3). Defaults to ~/.mifluz.


Node:htdb_load, Next:, Previous:htdb_stat, Up:Reference

htdb_load


Node:htdb_load NAME, Next:, Previous:htdb_load, Up:htdb_load

htdb_load NAME

displays statistics for Berkeley DB environments.


Node:htdb_load SYNOPSIS, Next:, Previous:htdb_load NAME, Up:htdb_load

htdb_load SYNOPSIS

htdb_load [-nTzW] [-c name=value] [-f file] [-h home] [-C cachesize] [-t btree | hash | recno] db_file

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htdb_load DESCRIPTION

The htdb_load utility reads from the standard input and loads it into the database db_file . The database db_file is created if it does not already exist.

The input to htdb_load must be in the output format specified by the htdb_dump utility, or as specified for the -T below.


Node:htdb_load OPTIONS, Next:, Previous:htdb_load DESCRIPTION, Up:htdb_load

htdb_load OPTIONS

-W

Initialize WordContext(3) before loading. With the -z flag allows to load inverted indexes using the mifluz(3) specific compression scheme. The MIFLUZ_CONFIG environment variable must be set to a file containing the mifluz(3) configuration.

-z

The db_file is compressed. If -W is given the mifluz(3) specific compression scheme is used. Otherwise the default gzip compression scheme is used.

-c

Specify configuration options for the DB structure ignoring any value they may have based on the input. The command-line format is name=value . See Supported Keywords for a list of supported words for the -c option.

-f

Read from the specified input file instead of from the standard input.

-h

Specify a home directory for the database. If a home directory is specified, the database environment is opened using the DB_INIT_LOCK , DB_INIT_LOG , DB_INIT_MPOOL , DB_INIT_TXN and DB_USE_ENVIRON flags to DBENV->open. This means that htdb_load can be used to load data into databases while they are in use by other processes. If the DBENV->open call fails, or if no home directory is specified, the database is still updated, but the environment is ignored, e.g., no locking is done.

-n

Do not overwrite existing keys in the database when loading into an already existing database. If a key/data pair cannot be loaded into the database for this reason, a warning message is displayed on the standard error output and the key/data pair are skipped.

-T

The -T option allows non-Berkeley DB applications to easily load text files into databases.

If the database to be created is of type Btree or Hash, or the keyword keys is specified as set, the input must be paired lines of text, where the first line of the pair is the key item, and the second line of the pair is its corresponding data item. If the database to be created is of type Queue or Recno and the keywork keys is not set, the input must be lines of text, where each line is a new data item for the database.

A simple escape mechanism, where newline and backslash (\) characters are special, is applied to the text input. Newline characters are interpreted as record separators. Backslash characters in the text will be interpreted in one of two ways: if the backslash character precedes another backslash character, the pair will be interpreted as a literal backslash. If the backslash character precedes any other character, the two characters following the backslash will be interpreted as hexadecimal specification of a single character, e.g., \0a is a newline character in the ASCII character set.

For this reason, any backslash or newline characters that naturally occur in the text input must be escaped to avoid misinterpretation by htdb_load

If the -T option is specified, the underlying access method type must be specified using the -t option.

-t

Specify the underlying access method. If no -t option is specified, the database will be loaded into a database of the same type as was dumped, e.g., a Hash database will be created if a Hash database was dumped.

Btree and Hash databases may be converted from one to the other. Queue and Recno databases may be converted from one to the other. If the -k option was specified on the call to htdb_dump then Queue and Recno databases may be converted to Btree or Hash, with the key being the integer record number.

-V

Write the version number to the standard output and exit.

The htdb_load utility attaches to one or more of the Berkeley DB shared memory regions. In order to avoid region corruption, it should always be given the chance to detach and exit gracefully. To cause htdb_load to clean up after itself and exit, send it an interrupt signal (SIGINT).

The htdb_load utility exits 0 on success, 1 if one or more key/data pairs were not loaded into the database because the key already existed, and >1 if an error occurs.


Node:htdb_load KEYWORDS, Next:, Previous:htdb_load OPTIONS, Up:htdb_load

htdb_load KEYWORDS

The following keywords are supported for the -c command-line option to the htdb_load utility. See DB->open for further discussion of these keywords and what values should be specified.

The parenthetical listing specifies how the value part of the name=value pair is interpreted. Items listed as (boolean) expect value to be 1 (set) or 0 (unset). Items listed as (number) convert value to a number. Items listed as (string) use the string value without modification.

bt_minkey (number)
The minimum number of keys per page.
db_lorder (number)
The byte order for integers in the stored database metadata.
db_pagesize (number)
The size of pages used for nodes in the tree, in bytes.
duplicates (boolean)
The value of the DB_DUP flag.
h_ffactor (number)
The density within the Hash database.
h_nelem (number)
The size of the Hash database.
keys (boolean)
Specify if keys are present for Queue or Recno databases.
re_len (number)
Specify fixed-length records of the specified length.
re_pad (string)
Specify the fixed-length record pad character.
recnum (boolean)
The value of the DB_RECNUM flag.
renumber (boolean)
The value of the DB_RENUMBER flag.
subdatabase (string)
The subdatabase to load.

Node:htdb_load ENVIRONMENT, Previous:htdb_load KEYWORDS, Up:htdb_load

htdb_load ENVIRONMENT

DB_HOME If the -h option is not specified and the environment variable DB_HOME is set, it is used as the path of the database home.

MIFLUZ_CONFIG file name of configuration file read by WordContext(3). Defaults to ~/.mifluz.


Node:mifluzdump, Next:, Previous:htdb_load, Up:Reference

mifluzdump


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mifluzdump NAME

dump the content of an inverted index.


Node:mifluzdump SYNOPSIS, Next:, Previous:mifluzdump NAME, Up:mifluzdump

mifluzdump SYNOPSIS

mifluzdump file

Node:mifluzdump DESCRIPTION, Next:, Previous:mifluzdump SYNOPSIS, Up:mifluzdump

mifluzdump DESCRIPTION

mifluzdump writes on stdout a complete ascii description of the file inverted index using the WordList::Write method.


Node:mifluzdump ENVIRONMENT, Previous:mifluzdump DESCRIPTION, Up:mifluzdump

mifluzdump ENVIRONMENT

MIFLUZ_CONFIG file name of configuration file read by WordContext(3). Defaults to ~/.mifluz.


Node:mifluzload, Next:, Previous:mifluzdump, Up:Reference

mifluzload


Node:mifluzload NAME, Next:, Previous:mifluzload, Up:mifluzload

mifluzload NAME

load the content of an inverted index.


Node:mifluzload SYNOPSIS, Next:, Previous:mifluzload NAME, Up:mifluzload

mifluzload SYNOPSIS

mifluzload file

Node:mifluzload DESCRIPTION, Next:, Previous:mifluzload SYNOPSIS, Up:mifluzload

mifluzload DESCRIPTION

mifluzload reads from stdout a complete ascii description of the file inverted index using the WordList::Read method.


Node:mifluzload ENVIRONMENT, Previous:mifluzload DESCRIPTION, Up:mifluzload

mifluzload ENVIRONMENT

MIFLUZ_CONFIG file name of configuration file read by WordContext(3). Defaults to ~/.mifluz.


Node:mifluzsearch, Next:, Previous:mifluzload, Up:Reference

mifluzsearch


Node:mifluzsearch NAME, Next:, Previous:mifluzsearch, Up:mifluzsearch

mifluzsearch NAME

search the content of an inverted index.


Node:mifluzsearch SYNOPSIS, Next:, Previous:mifluzsearch NAME, Up:mifluzsearch

mifluzsearch SYNOPSIS

mifluzsearch -f words [options]

Node:mifluzsearch DESCRIPTION, Next:, Previous:mifluzsearch SYNOPSIS, Up:mifluzsearch

mifluzsearch DESCRIPTION

mifluzsearch searches a mifluz index for documents matching a Alt*Vista expression (simple syntax).

Debugging information interpretation. A cursor is open in the index for every word and they are stored in a list. The list of cursors is always processed in the same order, as a single link list. With -v, each block is an individual action on behalf of the word shown on the first line. The last line of the block is the conclusion of the action described in the block. REDO means the same cursor must be examined again because the conditions have changed. RESTART means we go back to the first cursor in the list because it may not match the new conditions anymore. NEXT means the cursor and all the cursors before it match the conditions and we may proceed to the next cursor. ATEND means the cursor cannot match the conditions because it is at the end of the index.


Node:mifluzsearch ENVIRONMENT, Previous:mifluzsearch DESCRIPTION, Up:mifluzsearch

mifluzsearch ENVIRONMENT

MIFLUZ_CONFIG file name of configuration file read by WordContext(3). Defaults to ~/.mifluz.


Node:mifluzdict, Next:, Previous:mifluzsearch, Up:Reference

mifluzdict


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mifluzdict NAME

dump the dictionnary of an inverted index.


Node:mifluzdict SYNOPSIS, Next:, Previous:mifluzdict NAME, Up:mifluzdict

mifluzdict SYNOPSIS

mifluzdict file

Node:mifluzdict DESCRIPTION, Next:, Previous:mifluzdict SYNOPSIS, Up:mifluzdict

mifluzdict DESCRIPTION

mifluzdict writes on stdout a complete ascii description of the file inverted index using the WordList::Write method.


Node:mifluzdict ENVIRONMENT, Previous:mifluzdict DESCRIPTION, Up:mifluzdict

mifluzdict ENVIRONMENT

MIFLUZ_CONFIG file name of configuration file read by WordContext(3). Defaults to ~/.mifluz.


