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@advanced-rest-client/pouchdb-quick-search
Advanced tools
PouchDB Quick Search - persisted full-text search for PouchDB
var pouch = new PouchDB('mydb');
var doc = {_id: 'mydoc', title: "Guess who?", text: "It's-a me, Mario!"};
pouch.put(doc).then(function () {
return pouch.search({
query: 'mario',
fields: ['title', 'text'],
include_docs: true,
highlighting: true
});
}).then(function (res) {
console.log(res.rows[0].doc.text); // "It's-a me, Mario!"
console.log(res.rows[0].highlighting); // {"text": "It's-a me, <strong>Mario</strong>!"}
});
A very efficient and accurate full-text search engine built on top of PouchDB. Analyzes text, indexes it, and provides a simple but powerful API for querying. Ideal for PhoneGap apps or any webapp that needs offline search support.
This is a local plugin, so it is not designed to work against CouchDB/Cloudant/etc. If you'd like to search against the server, use the CouchDB Lucene plugin, Cloudant's search indexes, or something similar.
If you need prefix search (e.g. for autocompletion), then just use PouchDB itself. The allDocs()
and query()
APIs plus startkey
should give you everything you need for prefix lookup. See the autosuggestions and prefix search section for details.
The underlying tokenization/stemming/stopword engine is Lunr, which is optimized for English text, using a variant of the Porter stemmer. To optimize for other languages, check out lunr-languages and see the "other languages" section.
To use this plugin, include it after pouchdb.js
in your HTML page:
<script src="pouchdb.js"></script>
<script src="pouchdb.quick-search.js"></script>
This plugin is also available from Bower:
bower install pouchdb-quick-search
Just npm install it:
npm install pouchdb-quick-search
And then attach it to the PouchDB
object:
var PouchDB = require('pouchdb');
PouchDB.plugin(require('pouchdb-quick-search'));
Topics:
pouch.search({
query: 'your query here',
fields: ['title', 'text']
}).then(function (res) {
// handle results
}).catch(function (err) {
// handle error
});
Response:
{ rows:
[
{ id: 'mydoc5', score: 0.08027856564851082 },
{ id: 'mydoc3', score: 0.044194173824159216 },
{ id: 'mydoc4', score: 0.044194173824159216 }
],
total_rows: 3
}
In the simplest case, you call pouch.search()
with a query
and a list of document field
s to search. The results contain a list of matching document id
s and score
s, sorted from high to low.
If any document is missing a field, then it's simply ignored. You can search one or more fields at a time.
Like most of the PouchDB API, the search()
function returns a promise. But if you like callbacks, you can also use that style:
pouch.search({
query: 'your query here',
fields: ['title', 'text']
}, function (err, res) {
if (err) {
// handle error
} else {
// handle results
}
});
Your document fields can be strings or arrays of strings. Use dots to separate deeply nested fields. Searching deeply inside arrays is supported.
var doc = {
_id: 'mydoc',
name: 'Princess Peach',
likes: ['cakes', 'go-karts', 'turnips'],
description: {
summary: 'Can float in Mario 2.'
}
};
pouch.put(doc).then(function () {
return pouch.search({
query: 'peach',
fields: ['name', 'likes', 'description.summary']
});
});
Response:
{
"rows": [
{
"id": "mydoc",
"score": 0.044194173824159216
}
],
"total_rows": 1
}
By default, the results only contain a list of document id
s and score
s. You can also use {include_docs: true}
to get back the full documents:
pouch.search({
query: 'kong',
fields: ['title', 'text'],
include_docs: true
});
Response:
{
"rows": [
{
"doc": {
"_id": "mydoc5",
"_rev": "1-5252b7faa1062e74ef0881fc908274cd",
"text": "This kong likes to surf!",
"title": "Funky Kong"
},
"id": "mydoc5",
"score": 0.08027856564851082
},
{
"doc": {
"_id": "mydoc3",
"_rev": "1-895f4289f96485c86ab62b02603220ae",
"text": "He's the leader of the bunch, you know him well.",
"title": "Donkey Kong"
},
"id": "mydoc3",
"score": 0.044194173824159216
},
{
"doc": {
"_id": "mydoc4",
"_rev": "1-00117a7b1d05df952474206e51ff19a5",
"text": "His coconut gun can fire in spurts.",
"title": "Diddy Kong"
},
"id": "mydoc4",
"score": 0.044194173824159216
}
],
"total_rows": 3
}
A very handy option is {highlighting: true}
, which returns the fields that the query matched, along with the keywords highlighted in context:
pouch.search({
query: 'kong',
fields: ['title', 'text'],
highlighting: true
});
Response:
{
"rows": [
{
"highlighting": {
"text": "This <strong>kong</strong> likes to surf!",
"title": "Funky <strong>Kong</strong>"
},
"id": "mydoc5",
"score": 0.08027856564851082
},
{
"highlighting": {
"title": "Donkey <strong>Kong</strong>"
},
"id": "mydoc3",
"score": 0.044194173824159216
},
{
"highlighting": {
"title": "Diddy <strong>Kong</strong>"
},
"id": "mydoc4",
"score": 0.044194173824159216
}
],
"total_rows": 3
}
If you don't like '<strong></strong>'
, you can also specify your own highlighting_pre
and highlighting_post
strings:
pouch.search({
query: 'kong',
fields: ['title', 'text'],
highlighting: true,
highlighting_pre: '<em>',
highlighting_post: '</em>'
});
Response:
{
"rows": [
{
"highlighting": {
"text": "This <em>kong</em> likes to surf!",
"title": "Funky <em>Kong</em>"
},
"id": "mydoc5",
"score": 0.08027856564851082
},
{
"highlighting": {
"title": "Donkey <em>Kong</em>"
},
"id": "mydoc3",
"score": 0.044194173824159216
},
{
"highlighting": {
"title": "Diddy <em>Kong</em>"
},
"id": "mydoc4",
"score": 0.044194173824159216
}
],
"total_rows": 3
}
You can use limit
and skip
, just like with the allDocs()
/query()
API:
pouch.search({
query: 'kong',
fields: ['title', 'text'],
limit: 10,
skip: 20
});
The performance concerns for skip
that apply to allDocs()
/query()
do not apply so much here, because no matter what, we have to read in all the doc IDs and calculate their score in order to sort them correctly. In other words, it is guaranteed that you will read the doc IDs of all matching documents into memory, no matter what values you set for limit
and skip
.
