nickel-search
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0.6.1 • Public • Published

Nickel Search

Nickel Search implements a basic serverless word prefix search.

What is prefix search

In a full text search solution, you expect the server to return documents containing the searched words.

In a prefix search solution, you expect the server to search for all documents containing words starting with a specific prefix.

Given the advanced querying almost any full text search engine allows, prefix search is a subset of a full text search problem. For example, with Lucene (hence Solr, Elastic, and others) you can use * syntax to search for prefixed words. E.g., adv* would return documents containing adventure, advanced, and other words that start from adv.

The goal of this project is to allow prefix search in a serverless way, so that you don't have to pay for servers hosting Solr, Elastic, or another server.

Current issues and TODO

  1. The search doesn't support multi-word search.
  2. The indexing takes a lot of time and RAM.
  3. No support for synonyms, stemming/lemmatization.
  4. No test coverage.
  5. More ranking sampels needed.

How to use

There is a fully functional sample in the /samples directory, which also includes running the indexer as a Docker container on AWS Fargate. See README.md in the /samples directory for more info.

Install Nickel Search:

$> npm install nickel-search

Implement your index model and run indexer:

import nickel from "nickel-search";

class MyBlogPost {
    Title: string;
    Author: string;
    Body: string;
}

const options = {
    // Set fields that will be returned with search results
    getDisplayedFields: (s3Uri: string, document: MyBlogPost) => ({
        Title: document.Title,
        Author: document.Author,
    }),
    // Set fields to search against
    getSearchedFields: (s3Uri: string, document: MyBlogPost) => ({
        Title: document.Title,
    }),
    // number of search results per page has to be set when creating the index
    resultsPageSize: 50,
    // save checkpoints every 100 changes to each hash value
    saveThreshold: 100,
    // shards in the index store
    indexShards: 1000,
    // Implement to set search results sort order.
    sort: (a: ISearchable, b: ISearchable) => {
        let sort = a.weight - b.weight;
        if (sort === 0) {
            sort = a.original.Title.localeCompare(b.original.Title);
        }
        return sort;
    },
    // Data source options
    source: nickel.createDataStore<MyBlogPost>({
        location: "../sample-data/", // existing folder with JSON files matching MyBlogPost
    }),
    // Index store options
    indexStore: nickel.createIndexStore({
        location: "../sample-index/", // existing folder that will store the search index
    }),
};

nickel.indexer(options).run();

In the sample above, the indexer will JSON.decode all files in ../sample-data/, apply getDisplayedFields and getSearchedFields for each file, and save the index in ../sample-index/. The indexer will split the index into 1000 'shards' ({ options.indexShards: 1000 }). The number of shards has to be similar when indexing and searching against the same index.

Run the indexer. When it's done, run the search:

import nickel from "nickel-search";

const indexStore = nickel.createIndexStore({
    location: "../sample-index/", // search index location
});

const ns = nickel.searcher({ indexShards: 1000 }, indexStore);

const searchResults = await ns.search('nic');

See an example in the ./samples directory.

Requirements

  • Indexer can run fairly long.
    • In theory, most time consuming tasks can run in parallel but it is not implemented.
  • It will store the entire index in RAM before saving it, so it will require a lot of RAM.

Features

When to use Nickel Search

Nickel can help if all of the following is true:

  • You have a set of text documents that you want to be able to search using prefixes
  • Your dataset does not change often
  • You don't need advanced query syntax such as provided by Lucene or other implementations
  • You don't want to pay for an always on search server (such as Elastic or Solr)

A simple example scenario is an autocomplete search for book names. We don't need advanced full text search query syntax such as provided by Lucene or other implementation. In a same way many other autocomplete scenarios can be addressed.

When not to use Nickel Search

Don't use Nickel Search if:

  • You need to rank results when querying
  • You have KPIs on index update time
  • You need advanced syntax querying (AND/OR/etc.)
  • You need to get a response in less than 100ms
  • Your dataset is larger than RAM available for indexing
  • For languages other than English (or maybe submit a PR to support that language?)

How it works

Nickel Search is a node.js app that converts a set of documents into a prefix-queriable set of documents, so that you can use the capabilities of the storage system as your prefix-search server. I use it with AWS S3, so it provides a serverless search for my projects.

Future steps

TODO:

  • Deallocate stack after indexing done, keeping the source and target S3 buckets:

    • Move the S3 buckets definition to a different stack, and reference them from the current stack
    • Or delete money-consuming objects from the created stack
  • Add storage to Docker container before indexing starts

  • Remove storage from Docker container when indexing finishes.

  • Create a project directory for fabu.

  • Make indexer resumable.

  • Optimize time and memory usage.

  • Try other features of mature full text search solutions and see if they can be added to Nickel.

Release notes

v0.3

  • Changed the tokenizer to split on more punctuation marks
  • Added local file buffer to reduce RAM consumption
  • Enhanced sorting performance

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npm i nickel-search

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Version

0.6.1

License

MIT

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  • aynurin