Node:WordContext, Next:, Previous:mifluzdict, Up:Reference

WordContext


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WordContext NAME

read configuration and setup mifluz context.


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WordContext SYNOPSIS

#include <mifluz.h>

WordContext context;

Node:WordContext DESCRIPTION, Next:, Previous:WordContext SYNOPSIS, Up:WordContext

WordContext DESCRIPTION

The WordContext object must be the first object created. All other objects (WordList, WordReference, WordKey and WordRecord) are allocated via the corresponding methods of WordContext (List, Word, Key and Record respectively).

The WordContext object contains a Configuration object that holds the configuration parameters used by the instance. If a configuration parameter is changed, the ReInitialize method should be called to take them in account.


Node:WordContext CONFIGURATION, Next:, Previous:WordContext DESCRIPTION, Up:WordContext

WordContext CONFIGURATION

For more information on the configuration attributes and a complete list of attributes, see the mifluz(3) manual page.

wordlist_monitor {true|false} (default false)
If true create a WordMonitor instance to gather statistics and build reports.

Node:WordContext METHODS, Next:, Previous:WordContext CONFIGURATION, Up:WordContext

WordContext METHODS

WordContext()
Constructor. Read the configuration parameters from the environment. If the environment variable MIFLUZ_CONFIG is set to a pathname, read it as a configuration file. If MIFLUZ_CONFIG is not set, try to read the ~/.mifluz configuration file or /usr/etc/mifluz.conf . See the mifluz manual page for a complete list of the configuration attributes.
WordContext(const Configuration &config)
Constructor. The config argument must contain all the configuration parameters, no configuration file is loaded from the environment.
WordContext(const ConfigDefaults *array)
Constructor. The array argument holds configuration parameters that will override their equivalent in the configuration file read from the environment.
void Initialize(const Configuration &config)
Initialize the WordContext object. This method is called by every constructor.

When calling Initialize a second time, one must ensure that all WordList and WordCursor objects have been destroyed. WordList and WordCursor internal state depends on the current WordContext that will be lost by a second call.

For those interested by the internals, the Initialize function maintains a Berkeley DB environment (DB_ENV) in the following way:

First invocation:

Initialize -> new DB_ENV (thru WordDBInfo)

Second invocation:

Initialize -> delete DB_ENV -> new DB_ENV (thru WordDBInfo)

int Initialize(const ConfigDefaults* config_defaults = 0)
Initialize the WordContext object. Build a Configuration object from the file pointed to by the MIFLUZ_CONFIG environment variable or ~/.mifluz or /usr/etc/mifluz.conf. The config_defaults argument, if provided, is passed to the Configuration object using the Defaults method. The Initialize(const Configuration &) method is then called with the Configuration object. Return OK if success, NOTOK otherwise. Refer to the Configuration description for more information.
int ReInitialize()
Destroy internal state except the Configuration object and rebuild it. May be used when the configuration is changed to take these changes in account. Return OK if success, NOTOK otherwise.
const WordType& GetType() const
Return the WordType data member of the current object as a const.
WordType& GetType()
Return the WordType data member of the current object.
const WordKeyInfo& GetKeyInfo() const
Return the WordKeyInfo data member of the current object as a const.
WordKeyInfo& GetKeyInfo()
Return the WordKeyInfo data member of the current object.
const WordRecordInfo& GetRecordInfo() const
Return the WordRecordInfo data member of the current object as a const.
WordRecordInfo& GetRecordInfo()
Return the WordRecordInfo data member of the current object.
const WordDBInfo& GetDBInfo() const
Return the WordDBInfo data member of the current object as a const.
WordDBInfo& GetDBInfo()
Return the WordDBInfo data member of the current object.
const WordMonitor* GetMonitor() const
Return the WordMonitor data member of the current object as a const. The pointer may be NULL if the word_monitor attribute is false.
WordMonitor* GetMonitor()
Return the WordMonitor data member of the current object. The pointer may be NULL if the word_monitor attribute is false.
const Configuration& GetConfiguration() const
Return the Configuration data member of the current object as a const.
Configuration& GetConfiguration()
Return the Configuration data member of the current object.
WordList* List()
Return a new WordList object, using the WordList(WordContext*) constructor. It is the responsibility of the caller to delete this object before the WordContext object is deleted. Refer to the wordlist_multi configuration parameter to know the exact type of the object created.
WordReference* Word()
Return a new WordReference object, using the WordReference(WordContext*) constructor. It is the responsibility of the caller to delete this object before the WordContext object is deleted.
WordReference* Word(const String& key0, const String& record0)
Return a new WordReference object, using the WordReference(WordContext*, const String&, const& String) constructor. It is the responsibility of the caller to delete this object before the WordContext object is deleted.
WordReference* Word(const String& word)
Return a new WordReference object, using the WordReference(WordContext*, const String&) constructor. It is the responsibility of the caller to delete this object before the WordContext object is deleted.
WordRecord* Record()
Return a new WordRecord object, using the WordRecord(WordContext*) constructor. It is the responsibility of the caller to delete this object before the WordContext object is deleted.
WordKey* Key()
Return a new WordKey object, using the WordKey(WordContext*) constructor. It is the responsibility of the caller to delete this object before the WordContext object is deleted.
WordKey* Key(const String& word)
Return a new WordKey object, using the WordKey(WordContext*, const String&) constructor. It is the responsibility of the caller to delete this object before the WordContext object is deleted.
WordKey* Key(const WordKey& other)
Return a new WordKey object, using the WordKey(WordContext*, const WordKey&) constructor. It is the responsibility of the caller to delete this object before the WordContext object is deleted.
static String ConfigFile()
Return the full pathname of the configuration file. The configuration file lookup first searches for the file pointed by the MIFLUZ_CONFIG environment variable then ~/.mifluz and finally /usr/etc/mifluz.conf . If no configuration file is found, return the empty string.

Node:WordContext ENVIRONMENT, Previous:WordContext METHODS, Up:WordContext

WordContext ENVIRONMENT

MIFLUZ_CONFIG file name of configuration file read by WordContext(3). Defaults to ~/.mifluz. or /usr/etc/mifluz.conf


Node:WordList, Next:, Previous:WordContext, Up:Reference

WordList


Node:WordList NAME, Next:, Previous:WordList, Up:WordList

WordList NAME

abstract class to manage and use an inverted index file.


Node:WordList SYNOPSIS, Next:, Previous:WordList NAME, Up:WordList

WordList SYNOPSIS

#include <mifluz.h>

WordContext context;

WordList* words = context->List();

delete words;

Node:WordList DESCRIPTION, Next:, Previous:WordList SYNOPSIS, Up:WordList

WordList DESCRIPTION

WordList is the mifluz equivalent of a database handler. Each WordList object is bound to an inverted index file and implements the operations to create it, fill it with word occurrences and search for an entry matching a given criterion.

WordList is an abstract class and cannot be instanciated. The List method of the class WordContext will create an instance using the appropriate derived class, either WordListOne or WordListMulti. Refer to the corresponding manual pages for more information on their specific semantic.

When doing bulk insertions, mifluz creates temporary files that contain the entries to be inserted in the index. Those files are typically named indexC00000000 . The maximum size of the temporary file is wordlist_cache_size / 2. When the maximum size of the temporary file is reached, mifluz creates another temporary file named indexC00000001 . The process continues until mifluz created 50 temporary file. At this point it merges all temporary files into one that replaces the first indexC00000000 . Then it continues to create temporary file again and keeps following this algorithm until the bulk insertion is finished. When the bulk insertion is finished, mifluz has one big file named indexC00000000 that contains all the entries to be inserted in the index. mifluz inserts all the entries from indexC00000000 into the index and delete the temporary file when done. The insertion will be fast since all the entries in indexC00000000 are already sorted.

The parameter wordlist_cache_max can be used to prevent the temporary files to grow indefinitely. If the total cumulated size of the indexC* files grow beyond this parameter, they are merged into the main index and deleted. For instance setting this parameter value to 500Mb garanties that the total size of the indexC* files will not grow above 500Mb.


Node:WordList CONFIGURATION, Next:, Previous:WordList DESCRIPTION, Up:WordList

WordList CONFIGURATION

For more information on the configuration attributes and a complete list of attributes, see the mifluz(3) manual page.

wordlist_extend {true|false} (default false)
If true maintain reference count of unique words. The Noccurrence method gives access to this count.
wordlist_verbose <number> (default 0)
Set the verbosity level of the WordList class.

1 walk logic

2 walk logic details

3 walk logic lots of details

wordlist_page_size <bytes> (default 8192)
Berkeley DB page size (see Berkeley DB documentation)
wordlist_cache_size <bytes> (default 500K)
Berkeley DB cache size (see Berkeley DB documentation) Cache makes a huge difference in performance. It must be at least 2% of the expected total data size. Note that if compression is activated the data size is eight times larger than the actual file size. In this case the cache must be scaled to 2% of the data size, not 2% of the file size. See Cache tuning in the mifluz guide for more hints. See WordList(3) for the rationale behind cache file handling.
wordlist_cache_max <bytes> (default 0)
Maximum size of the cumulated cache files generated when doing bulk insertion with the BatchStart() function. When this limit is reached, the cache files are all merged into the inverted index. The value 0 means infinite size allowed. See WordList(3) for the rationale behind cache file handling.
wordlist_cache_inserts {true|false} (default false)
If true all Insert calls are cached in memory. When the WordList object is closed or a different access method is called the cached entries are flushed in the inverted index.
wordlist_compress {true|false} (default false)
Activate compression of the index. The resulting index is eight times smaller than the uncompressed index.