What this will optimize, however, is the attachment of metadata like doc
and highlighting
– it will only be done for the subset of results that you want.
total_rows
You will also get back a field, total_rows
, which tells you how many documents you would have gotten from your query if you hadn't applied limit
/skip
. You can use this for a "how many pages are remaining" display during pagination.
Fields may be boosted, if you pass in an object rather than an array:
pouch.search({
query: 'kong',
fields: {
'title': 1,
'text': 5
}
});
The default boost is 1
. Shorter fields are naturally boosted relative to longer fields (see the algorithmic explanation below).
By default, every term in a query other than stopwords must appear somewhere in the document in order for it to be matched. If you want to relax this to allow just a subset of the terms to match, use the mm
("minimum should match") option, which is modeled after Solr's mm
option.
Example 1: docs must contain both the terms 'donkey'
and 'kong'
:
pouch.search({
query: 'donkey kong',
fields: ['title', 'text']
});
Example 2: docs must contain either of the terms 'donkey'
and 'kong'
:
pouch.search({
query: 'donkey kong',
fields: ['title', 'text'],
mm: '50%'
});
Example 3: docs must contain at least one of the three terms 'donkey'
, 'kong'
, and 'country'
:
pouch.search({
query: 'donkey kong country',
fields: ['title', 'text'],
mm: '33%'
});
The default mm
value is 100%
. All values must be provided as a percentage (ints are okay).
If you only want to index a subset of your documents, you can include a filter function that tells us which documents to skip. The filter function should return true
for documents you want to index, and false
for documents you want to skip. (Truthy/falsy values are also okay.)
Example:
pouch.search({
query: 'foo',
fields: ['title', 'text'],
filter: function (doc) {
return doc.type === 'person'; // only index persons
}
}).then(function (info) {
// handle result
}).catch(function (err) {
// handle error
});
The filter
option, like fields
and language
, affects the identity of the underlying index, so it affects building and deleting (see building/deleting below).
Thanks to Jean-Felix Girard for implementing this feature!
If you only use the search()
method as described above, then it will be slow the first time you query, because the index has to be built up.
To avoid slow performance, you can explicitly tell the search plugin to build up the index using {build: true}
:
pouch.search({
fields: ['title', 'text'],
build: true
}).then(function (info) {
// if build was successful, info is {"ok": true}
}).catch(function (err) {
// handle error
});
This will build up the index without querying it. If the database has changed since you last updated (e.g. new documents were added), then it will simply update the index with the new documents. If nothing has changed, then it won't do anything.
You must at least provide the fields
you want to index. If the language isn't English, you must pass in the language
option. Boosts don't matter.
If, for whatever reason, you need to delete an index that's been saved to disk, you can pass in {destroy: true}
to the search()
function, and instead of searching, it will delete the external search database.
pouch.search({
fields: ['title', 'text'],
destroy: true
});
When you do this, you must at least provide the fields
, because external databases are created and identified based on the fields you want to index. You should also provide the language
option if the language is something other than English. I.e., for every unique fields
combination you want to index (plus language
if non-English), a separate database will be created especially for that query. If you open up your developer tools, you can see it; it should have a name like <mydbname>-search-<md5sum>
and look like this:
When you search, a persistent map/reduce index is created behind the scenes, in order to save the indexed data and provide the fastest possible queries.
