2022-03-21 13:41:39 +00:00
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title = "Full-Text Search"
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insert_anchor_links = "right"
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description = "Details about configuring the fulltext search."
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weight = 50
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template = "docs.html"
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# Full-Text Search
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Fulltext search is optional and provided by external systems. There
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are currently [Apache SOLR](https://solr.apache.org) and [PostgreSQL's
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text search](https://www.postgresql.org/docs/14/textsearch.html)
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available.
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You can enable and configure the fulltext search backends as described
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below and then choose the backend:
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```conf
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full-text-search {
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enabled = true
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# Which backend to use, either solr or postgresql
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backend = "solr"
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…
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}
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```
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All docspell components must provide the same fulltext search
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configuration.
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2022-04-24 16:34:22 +00:00
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The features provided for full text search depends on the backend.
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Docspell only hands the query to the backend and thus content queries
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may not work across different fulltext search backends.
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## SOLR
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[Apache SOLR](https://solr.apache.org) can be used to provide the
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full-text search. This is defined in the `full-text-search.solr`
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subsection:
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``` bash
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...
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full-text-search {
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...
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solr = {
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url = "http://localhost:8983/solr/docspell"
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}
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}
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```
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2022-05-21 15:00:27 +00:00
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The [default configuration](@/docs/configure/defaults.md)
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contains more information about each setting.
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The `solr.url` is the mandatory setting that you need to change to
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point to your SOLR instance. Then you need to set the `enabled` flag
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to `true`.
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When installing docspell manually, just install solr and create a core
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as described in the [solr
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documentation](https://solr.apache.org/guide/8_4/installing-solr.html).
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That will provide you with the connection url (the last part is the
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core name). If Docspell detects an empty core it will run a schema
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setup on start automatically.
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2022-04-24 16:34:22 +00:00
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The `full-text-search.solr` options must be the same for joex and the
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restserver.
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Sometimes it is necessary to re-create the entire index, for example
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if you upgrade SOLR or delete the core to provide a new one (see
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[here](https://solr.apache.org/guide/8_4/reindexing.html) for
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details). Another way is to restart docspell (while clearing the
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index). If docspell detects an empty index at startup, it will submit
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a task to build the index automatically.
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Note that a collective can also re-index their data using a similiar
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endpoint; but this is only deleting their data and doesn't do a full
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re-index.
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The solr index doesn't contain any new information, it can be
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regenerated any time using the above REST call. Thus it doesn't need
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to be backed up.
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## PostgreSQL
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PostgreSQL provides many additional features, one of them is [text
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search](https://www.postgresql.org/docs/14/textsearch.html). Docspell
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can utilize this to provide the fulltext search feature. This is
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especially useful, if PostgreSQL is used as the primary database for
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docspell.
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You can choose to use the same database or separate connection. The
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fulltext search will create a single table `ftspsql_search` that holds
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all necessary data. When doing backups, you can exclude this table as
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it can be recreated from the primary data any time.
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The configuration is placed inside `full-text-search`:
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```conf
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full-text-search {
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…
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postgresql = {
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use-default-connection = false
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jdbc {
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url = "jdbc:postgresql://server:5432/db"
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user = "pguser"
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password = ""
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}
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pg-config = {
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}
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pg-query-parser = "websearch_to_tsquery"
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pg-rank-normalization = [ 4 ]
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}
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}
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```
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The flag `use-default-connection` can be set to `true` if you use
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PostgreSQL as the primary db to have it also used for the fulltext
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search. If set to `false`, the subsequent `jdbc` block defines the
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connection to the postgres database to use.
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It follows some settings to tune PostgreSQL's text search feature.
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Please visit [their
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documentation](https://www.postgresql.org/docs/14/textsearch.html) for
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all the details.
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- `pg-config`: this is an optional mapping from document languages as
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used in Docspell to a PostgreSQL text search configuration. Not all
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languages are equally well supported out of the box. You can create
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your own text search config in PostgreSQL and then define it in this
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map for your language. For example:
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```conf
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pg-config = {
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english = "my-english"
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german = "my-german"
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}
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```
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By default, the predefined configs are used for some lanugages and
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otherwise fallback to `simple`.
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*If you change this setting, you must re-index everything.*
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- `pg-query-parser`: the parser applied to the fulltext query. By
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default it is `websearch_to_tsquery`. (relevant [doc
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link](https://www.postgresql.org/docs/14/textsearch-controls.html#TEXTSEARCH-PARSING-QUERIES))
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- `pg-rank-normalization`: this is used to tweak rank calculation that
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affects the order of the elements returned from a query. It is an
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array of numbers out of `1`, `2`, `4`, `8`, `16` or `32`. (relevant
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[doc
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link](https://www.postgresql.org/docs/14/textsearch-controls.html#TEXTSEARCH-RANKING))
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# Re-create the index
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There is an [admin route](@/docs/api/intro.md#admin) that allows to
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re-create the entire index (for all collectives). This is possible via
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a call:
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``` bash
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$ curl -XPOST -H "Docspell-Admin-Secret: test123" http://localhost:7880/api/v1/admin/fts/reIndexAll
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```
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or use the [cli](@/docs/tools/cli.md):
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```bash
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dsc admin -a test123 recreate-index
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```
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Here the `test123` is the key defined with `admin-endpoint.secret`. If
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it is empty (the default), this call is disabled (all admin routes).
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Otherwise, the POST request will submit a system task that is executed
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by a joex instance eventually.
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Using this endpoint, the entire index (including the schema) will be
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re-created.
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