Node:WordList METHODS, Previous:WordList CONFIGURATION, Up:WordList

WordList METHODS

inline WordContext* GetContext()
Return a pointer to the WordContext object used to create this instance.
inline const WordContext* GetContext() const
Return a pointer to the WordContext object used to create this instance as a const.
virtual inline int Override(const WordReference& wordRef)
Insert wordRef in index. If the Key() part of the wordRef exists in the index, override it. Returns OK on success, NOTOK on error.
virtual int Exists(const WordReference& wordRef)
Returns OK if wordRef exists in the index, NOTOK otherwise.
inline int Exists(const String& word)
Returns OK if word exists in the index, NOTOK otherwise.
virtual int WalkDelete(const WordReference& wordRef)
Delete all entries in the index whose key matches the Key() part of wordRef , using the Walk method. Returns the number of entries successfully deleted.
virtual int Delete(const WordReference& wordRef)
Delete the entry in the index that exactly matches the Key() part of wordRef. Returns OK if deletion is successfull, NOTOK otherwise.
virtual int Open(const String& filename, int mode)
Open inverted index filename. mode may be O_RDONLY or O_RDWR. If mode is O_RDWR it can be or'ed with O_TRUNC to reset the content of an existing inverted index. Return OK on success, NOTOK otherwise.
virtual int Close()
Close inverted index. Return OK on success, NOTOK otherwise.
virtual unsigned int Size() const
Return the size of the index in pages.
virtual int Pagesize() const
Return the page size
virtual WordDict *Dict()
Return a pointer to the inverted index dictionnary.
const String& Filename() const
Return the filename given to the last call to Open.
int Flags() const
Return the mode given to the last call to Open.
inline List *Find(const WordReference& wordRef)
Returns the list of word occurrences exactly matching the Key() part of wordRef. The List returned contains pointers to WordReference objects. It is the responsibility of the caller to free the list. See List.h header for usage.
inline List *FindWord(const String& word)
Returns the list of word occurrences exactly matching the word. The List returned contains pointers to WordReference objects. It is the responsibility of the caller to free the list. See List.h header for usage.
virtual List *operator [] (const WordReference& wordRef)
Alias to the Find method.
inline List *operator [] (const String& word)
Alias to the FindWord method.
virtual List *Prefix (const WordReference& prefix)
Returns the list of word occurrences matching the Key() part of wordRef. In the Key() , the string (accessed with GetWord() ) matches any string that begins with it. The List returned contains pointers to WordReference objects. It is the responsibility of the caller to free the list.
inline List *Prefix (const String& prefix)
Returns the list of word occurrences matching the word. In the Key() , the string (accessed with GetWord() ) matches any string that begins with it. The List returned contains pointers to WordReference objects. It is the responsibility of the caller to free the list.
virtual List *Words()
Returns a list of all unique words contained in the inverted index. The List returned contains pointers to String objects. It is the responsibility of the caller to free the list. See List.h header for usage.
virtual List *WordRefs()
Returns a list of all entries contained in the inverted index. The List returned contains pointers to WordReference objects. It is the responsibility of the caller to free the list. See List.h header for usage.
virtual WordCursor *Cursor(wordlist_walk_callback_t callback, Object *callback_data)
Create a cursor that searches all the occurrences in the inverted index and call ncallback with ncallback_data for every match.
virtual WordCursor *Cursor(const WordKey &searchKey, int action = HTDIG_WORDLIST_WALKER)
Create a cursor that searches all the occurrences in the inverted index and that match nsearchKey. If naction is set to HTDIG_WORDLIST_WALKER calls searchKey.callback with searchKey.callback_data for every match. If naction is set to HTDIG_WORDLIST_COLLECT push each match in searchKey.collectRes data member as a WordReference object. It is the responsibility of the caller to free the searchKey.collectRes list.
virtual WordCursor *Cursor(const WordKey &searchKey, wordlist_walk_callback_t callback, Object * callback_data)
Create a cursor that searches all the occurrences in the inverted index and that match nsearchKey and calls ncallback with ncallback_data for every match.
virtual WordKey Key(const String& bufferin)
Create a WordKey object and return it. The bufferin argument is used to initialize the key, as in the WordKey::Set method. The first component of bufferin must be a word that is translated to the corresponding numerical id using the WordDict::Serial method.
virtual WordReference Word(const String& bufferin, int exists = 0)
Create a WordReference object and return it. The bufferin argument is used to initialize the structure, as in the WordReference::Set method. The first component of bufferin must be a word that is translated to the corresponding numerical id using the WordDict::Serial method. If the exists argument is set to 1, the method WordDict::SerialExists is used instead, that is no serial is assigned to the word if it does not already have one. Before translation the word is normalized using the WordType::Normalize method. The word is saved using the WordReference::SetWord method.
virtual WordReference WordExists(const String& bufferin)
Alias for Word(bufferin, 1).
virtual void BatchStart()
Accelerate bulk insertions in the inverted index. All insertion done with the Override method are batched instead of being updating the inverted index immediately. No update of the inverted index file is done before the BatchEnd method is called.
virtual void BatchEnd()
Terminate a bulk insertion started with a call to the BatchStart method. When all insertions are done the AllRef method is called to restore statistics.
virtual int Noccurrence(const String& key, unsigned int& noccurrence) const
Return in noccurrence the number of occurrences of the string contained in the GetWord() part of key. Returns OK on success, NOTOK otherwise.
virtual int Write(FILE* f)
Write on file descriptor f an ASCII description of the index. Each line of the file contains a WordReference ASCII description. Return OK on success, NOTOK otherwise.
virtual int WriteDict(FILE* f)
Write on file descriptor f the complete dictionnary with statistics. Return OK on success, NOTOK otherwise.
virtual int Read(FILE* f)
Read WordReference ASCII descriptions from f , returns the number of inserted WordReference or < 0 if an error occurs. Invalid descriptions are ignored as well as empty lines.

Node:WordDict, Next:, Previous:WordList, Up:Reference

WordDict


Node:WordDict NAME, Next:, Previous:WordDict, Up:WordDict

WordDict NAME

manage and use an inverted index dictionary.


Node:WordDict SYNOPSIS, Next:, Previous:WordDict NAME, Up:WordDict

WordDict SYNOPSIS

#include <mifluz.h>

WordList* words = ...;
WordDict* dict = words->Dict();

Node:WordDict DESCRIPTION, Next:, Previous:WordDict SYNOPSIS, Up:WordDict

WordDict DESCRIPTION

WordDict maps strings to unique identifiers and frequency in the inverted index. Whenever a new word is found, the WordDict class can be asked to assign it a serial number. When doing so, an entry is created in the dictionary with a frequency of zero. The application may then increment or decrement the frequency to reflect the inverted index content.

The serial numbers range from 1 to 2^32 inclusive.

A WordDict object is automatically created by the WordList object and should not be created directly by the application.


Node:WordDict METHODS, Previous:WordDict DESCRIPTION, Up:WordDict

WordDict METHODS

WordDict()
Private constructor.
int Initialize(WordList* words)
Bind the object a WordList inverted index. Return OK on success, NOTOK otherwise.
int Open()
Open the underlying Berkeley DB sub-database. The enclosing file is given by the words data member. Return OK on success, NOTOK otherwise.
int Remove()
Destroy the underlying Berkeley DB sub-database. Return OK on success, NOTOK otherwise.
int Close()
Close the underlying Berkeley DB sub-database. Return OK on success, NOTOK otherwise.
int Serial(const String& word, unsigned int& serial)
If the word argument exists in the dictionnary, return its serial number in the serial argument. If it does not already exists, assign it a serial number, create an entry with a frequency of zero and return the new serial in the serial argument. Return OK on success, NOTOK otherwise.
int SerialExists(const String& word, unsigned int& serial)
If the word argument exists in the dictionnary, return its serial number in the serial argument. If it does not exists set the serial argument to WORD_DICT_SERIAL_INVALID. Return OK on success, NOTOK otherwise.
int SerialRef(const String& word, unsigned int& serial)
Short hand for Serial() followed by Ref(). Return OK on success, NOTOK otherwise.
int Noccurrence(const String& word, unsigned int& noccurrence) const
Return the frequency of the word argument in the noccurrence argument. Return OK on success, NOTOK otherwise.
int Normalize(String& word) const
Short hand for words->GetContext()->GetType()->Normalize(word). Return OK on success, NOTOK otherwise.
int Ref(const String& word)
Short hand for Incr(word, 1)
int Incr(const String& word, unsigned int incr)
Add incr to the frequency of the word . Return OK on success, NOTOK otherwise.
int Unref(const String& word)
Short hand for Decr(word, 1)
int Decr(const String& word, unsigned int decr)
Subtract decr to the frequency of the word . If the frequency becomes lower or equal to zero, remove the entry from the dictionnary and lose the association between the word and its serial number. Return OK on success, NOTOK otherwise.
int Put(const String& word, unsigned int noccurrence)
Set the frequency of word with the value of the noccurrence argument.
int Exists(const String& word) const
Return true if word exists in the dictionnary, false otherwise.
List* Words() const
Return a pointer to the associated WordList object.
WordDictCursor* Cursor() const
Return a cursor to sequentially walk the dictionnary using the Next method.
int Next(WordDictCursor* cursor, String& word, WordDictRecord& record)
Return the next entry in the dictionnary. The cursor argument must have been created using the Cursor method. The word is returned in the word argument and the record is returned in the record argument. On success the function returns 0, at the end of the dictionnary it returns DB_NOTFOUND. The cursor argument is deallocated when the function hits the end of the dictionnary or an error occurs.
WordDictCursor* CursorPrefix(const String& prefix) const
Return a cursor to sequentially walk the entries of the dictionnary that start with the prefix argument, using the NextPrefix method.
int NextPrefix(WordDictCursor* cursor, String& word, WordDictRecord& record)
Return the next prefix from the dictionnary. The cursor argument must have been created using the CursorPrefix method. The word is returned in the word argument and the record is returned in the record argument. The word is guaranteed to start with the prefix specified to the CursorPrefix method. On success the function returns 0, at the end of the dictionnary it returns DB_NOTFOUND. The cursor argument is deallocated when the function hits the end of the dictionnary or an error occurs.
int Write(FILE* f)
Dump the complete dictionary in the file descriptor f. The format of the dictionary is word serial frequency , one by line.