This means you can use the stale
options, as in the query()
API, to get faster but less accurate results:
// return immediately, update the index afterwards
pouch.search({
query: 'donkey kong',
fields: ['title', 'text'],
stale: 'update_after'
});
or
//
pouch.search({
query: 'donkey kong',
fields: ['title', 'text'],
stale: 'ok'
});
Most likely, though, you won't want to do this unless your database is frequently changing.
The default Lunr pipeline uses the Porter stemmer, which is optimized for English. So for instance, the words "work," "worked," "working," and "works" would all resolve to the same stem using the default settings.
Obviously other languages have different morphologies (and stopwords), so to support these language, this plugin can integrate with the lunr-languages plugin.
To use another language, first follow the lunr-languages instructions to install the language of your choice.
Next, use the language
option when you search:
pouch.search({
query: 'marche',
fields: ['text'],
include_docs: true,
language: 'fr'
});
Response:
{
"rows": [
{
"doc": {
"_id": "french-doc",
"_rev": "1-997cba2d79a6f803c6040ddbedee642f",
"text": "Ça va marcher."
},
"id": "french-doc",
"score": 0.7071067811865475
}
],
"total_rows": 1
}
You can still query in English:
pouch.search({
query: 'works',
fields: ['text'],
include_docs: true
});
Response:
{
"rows": [
{
"doc": {
"_id": "english-doc",
"_rev": "1-48f9b2f4f17fc352fa53a21dca7e188e",
"text": "This will work."
},
"id": "english-doc",
"score": 1
}
],
"total_rows": 1
}
If you don't specify a language
, then the default is 'en'
. Under the hood, separate external databases will be created per language (and per fields
definition), so you may want to keep that in mind if you're using the destroy
and build
options.
Note: currently the lunr-languages plugin expects a global lunr
object, so unfortunately you will have to include lunr as an extra dependency in your project and assign it to global (as described in the lunr-languages instructions). Hopefully this will be fixed in the future.
Recently lunr-languages
developers have added the ability to search in multiple languages at once. To be able to search from several languages:
You should include lunr.multi.js
from the lunr-languages
repository. (Currently it is available only on master; they haven't tagged a release).
Pass an array into language
, for example:
pouch.search({
query: 'marche',
fields: ['text'],
include_docs: true,
language: ['en', 'fr']
});
The above code will search using both French and English.
While the pouchdb-quick-search
plugin does not provide prefix/autosuggestion support, you can trivially do it in PouchDB itself by using allDocs()
.
Just create documents with IDs equal to what you want to search for, and then use startkey
/endkey
plus the special high unicode character \uffff
to search:
pouch.bulkDocs([
{_id: 'marin'},
{_id: 'mario'},
{_id: 'marth'},
{_id: 'mushroom'},
{_id: 'zelda'}
]).then(function () {
return pouch.allDocs({
startkey: 'mar',
endkey: 'mar\uffff'
});
});
This will return all documents that start with 'mar'
, which in this case would be 'marin'
, 'mario'
, and 'marth'
.
How does it work? Well, in PouchDB and CouchDB, doc IDs are sorted lexiocographically, hence the \uffff
trick.
Note that to handle uppercase/lowercase, you would have to insert the documents with the _id
s already lowercase, and then search using lowercase letters as well.
Note: You can also accomplish this using map/reduce queries, and the principle is the same (including the \uffff
trick). However, the performance may be worse than allDocs()
because you are using a secondary index rather than the primary index.
This plugin uses the classic search technique of TF-IDF, which strikes a nice balance between accuracy and speed. It is probably the most widely deployed search algorithm in the world.
Additionally, it applies a per-field weighting based on the DisMax algorithm as used in Apache Solr, which means that short fields tend to be boosted relative to long fields. This is useful for things like e.g. web page titles and web page contents, where the words in the titles are usually more significant than words in the contents. For multi-word queries, this algorithm also has the nice effect of preferring documents that match both words, even across several fields.
For more information about the algorithms that guided this implementation, refer to the Lucene Similarity documentation.
npm install
npm run build
This will run the tests in Node using LevelDB:
npm test
You can also check for 100% code coverage using:
npm run coverage
If you don't like the coverage results, change the values from 100 to something else in package.json
, or add /*istanbul ignore */
comments.
If you have mocha installed globally you can run single test with:
TEST_DB=local mocha --reporter spec --grep search_phrase
The TEST_DB
environment variable specifies the database that PouchDB should use (see package.json
).
Run npm run dev
and then point your favorite browser to http://127.0.0.1:8001/test/index.html.
The query param ?grep=mysearch
will search for tests matching mysearch
.
You can run e.g.
CLIENT=selenium:firefox npm test
CLIENT=selenium:phantomjs npm test
This will run the tests automatically and the process will exit with a 0 or a 1 when it's done. Firefox uses IndexedDB, and PhantomJS uses WebSQL.
FAQs
PouchDB Quick Search - persisted full-text search for PouchDB
The npm package @advanced-rest-client/pouchdb-quick-search receives a total of 341 weekly downloads. As such, @advanced-rest-client/pouchdb-quick-search popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @advanced-rest-client/pouchdb-quick-search demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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