Node:WordListOne, Next:, Previous:WordDict, Up:Reference

WordListOne


Node:WordListOne NAME, Next:, Previous:WordListOne, Up:WordListOne

WordListOne NAME

manage and use an inverted index file.


Node:WordListOne SYNOPSIS, Next:, Previous:WordListOne NAME, Up:WordListOne

WordListOne SYNOPSIS

#include <mifluz.h>

WordContext context;

WordList* words = context->List();
WordList* words = WordListOne(context)

Node:WordListOne DESCRIPTION, Next:, Previous:WordListOne SYNOPSIS, Up:WordListOne

WordListOne DESCRIPTION

WordList is the mifluz equivalent of a database handler. Each WordList object is bound to an inverted index file and implements the operations to create it, fill it with word occurrences and search for an entry matching a given criterion.

The general behavious of WordListOne is described in the WordList manual page. It is prefered to create a WordListOne instance by setting the wordlist_multi configuration parameter to false and calling the WordContext::List method.

Only the methods that differ from WordList are listed here. All the methods of WordList are implemented by WordListOne and you should refer to the manual page for more information.

The Cursor methods all return a WordCursorOne instance cast to a WordCursor object.


Node:WordListOne METHODS, Previous:WordListOne DESCRIPTION, Up:WordListOne

WordListOne METHODS

WordListOne(WordContext* ncontext)
Constructor. Build inverted index handling object using run time configuration parameters listed in the CONFIGURATION section of the WordList manual page.
int DeleteCursor(WordDBCursor& cursor)
Delete the inverted index entry currently pointed to by the cursor. Returns 0 on success, Berkeley DB error code on error. This is mainly useful when implementing a callback function for a WordCursor.

Node:WordKey, Next:, Previous:WordListOne, Up:Reference

WordKey


Node:WordKey NAME, Next:, Previous:WordKey, Up:WordKey

WordKey NAME

inverted index key.


Node:WordKey SYNOPSIS, Next:, Previous:WordKey NAME, Up:WordKey

WordKey SYNOPSIS

#include <WordKey.h>

#define WORD_KEY_DOCID    1
#define WORD_KEY_LOCATION 2

WordList* words = ...;
WordKey key = words->Key("word 100 20");
WordKey searchKey;
words->Dict()->SerialExists("dog", searchKey.Get(WORD_KEY_WORD));
searchKey.Set(WORD_KEY_LOCATION, 5);
WordCursor* cursor = words->Key(searchKey);

Node:WordKey DESCRIPTION, Next:, Previous:WordKey SYNOPSIS, Up:WordKey

WordKey DESCRIPTION

Describes the key used to store a entry in the inverted index. Each field in the key has a bit in the set member that says if it is set or not. This bit allows to say that a particular field is undefined regardless of the actual value stored. The methods IsDefined, SetDefined and Undefined are used to manipulate the defined status of a field. The Pack and Unpack methods are used to convert to and from the disk storage representation of the key.

Although constructors may be used, the prefered way to create a WordKey object is by using the WordContext::Key method.

The following constants are defined:

WORD_KEY_WORD
the index of the word identifier with the key for Set and Get methods.
WORD_KEY_VALUE_INVALID
a value that is invalid for any field of the key.

Node:WordKey ASCII FORMAT, Next:, Previous:WordKey DESCRIPTION, Up:WordKey

WordKey ASCII FORMAT

The ASCII description is a string with fields separated by tabs or white space.

Example: 200 <UNDEF> 1 4 2
Field 1: The word identifier or <UNDEF> if not defined
Field 2 to the end: numerical value of the field or <UNDEF> if
                    not defined

Node:WordKey METHODS, Previous:WordKey ASCII FORMAT, Up:WordKey

WordKey METHODS

WordKey(WordContext* ncontext)
Constructor. Build an empty key. The ncontext argument must be a pointer to a valid WordContext object.
WordKey(WordContext* ncontext, const String& desc)
Constructor. Initialize from an ASCII description of a key. See ASCII FORMAT section. The ncontext argument must be a pointer to a valid WordContext object.
void Clear()
Reset to empty key.
inline int NFields() const
Convenience functions to access the total number of fields in a key (see WordKeyInfo(3) ).
inline WordKeyNum MaxValue(int position)
Convenience functions to access the maximum possible value for field at position. in a key (see WordKeyInfo(3) ).
inline WordContext* GetContext()
Return a pointer to the WordContext object used to create this instance.
inline const WordContext* GetContext() const
Return a pointer to the WordContext object used to create this instance as a const.
inline WordKeyNum Get(int position) const
Return value of numerical field at position as const.
inline WordKeyNum& Get(int position)
Return value of numerical field at position.
inline const WordKeyNum & operator[] (int position) const
Return value of numerical field at position as const.
inline WordKeyNum & operator[] (int position)
Return value of numerical field at position.
inline void Set(int position, WordKeyNum val)
Set value of numerical field at position to val.
int IsDefined(int position) const
Returns true if field at position is defined , false otherwise.
void SetDefined(int position)
Value in field position becomes defined. A bit is set in the bit field describing the defined/undefined state of the value and the actual value of the field is not modified.
void Undefined(int position)
Value in field position becomes undefined. A bit is set in the bit field describing the defined/undefined state of the value and the actual value of the field is not modified.
int Set(const String& bufferin)
Set the whole structure from ASCII string in bufferin. See ASCII FORMAT section. Return OK if successfull, NOTOK otherwise.
int Get(String& bufferout) const
Convert the whole structure to an ASCII string description in bufferout. See ASCII FORMAT section. Return OK if successfull, NOTOK otherwise.
String Get() const
Convert the whole structure to an ASCII string description and return it. See ASCII FORMAT section.
int Unpack(const char* string, int length)
Set structure from disk storage format as found in string buffer or length length. Return OK if successfull, NOTOK otherwise.
inline int Unpack(const String& data)
Set structure from disk storage format as found in data string. Return OK if successfull, NOTOK otherwise.
int Pack(String& data) const
Convert object into disk storage format as found in and place the result in data string. Return OK if successfull, NOTOK otherwise.
int Merge(const WordKey& other)
Copy each defined field from other into the object, if the corresponding field of the object is not defined. Return OK if successfull, NOTOK otherwise.
int PrefixOnly()
Undefine all fields found after the first undefined field. The resulting key has a set of defined fields followed by undefined fields. Returns NOTOK if the word is not defined because the resulting key would be empty and this is considered an error. Returns OK on success.
int SetToFollowing(int position = WORD_FOLLOWING_MAX)
Implement ++ on a key.

It behaves like arithmetic but follows these rules:

. Increment starts at field <position>
. If a field value overflows, increment field
position
 - 1
. Undefined fields are ignored and their value untouched
. When a field is incremented all fields to the left are set to 0
If position is not specified it is equivalent to NFields() - 1. It returns OK if successfull, NOTOK if position out of range or WORD_FOLLOWING_ATEND if the maximum possible value was reached.
int Filled() const
Return true if all the fields are defined , false otherwise.
int Empty() const
Return true if no fields are defined , false otherwise.
int Equal(const WordKey& other) const
Return true if the object and other are equal. Only fields defined in both keys are compared.
int ExactEqual(const WordKey& other) const
Return true if the object and other are equal. All fields are compared. If a field is defined in object and not defined in the object, the key are not considered equal.
int Cmp(const WordKey& other) const
Compare object and other as in strcmp. Undefined fields are ignored. Returns a positive number if object is greater than other , zero if they are equal, a negative number if object is lower than other.
int PackEqual(const WordKey& other) const
Return true if the object and other are equal. The packed string are compared. An undefined numerical field will be 0 and therefore undistinguishable from a defined field whose value is 0.
int Outbound(int position, int increment)
Return true if adding increment in field at position makes it overflow or underflow, false if it fits.
int Overflow(int position, int increment)
Return true if adding positive increment to field at position makes it overflow, false if it fits.
int Underflow(int position, int increment)
Return true if subtracting positive increment to field at position makes it underflow, false if it fits.
int Prefix() const
Return OK if the key may be used as a prefix for search. In other words return OK if the fields set in the key are all contiguous, starting from the first field. Otherwise returns NOTOK
static int Compare(WordContext* context, const String& a, const String& b)
Compare a and b in the Berkeley DB fashion. a and b are packed keys. The semantics of the returned int is as of strcmp and is driven by the key description found in WordKeyInfo. Returns a positive number if a is greater than b , zero if they are equal, a negative number if a is lower than b.
static int Compare(WordContext* context, const unsigned char *a, int a_length, const unsigned char *b, int b_length)
Compare a and b in the Berkeley DB fashion. a and b are packed keys. The semantics of the returned int is as of strcmp and is driven by the key description found in WordKeyInfo. Returns a positive number if a is greater than b , zero if they are equal, a negative number if a is lower than b.
int Diff(const WordKey& other, int& position, int& lower)
Compare object defined fields with other key defined fields only, ignore fields that are not defined in object or other. Return 1 if different 0 if equal. If different, position is set to the field number that differ, lower is set to 1 if Get( position ) is lower than other.Get( position ) otherwise lower is set to 0.
int Write(FILE* f) const
Print object in ASCII form on f (uses Get method). See ASCII FORMAT section.
void Print() const
Print object in ASCII form on stdout (uses Get method). See ASCII FORMAT section.

Node:WordKeyInfo, Next:, Previous:WordKey, Up:Reference

WordKeyInfo


Node:WordKeyInfo NAME, Next:, Previous:WordKeyInfo, Up:WordKeyInfo

WordKeyInfo NAME

information on the key structure of the inverted index.


Node:WordKeyInfo SYNOPSIS, Next:, Previous:WordKeyInfo NAME, Up:WordKeyInfo

WordKeyInfo SYNOPSIS

Helper for the WordKey class.

Node:WordKeyInfo DESCRIPTION, Next:, Previous:WordKeyInfo SYNOPSIS, Up:WordKeyInfo

WordKeyInfo DESCRIPTION

Describe the structure of the index key ( WordKey ). The description includes the layout of the packed version stored on disk.


Node:WordKeyInfo CONFIGURATION, Previous:WordKeyInfo DESCRIPTION, Up:WordKeyInfo

WordKeyInfo CONFIGURATION

For more information on the configuration attributes and a complete list of attributes, see the mifluz(3) manual page.

wordlist_wordkey_description <desc> (no default)
Describe the structure of the inverted index key. In the following explanation of the <desc> format, mandatory words are in bold and values that must be replaced in italic.

Word bits/name bits [/...]

The name is an alphanumerical symbolic name for the key field. The bits is the number of bits required to store this field. Note that all values are stored in unsigned integers (unsigned int). Example:

Word 8/Document 16/Location 8

Node:WordType, Next:, Previous:WordKeyInfo, Up:Reference

WordType


Node:WordType NAME, Next:, Previous:WordType, Up:WordType

WordType NAME

defines a word in term of allowed characters, length etc.


Node:WordType SYNOPSIS, Next:, Previous:WordType NAME, Up:WordType

WordType SYNOPSIS

Only called thru WordContext::Initialize()

Node:WordType DESCRIPTION, Next:, Previous:WordType SYNOPSIS, Up:WordType

WordType DESCRIPTION

WordType defines an indexed word and operations to validate a word to be indexed. All words inserted into the mifluz index are Normalize d before insertion. The configuration options give some control over the definition of a word.


Node:WordType CONFIGURATION, Next:, Previous:WordType DESCRIPTION, Up:WordType

WordType CONFIGURATION

For more information on the configuration attributes and a complete list of attributes, see the mifluz(3) manual page.

wordlist_locale <locale> (default C)
Set the locale of the program to locale . See setlocale(3) for more information.
wordlist_allow_numbers {true|false} <number> (default false)
A digit is considered a valid character within a word if this configuration parameter is set to true otherwise it is an error to insert a word containing digits. See the Normalize method for more information.
wordlist_mimimun_word_length <number> (default 3)
The minimum length of a word. See the Normalize method for more information.
wordlist_maximum_word_length <number> (default 25)
The maximum length of a word. See the Normalize method for more information.
wordlist_allow_numbers {true|false} <number> (default false)
A digit is considered a valid character within a word if this configuration parameter is set to true otherwise it is an error to insert a word containing digits. See the Normalize method for more information.
wordlist_truncate {true|false} <number> (default true)
If a word is too long according to the wordlist_maximum_word_length it is truncated if this configuration parameter is true otherwise it is considered an invalid word.
wordlist_lowercase {true|false} <number> (default true)
If a word contains upper case letters it is converted to lowercase if this configuration parameter is true, otherwise it is left untouched.
wordlist_valid_punctuation [characters] (default none)
A list of punctuation characters that may appear in a word. These characters will be removed from the word before insertion in the index.

Node:WordType METHODS, Previous:WordType CONFIGURATION, Up:WordType

WordType METHODS

int Normalize(String &s) const
Normalize a word according to configuration specifications and builtin transformations. Every word inserted in the inverted index goes thru this function. If a word is rejected (return value has WORD_NORMALIZE_NOTOK bit set) it will not be inserted in the index. If a word is accepted (return value has WORD_NORMALIZE_OK bit set) it will be inserted in the index. In addition to these two bits, informational values are stored that give information on the processing done on the word. The bit field values and their meanings are as follows:
WORD_NORMALIZE_TOOLONG
the word length exceeds the value of the wordlist_maximum_word_length configuration parameter.
WORD_NORMALIZE_TOOSHORT
the word length is smaller than the value of the wordlist_minimum_word_length configuration parameter.
WORD_NORMALIZE_CAPITAL
the word contained capital letters and has been converted to lowercase. This bit is only set if the wordlist_lowercase configuration parameter is true.
WORD_NORMALIZE_NUMBER
the word contains digits and the configuration parameter wordlist_allow_numbers is set to false.
WORD_NORMALIZE_CONTROL
the word contains control characters.
WORD_NORMALIZE_BAD
the word is listed in the file pointed by the wordlist_bad_word_list configuration parameter.
WORD_NORMALIZE_NULL
the word is a zero length string.
WORD_NORMALIZE_PUNCTUATION
at least one character listed in the wordlist_valid_punctuation attribute was removed from the word.
WORD_NORMALIZE_NOALPHA
the word does not contain any alphanumerical character.

static String NormalizeStatus(int flags)
Returns a string explaining the return flags of the Normalize method.

Node:WordDBInfo, Next:, Previous:WordType, Up:Reference

WordDBInfo


Node:WordDBInfo NAME, Next:, Previous:WordDBInfo, Up:WordDBInfo

WordDBInfo NAME

inverted index usage environment.


Node:WordDBInfo SYNOPSIS, Next:, Previous:WordDBInfo NAME, Up:WordDBInfo

WordDBInfo SYNOPSIS

Only called thru WordContext::Initialize()

Node:WordDBInfo DESCRIPTION, Next:, Previous:WordDBInfo SYNOPSIS, Up:WordDBInfo

WordDBInfo DESCRIPTION

The inverted indexes may be shared among processes/threads and provide the appropriate locking to prevent mistakes. In addition the memory cache used by WordList objects may be shared by processes/threads, greatly reducing the memory needs in multi-process applications. For more information about the shared environment, check the Berkeley DB documentation.


Node:WordDBInfo CONFIGURATION, Previous:WordDBInfo DESCRIPTION, Up:WordDBInfo

WordDBInfo CONFIGURATION

For more information on the configuration attributes and a complete list of attributes, see the mifluz(3) manual page.

wordlist_env_skip {true,false} (default false)
If true no environment is created at all. This must never be used if a WordList object is created. It may be useful if only WordKey objects are used, for instance.
wordlist_env_share {true,false} (default false)
If true a sharable environment is open or created if none exist.
wordlist_env_dir <directory> (default .)
Only valid if wordlist_env_share set to true. Specify the directory in which the sharable environment will be created. All inverted indexes specified with a non-absolute pathname will be created relative to this directory.

Node:WordRecordInfo, Next:, Previous:WordDBInfo, Up:Reference

WordRecordInfo


Node:WordRecordInfo NAME, Next:, Previous:WordRecordInfo, Up:WordRecordInfo

WordRecordInfo NAME

information on the record structure of the inverted index.


Node:WordRecordInfo SYNOPSIS, Next:, Previous:WordRecordInfo NAME, Up:WordRecordInfo

WordRecordInfo SYNOPSIS

Only called thru WordContext::Initialize()

Node:WordRecordInfo DESCRIPTION, Next:, Previous:WordRecordInfo SYNOPSIS, Up:WordRecordInfo

WordRecordInfo DESCRIPTION

The structure of a record is very limited. It can contain a single integer value or a string.


Node:WordRecordInfo CONFIGURATION, Previous:WordRecordInfo DESCRIPTION, Up:WordRecordInfo

WordRecordInfo CONFIGURATION

For more information on the configuration attributes and a complete list of attributes, see the mifluz(3) manual page.

wordlist_wordrecord_description {NONE|DATA|STR} (no default)
NONE: the record is empty

DATA: the record contains an integer (unsigned int)

STR: the record contains a string (String)


Node:WordRecord, Next:, Previous:WordRecordInfo, Up:Reference

WordRecord


Node:WordRecord NAME, Next:, Previous:WordRecord, Up:WordRecord

WordRecord NAME

inverted index record.


Node:WordRecord SYNOPSIS, Next:, Previous:WordRecord NAME, Up:WordRecord

WordRecord SYNOPSIS

#include <WordRecord.h>

WordContext* context;
WordRecord* record = context->Record();
if(record->DefaultType() == WORD_RECORD_DATA) {
  record->info.data = 120;
} else if(record->DefaultType() == WORD_RECORD_STR) {
  record->info.str = "foobar";
}
delete record;

Node:WordRecord DESCRIPTION, Next:, Previous:WordRecord SYNOPSIS, Up:WordRecord

WordRecord DESCRIPTION

The record can contain an integer, if the default record type (see CONFIGURATION in WordKeyInfo ) is set to DATA or a string if set to STR. If the type is set to NONE the record does not contain any usable information.

Although constructors may be used, the prefered way to create a WordRecord object is by using the WordContext::Record method.


Node:WordRecord ASCII FORMAT, Next:, Previous:WordRecord DESCRIPTION, Up:WordRecord

WordRecord ASCII FORMAT

If default type is DATA it is the decimal representation of an integer. If default type is NONE it is the empty string.


Node:WordRecord METHODS, Previous:WordRecord ASCII FORMAT, Up:WordRecord

WordRecord METHODS

inline WordRecord(WordContext* ncontext)
Constructor. Build an empty record. The ncontext argument must be a pointer to a valid WordContext object.
inline void Clear()
Reset to empty and set the type to the default specified in the configuration.
inline int DefaultType()
Return the default type WORD_RECORD_{DATA,STR,NONE}
inline int Pack(String& packed) const
Convert the object to a representation for disk storage written in the packed string. Return OK on success, NOTOK otherwise.
inline int Unpack(const char* string, int length)
Alias for Unpack(String(string, length))
inline int Unpack(const String& packed)
Read the object from a representation for disk storage contained in the packed argument. Return OK on success, NOTOK otherwise.
int Set(const String& bufferin)
Set the whole structure from ASCII string description stored in the bufferin argument. Return OK on success, NOTOK otherwise.
int Get(String& bufferout) const
Convert the whole structure to an ASCII string description and return it in the bufferout argument. Return OK on success, NOTOK otherwise.
String Get() const
Convert the whole structure to an ASCII string description and return it.
inline WordContext* GetContext()
Return a pointer to the WordContext object used to create this instance.
inline const WordContext* GetContext() const
Return a pointer to the WordContext object used to create this instance as a const.
int Write(FILE* f) const
Print object in ASCII form on descriptor f using the Get method.

Node:WordReference, Next:, Previous:WordRecord, Up:Reference

WordReference


Node:WordReference NAME, Next:, Previous:WordReference, Up:WordReference

WordReference NAME

inverted index occurrence.


Node:WordReference SYNOPSIS, Next:, Previous:WordReference NAME, Up:WordReference

WordReference SYNOPSIS

#include <WordReference.h>

WordContext* context;
WordReference* word = context->Word("word");
WordReference* word = context->Word();
WordReference* word = context->Word(WordKey("key 1 2"), WordRecord());

WordKey key = word->Key()
WordKey record = word->Record()

word->Clear();

delete word;

Node:WordReference DESCRIPTION, Next:, Previous:WordReference SYNOPSIS, Up:WordReference

WordReference DESCRIPTION

A WordReference object is an agregate of a WordKey object and a WordRecord object.

Although constructors may be used, the prefered way to create a WordReference object is by using the WordContext::Word method.


Node:WordReference ASCII FORMAT, Next:, Previous:WordReference DESCRIPTION, Up:WordReference

WordReference ASCII FORMAT

The ASCII description is a string with fields separated by tabs or white space. It is made of the ASCII description of a WordKey object immediately followed by the ASCII description of a WordRecord object. See the corresponding manual pages for more information.


Node:WordReference METHODS, Previous:WordReference ASCII FORMAT, Up:WordReference

WordReference METHODS

WordReference(WordContext* ncontext) :
Constructor. Build an object with empty key and empty record. The ncontext argument must be a pointer to a valid WordContext object.
WordReference(WordContext* ncontext, const String& key0, const String& record0) :
Constructor. Build an object from disk representation of key and record . The ncontext argument must be a pointer to a valid WordContext object.
WordReference(WordContext* ncontext, const String& word) :
Constructor. Build an object with key word set to word and otherwise empty and empty record. The ncontext argument must be a pointer to a valid WordContext object.
void Clear()
Reset to empty key and record
inline WordContext* GetContext()
Return a pointer to the WordContext object used to create this instance.
inline const WordContext* GetContext() const
Return a pointer to the WordContext object used to create this instance as a const.
inline String& GetWord()
Return the word data member.
inline const String& GetWord() const
Return the word data member as a const.
inline void SetWord(const String& nword)
Set the word data member from the nword argument.
WordKey& Key()
Return the key object.
const WordKey& Key() const
Return the key object as const.
WordRecord& Record()
Return the record object.
const WordRecord& Record() const
Return the record object as const.
void Key(const WordKey& arg)
Copy arg in the key part of the object.
int KeyUnpack(const String& packed)
Set key structure from disk storage format as found in packed string. Return OK if successfull, NOTOK otherwise.
String KeyPack() const
Convert key object into disk storage format as found in return the resulting string.
int KeyPack(String& packed) const
Convert key object into disk storage format as found in and place the result in packed string. Return OK if successfull, NOTOK otherwise.
void Record(const WordRecord& arg)
Copy arg in the record part of the object.
int RecordUnpack(const String& packed)
Set record structure from disk storage format as found in packed string. Return OK if successfull, NOTOK otherwise.
String RecordPack() const
Convert record object into disk storage format as found in return the resulting string.
int RecordPack(String& packed) const
Convert record object into disk storage format as found in and place the result in packed string. Return OK if successfull, NOTOK otherwise.
inline int Pack(String& ckey, String& crecord) const
Short hand for KeyPack( ckey ) RecordPack( crecord ).
int Unpack(const String& ckey, const String& crecord)
Short hand for KeyUnpack( ckey ) RecordUnpack( crecord ).
int Merge(const WordReference& other)
Merge key with other.Key() using the WordKey::Merge method: key.Merge(other.Key()). See the corresponding manual page for details. Copy other.record into the record part of the object.
static WordReference Merge(const WordReference& master, const WordReference& slave)
Copy master before merging with master. Merge( slave ) and return the copy. Prevents alteration of master .
int Set(const String& bufferin)
Set the whole structure from ASCII string in bufferin . See ASCII FORMAT section. Return OK if successfull, NOTOK otherwise.
int Get(String& bufferout) const
Convert the whole structure to an ASCII string description in bufferout. See ASCII FORMAT section. Return OK if successfull, NOTOK otherwise.
String Get() const
Convert the whole structure to an ASCII string description and return it. See ASCII FORMAT section.
int Write(FILE* f) const
Print object in ASCII form on f (uses Get method). See ASCII FORMAT section.
void Print() const
Print object in ASCII form on stdout (uses Get method). See ASCII FORMAT section.

Node:WordCursor, Next:, Previous:WordReference, Up:Reference

WordCursor


Node:WordCursor NAME, Next:, Previous:WordCursor, Up:WordCursor

WordCursor NAME

abstract class to search and retrieve entries in a WordList object.


Node:WordCursor SYNOPSIS, Next:, Previous:WordCursor NAME, Up:WordCursor

WordCursor SYNOPSIS

#include <WordList.h>

int callback(WordList *, WordDBCursor& , const WordReference *, Object &)
{
   ...
}

Object* data = ...

WordList *words = ...;

WordCursor *search = words->Cursor(WordKey("word <UNDEF> <UNDEF>"), HTDIG_WORDLIST_COLLECTOR);

if(search->Walk() == NOTOK) bark;
List* results = search->GetResults();

WordCursor *search = words->Cursor(callback, data);
WordCursor *search = words->Cursor(WordKey("word <UNDEF> <UNDEF>"));
WordCursor *search = words->Cursor(WordKey("word <UNDEF> <UNDEF>"), callback, data);
WordCursor *search = words->Cursor(WordKey());

search->WalkInit();
if(search->WalkNext() == OK)
  dosomething(search->GetFound());
search->WalkFinish();

Node:WordCursor DESCRIPTION, Next:, Previous:WordCursor SYNOPSIS, Up:WordCursor

WordCursor DESCRIPTION

WordCursor is an iterator on an inverted index. It is created by asking a WordList object with the Cursor. There is no other way to create a WordCursor object. When the Walk* methods return, the WordCursor object contains the result of the search and status information that indicates if it reached the end of the list (IsAtEnd() method).

The callback function that is called each time a match is found takes the following arguments:

WordList* words pointer to the inverted index handle.
WordDBCursor& cursor to call Del() and delete the current match
WordReference* wordRef is the match
Object& data is the user data provided by the caller when
             search began.

The WordKey object that specifies the search criterion may be used as follows (assuming word is followed by DOCID and LOCATION):

Ex1: WordKey() walk the entire list of occurences.

Ex2: WordKey("word <UNDEF> <UNDEF>") find all occurrences of word .

Ex3: WordKey("meet <UNDEF> 1") find all occurrences of meet that occur at LOCATION 1 in any DOCID. This can be inefficient since the search has to scan all occurrences of meet to find the ones that occur at LOCATION 1.

Ex4: WordKey("meet 2 <UNDEF>") find all occurrences of meet that occur in DOCID 2, at any location.

WordList is an abstract class and cannot be instanciated. See the WordCursorOne manual page for an actual implementation of a WordCursor object.


Node:WordCursor METHODS, Previous:WordCursor DESCRIPTION, Up:WordCursor

WordCursor METHODS

virtual void Clear() = 0
Clear all data in object, set GetResult() data to NULL but do not delete it (the application is responsible for that).
virtual inline int IsA() const
Returns the type of the object. May be overloaded by derived classes to differentiate them at runtime. Returns WORD_CURSOR.
virtual inline int Optimize()
Optimize the cursor before starting a Walk. Returns OK on success, NOTOK otherwise.
virtual int ContextSave(String& buffer) const = 0
Save in buffer all the information necessary to resume the walk at the point it left. The ASCII representation of the last key found (GetFound()) is written in buffer using the WordKey::Get method.
virtual int ContextRestore(const String& buffer) = 0
Restore from buffer all the information necessary to resume the walk at the point it left. The buffer is expected to contain an ASCII representation of a WordKey (see WordKey::Set method). A Seek is done on the key and the object is prepared to jump to the next occurrence when WalkNext is called (the cursor_get_flags is set to DB_NEXT.
virtual int Walk() = 0
Walk and collect data from the index. Returns OK on success, NOTOK otherwise.
virtual int WalkInit() = 0
Must be called before other Walk methods are used. Fill internal state according to input parameters and move before the first matching entry. Returns OK on success, NOTOK otherwise.
virtual int WalkRewind() = 0
Move before the first index matching entry. Returns OK on success, NOTOK otherwise.
virtual int WalkNext() = 0
Move to the next matching entry. At end of list, WORD_WALK_ATEND is returned. Returns OK on success, NOTOK otherwise. When OK is returned, the GetFound() method returns the matched entry. When WORD_WALK_ATEND is returned, the GetFound() method returns an empty object if the end of the index was reached or the match that was found and that is greated than the specified search criterion.
virtual int WalkNextStep() = 0
Advance the cursor one step. The entry pointed to by the cursor may or may not match the requirements. Returns OK if entry pointed by cursor matches requirements. Returns NOTOK on failure. Returns WORD_WALK_NOMATCH_FAILED if the current entry does not match requirements, it's safe to call WalkNextStep again until either OK or NOTOK is returned.
virtual int WalkNextExclude(const WordKey& key)
Return 0 if this key must not be returned by WalkNext as a valid match. The WalkNextStep method calls this virtual method immediately after jumping to the next entry in the database. This may be used, for instance, to skip entries that were selected by a previous search.
virtual int WalkFinish() = 0
Terminate Walk, free allocated resources. Returns OK on success, NOTOK otherwise.
virtual int Seek(const WordKey& patch) = 0
Move before the inverted index position specified in patch. May only be called after a successfull call to the WalkNext or WalkNextStep method. Copy defined fields from patch into a copy of the found data member and initialize internal state so that WalkNext jumps to this key next time it's called (cursor_get_flag set to DB_SET_RANGE). Returns OK if successfull, NOTOK otherwise.
virtual inline int IsAtEnd() const
Returns true if cursor is positioned after the last possible match, false otherwise.
virtual inline int IsNoMatch() const
Returns true if cursor hit a value that does not match search criterion.
inline WordKey& GetSearch()
Returns the search criterion.
inline int GetAction() const
Returns the type of action when a matching entry is found.
inline List *GetResults()
Returns the list of WordReference found. The application is responsible for deallocation of the list. If the action input flag bit HTDIG_WORDLIST_COLLECTOR is not set, return a NULL pointer.
inline List *GetTraces()
For debugging purposes. Returns the list of WordReference hit during the search process. Some of them match the searched key, some don't. The application is responsible for deallocation of the list.
inline void SetTraces(List* traceRes_arg)
For debugging purposes. Set the list of WordReference hit during the search process.
inline const WordReference& GetFound()
Returns the last entry hit by the search. Only contains a valid value if the last WalkNext or WalkNextStep call was successfull (i.e. returned OK).
inline int GetStatus() const
Returns the status of the cursor which may be OK or WORD_WALK_ATEND.
virtual int Get(String& bufferout) const = 0
Convert the whole structure to an ASCII string description. Returns OK if successfull, NOTOK otherwise.
inline String Get() const
Convert the whole structure to an ASCII string description and return it.
virtual int Initialize(WordList *nwords, const WordKey &nsearchKey, wordlist_walk_callback_t ncallback, Object * ncallback_data, int naction) = 0
Protected method. Derived classes should use this function to initialize the object if they do not call a WordCursor constructor in their own constructutor. Initialization may occur after the object is created and must occur before a Walk* method is called. See the DESCRIPTION section for the semantics of the arguments. Return OK on success, NOTOK on error.
WordKey searchKey
Input data. The key to be searched, see DESCRIPTION for more information.
WordReference found
Output data. Last match found. Use GetFound() to retrieve it.
int status
Output data. WORD_WALK_ATEND if cursor is past last match, OK otherwise. Use GetStatus() to retrieve it.
WordList *words
The inverted index used by this cursor.

Node:WordCursorOne, Next:, Previous:WordCursor, Up:Reference

WordCursorOne


Node:WordCursorOne NAME, Next:, Previous:WordCursorOne, Up:WordCursorOne

WordCursorOne NAME

search and retrieve entries in a WordListOne object.


Node:WordCursorOne SYNOPSIS, Next:, Previous:WordCursorOne NAME, Up:WordCursorOne

WordCursorOne SYNOPSIS

#include <WordList.h>

int callback(WordList *, WordDBCursor& , const WordReference *, Object &)
{
   ...
}

Object* data = ...

WordList *words = ...;

WordCursor *search = words->Cursor(callback, data);
WordCursor *search = words->Cursor(WordKey("word <UNDEF> <UNDEF>"));
WordCursor *search = words->Cursor(WordKey("word <UNDEF> <UNDEF>"), callback, data);
WordCursor *search = words->Cursor(WordKey());

...

if(search->Walk() == NOTOK) bark;
List* results = search->GetResults();

search->WalkInit();
if(search->WalkNext() == OK)
  dosomething(search->GetFound());
search->WalkFinish();

Node:WordCursorOne DESCRIPTION, Next:, Previous:WordCursorOne SYNOPSIS, Up:WordCursorOne

WordCursorOne DESCRIPTION

WordCursorOne is a WordCursor derived class that implements search in a WordListOne object. It currently is the only derived class of the WordCursor object. Most of its behaviour is described in the WordCursor manual page, only the behaviour specific to WordCursorOne is documented here.


Node:WordCursorOne METHODS, Previous:WordCursorOne DESCRIPTION, Up:WordCursorOne

WordCursorOne METHODS

WordCursorOne(WordList *words)
Private constructor. Creator of the object must then call Initialize() prior to using any other methods.
WordCursorOne(WordList *words, wordlist_walk_callback_t callback, Object * callback_data)
Private constructor. See WordList::Cursor method with same prototype for description.
WordCursorOne(WordList *words, const WordKey &searchKey, int action = HTDIG_WORDLIST_WALKER)
Private constructor. See WordList::Cursor method with same prototype for description.
WordCursorOne(WordList *words, const WordKey &searchKey, wordlist_walk_callback_t callback, Object * callback_data)
Private constructor. See WordList::Cursor method with same prototype for description.

Node:WordMonitor, Next:, Previous:WordCursorOne, Up:Reference

WordMonitor


Node:WordMonitor NAME, Next:, Previous:WordMonitor, Up:WordMonitor

WordMonitor NAME

monitoring classes activity.


Node:WordMonitor SYNOPSIS, Next:, Previous:WordMonitor NAME, Up:WordMonitor

WordMonitor SYNOPSIS

Only called thru WordContext::Initialize()

Node:WordMonitor DESCRIPTION, Next:, Previous:WordMonitor SYNOPSIS, Up:WordMonitor

WordMonitor DESCRIPTION

The test directory contains a benchmark-report script used to generate and archive graphs from the output of WordMonitor .


Node:WordMonitor CONFIGURATION, Previous:WordMonitor DESCRIPTION, Up:WordMonitor

WordMonitor CONFIGURATION

For more information on the configuration attributes and a complete list of attributes, see the mifluz(3) manual page.

wordlist_monitor_period <sec> (default 0)
If the value sec is a positive integer, set a timer to print reports every sec seconds. The timer is set using the ALRM signal and will fail if the calling application already has a handler on that signal.
wordlist_monitor_output <file>[,{rrd,readable] (default stderr)
Print reports on file instead of the default stderr . If type is set to rrd the output is fit for the benchmark-report script. Otherwise it a (hardly :-) readable string.

Node:Configuration, Next:, Previous:WordMonitor, Up:Reference

Configuration


Node:Configuration NAME, Next:, Previous:Configuration, Up:Configuration

Configuration NAME

reads the configuration file and manages it in memory.


Node:Configuration SYNOPSIS, Next:, Previous:Configuration NAME, Up:Configuration

Configuration SYNOPSIS

#include <Configuration.h>

Configuration config;

ConfigDefault config_defaults = {
  { "verbose", "true" },
  { 0, 0 }
};

config.Defaults(config_defaults);

config.Read("/spare2/myconfig") ;

config.Add("sync", "false");

if(config["sync"]) ...
if(config.Value("rate") < 50) ...
if(config.Boolean("sync")) ...

Node:Configuration DESCRIPTION, Next:, Previous:Configuration SYNOPSIS, Up:Configuration

Configuration DESCRIPTION

The primary purpose of the Configuration class is to parse a configuration file and allow the application to modify the internal data structure produced. All values are strings and are converted by the appropriate accessors. For instance the Boolean method will return numerical true (not zero) if the string either contains a number that is different from zero or the string true .

The ConfigDefaults type is a structure of two char pointers: the name of the configuration attribute and it's value. The end of the array is the first entry that contains a null pointer instead of the attribute name. Numerical values must be in strings. For instance:

ConfigDefault* config_defaults = {
  { "wordlist_compress", "true" },
  { "wordlist_page_size", "8192" },
  { 0, 0 }
};
The additional fields of the ConfigDefault are purely informative.
Node:Configuration FILE FORMAT, Next:, Previous:Configuration DESCRIPTION, Up:Configuration

Configuration FILE FORMAT

The configuration file is a plain ASCII text file. Each line in the file is either a comment or an attribute. Comment lines are blank lines or lines that start with a '#'. Attributes consist of a variable name and an associated value:

<name>:<whitespace><value><newline>

The <name> contains any alphanumeric character or underline (_) The <value> can include any character except newline. It also cannot start with spaces or tabs since those are considered part of the whitespace after the colon. It is important to keep in mind that any trailing spaces or tabs will be included.

It is possible to split the <value> across several lines of the configuration file by ending each line with a backslash (\). The effect on the value is that a space is added where the line split occurs.

A configuration file can include another file, by using the special <name>, include . The <value> is taken as the file name of another configuration file to be read in at this point. If the given file name is not fully qualified, it is taken relative to the directory in which the current configuration file is found. Variable expansion is permitted in the file name. Multiple include statements, and nested includes are also permitted.

include: common.conf

Node:Configuration METHODS, Previous:Configuration FILE FORMAT, Up:Configuration

Configuration METHODS

Configuration()
Constructor
~Configuration()
Destructor
void Add(const String& str)
Add configuration item str to the configuration. The value associated with it is undefined.
void Add(const String& name, const String& value)
Add configuration item name to the configuration and associate it with value .
int Remove(const String& name)
Remove the name from the configuration.
void NameValueSeparators(const String& s)
Let the Configuration know how to parse name value pairs. Each character of string s is a valid separator between the name and the value.
virtual int Read(const String& filename)
Read name/value configuration pairs from the file filename .
const String Find(const String& name) const
Return the value of configuration attribute name as a String .
const String operator[](const String& name) const
Alias to the Find method.
int Value(const String& name, int default_value = 0) const
Return the value associated with the configuration attribute name , converted to integer using the atoi(3) function. If the attribute is not found in the configuration and a default_value is provided, return it.
double Double(const String& name, double default_value = 0) const
Return the value associated with the configuration attribute name , converted to double using the atof(3) function. If the attribute is not found in the configuration and a default_value is provided, return it.
int Boolean(const String& name, int default_value = 0) const
Return 1 if the value associated to name is either 1, yes or true . Return 0 if the value associated to name is either 0, no or false .
void Defaults(const ConfigDefaults *array)
Load configuration attributes from the name and value members of the array argument.

Node:mifluz, Previous:Configuration, Up:Reference

mifluz


Node:mifluz NAME, Next:, Previous:mifluz, Up:mifluz

mifluz NAME

C++ library to use and manage inverted indexes


Node:mifluz SYNOPSIS, Next:, Previous:mifluz NAME, Up:mifluz

mifluz SYNOPSIS

#include <mifluz.h>

main()
{
   Configuration* config = WordContext::Initialize();

   WordList* words = new WordList(*config);

   ...

   delete words;

   WordContext::Finish();
}

Node:mifluz DESCRIPTION, Next:, Previous:mifluz SYNOPSIS, Up:mifluz

mifluz DESCRIPTION

The purpose of mifluz is to provide a C++ library to build and query a full text inverted index. It is dynamically updatable, scalable (up to 1Tb indexes), uses a controlled amount of memory, shares index files and memory cache among processes or threads and compresses index files to 50% of the raw data. The structure of the index is configurable at runtime and allows inclusion of relevance ranking information. The query functions do not require loading all the occurrences of a searched term. They consume very few resources and many searches can be run in parallel.

The file management library used in mifluz is a modified Berkeley DB (www.sleepycat.com) version 3.1.14.


Node:mifluz CLASSES AND COMMANDS, Next:, Previous:mifluz DESCRIPTION, Up:mifluz

mifluz CLASSES AND COMMANDS

Configuration

reads the configuration file and manages it in memory.

WordContext

read configuration and setup mifluz context.

WordCursor

abstract class to search and retrieve entries in a WordList object.

WordCursorOne

search and retrieve entries in a WordListOne object.

WordDBInfo
inverted index usage environment.
WordDict

manage and use an inverted index dictionary.

WordKey
inverted index key.
WordKeyInfo
information on the key structure of the inverted index.
WordList

abstract class to manage and use an inverted index file.

WordListOne

manage and use an inverted index file.

WordMonitor
monitoring classes activity.
WordRecord
inverted index record.
WordRecordInfo
information on the record structure of the inverted index.
WordReference
inverted index occurrence.
WordType
defines a word in term of allowed characters, length etc.
htdb_dump

dump the content of an inverted index in Berkeley DB fashion

htdb_load

displays statistics for Berkeley DB environments.

htdb_stat

displays statistics for Berkeley DB environments.

mifluzdict

dump the dictionnary of an inverted index.

mifluzdump

dump the content of an inverted index.

mifluzload

load the content of an inverted index.

mifluzsearch
search the content of an inverted index.

Node:mifluz CONFIGURATION, Next:, Previous:mifluz CLASSES AND COMMANDS, Up:mifluz

mifluz CONFIGURATION

The format of the configuration file read by WordContext::Initialize is:

keyword: value
Comments may be added on lines starting with a #. The default configuration file is read from from the file pointed by the MIFLUZ_CONFIG environment variable or ~/.mifluz or /etc/mifluz.conf in this order. If no configuration file is available, builtin defaults are used. Here is an example configuration file:
wordlist_extend: true
wordlist_cache_size: 10485760
wordlist_page_size: 32768
wordlist_compress: 1
wordlist_wordrecord_description: NONE
wordlist_wordkey_description: Word/DocID 32/Flags 8/Location 16
wordlist_monitor: true
wordlist_monitor_period: 30
wordlist_monitor_output: monitor.out,rrd
wordlist_allow_numbers {true|false} <number> (default false)
A digit is considered a valid character within a word if this configuration parameter is set to true otherwise it is an error to insert a word containing digits. See the Normalize method for more information.
wordlist_cache_inserts {true|false} (default false)
If true all Insert calls are cached in memory. When the WordList object is closed or a different access method is called the cached entries are flushed in the inverted index.
wordlist_cache_max <bytes> (default 0)
Maximum size of the cumulated cache files generated when doing bulk insertion with the BatchStart() function. When this limit is reached, the cache files are all merged into the inverted index. The value 0 means infinite size allowed. See WordList(3) for the rationale behind cache file handling.
wordlist_cache_size <bytes> (default 500K)
Berkeley DB cache size (see Berkeley DB documentation) Cache makes a huge difference in performance. It must be at least 2% of the expected total data size. Note that if compression is activated the data size is eight times larger than the actual file size. In this case the cache must be scaled to 2% of the data size, not 2% of the file size. See Cache tuning in the mifluz guide for more hints. See WordList(3) for the rationale behind cache file handling.
wordlist_compress {true|false} (default false)
Activate compression of the index. The resulting index is eight times smaller than the uncompressed index.
wordlist_env_dir <directory> (default .)
Only valid if wordlist_env_share set to true. Specify the directory in which the sharable environment will be created. All inverted indexes specified with a non-absolute pathname will be created relative to this directory.
wordlist_env_share {true,false} (default false)
If true a sharable environment is open or created if none exist.
wordlist_env_skip {true,false} (default false)
If true no environment is created at all. This must never be used if a WordList object is created. It may be useful if only WordKey objects are used, for instance.
wordlist_extend {true|false} (default false)
If true maintain reference count of unique words. The Noccurrence method gives access to this count.
wordlist_locale <locale> (default C)
Set the locale of the program to locale . See setlocale(3) for more information.
wordlist_lowercase {true|false} <number> (default true)
If a word contains upper case letters it is converted to lowercase if this configuration parameter is true, otherwise it is left untouched.
wordlist_maximum_word_length <number> (default 25)
The maximum length of a word. See the Normalize method for more information.
wordlist_mimimun_word_length <number> (default 3)
The minimum length of a word. See the Normalize method for more information.
wordlist_monitor {true|false} (default false)
If true create a WordMonitor instance to gather statistics and build reports.
wordlist_monitor_output <file>[,{rrd,readable] (default stderr)
Print reports on file instead of the default stderr . If type is set to rrd the output is fit for the benchmark-report script. Otherwise it a (hardly :-) readable string.
wordlist_monitor_period <sec> (default 0)
If the value sec is a positive integer, set a timer to print reports every sec seconds. The timer is set using the ALRM signal and will fail if the calling application already has a handler on that signal.
wordlist_page_size <bytes> (default 8192)
Berkeley DB page size (see Berkeley DB documentation)
wordlist_truncate {true|false} <number> (default true)
If a word is too long according to the wordlist_maximum_word_length it is truncated if this configuration parameter is true otherwise it is considered an invalid word.
wordlist_valid_punctuation [characters] (default none)
A list of punctuation characters that may appear in a word. These characters will be removed from the word before insertion in the index.
wordlist_verbose <number> (default 0)
Set the verbosity level of the WordList class.

1 walk logic

2 walk logic details

3 walk logic lots of details

wordlist_wordkey_description <desc> (no default)
Describe the structure of the inverted index key. In the following explanation of the <desc> format, mandatory words are in bold and values that must be replaced in italic.

Word bits/name bits [/...]

The name is an alphanumerical symbolic name for the key field. The bits is the number of bits required to store this field. Note that all values are stored in unsigned integers (unsigned int). Example:

Word 8/Document 16/Location 8

wordlist_wordkey_document [field ...] (default none)
A white space separated list of field numbers that define a document. The field number list must not contain gaps. For instance 1 2 3 is valid but 1 3 4 is not valid. This configuration parameter is not used by the mifluz library but may be used by a query application to define the semantic of a document. In response to a query, the application will return a list of results in which only distinct documents will be shown.
wordlist_wordkey_location field (default none)
A single field number that contains the position of a word in a given document. This configuration parameter is not used by the mifluz library but may be used by a query application.
wordlist_wordrecord_description {NONE|DATA|STR} (no default)
NONE: the record is empty

DATA: the record contains an integer (unsigned int)

STR: the record contains a string (String)


Node:mifluz ENVIRONMENT, Previous:mifluz CONFIGURATION, Up:mifluz

mifluz ENVIRONMENT

MIFLUZ_CONFIG file name of configuration file read by WordContext(3). Defaults to ~/.mifluz. or /usr/etc/mifluz.conf


Node:Concept Index, Previous:Reference, Up:Top

Index of Concepts

Table of Contents

 
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