Namespace Lucene.Net.Demo
The demo module offers simple example code to show the features of Lucene.
Apache Lucene - Building and Installing the Basic Demo
About this Document
This document is intended as a "getting started" guide to using and running the Lucene demos. It walks you through some basic installation and configuration.
About the Demo
The Lucene command-line demo code consists of an application that demonstrates various functionalities of Lucene and how you can add Lucene to your applications.
Indexing Files
Once you've gotten this far you're probably itching to go. Let's build an index! Assuming you've set your CLASSPATH correctly, just type:
java org.apache.lucene.demo.IndexFiles -docs {path-to-lucene}/src
This will produce a subdirectory called index which will contain an index of all of the Lucene source code.
To search the index type:
java org.apache.lucene.demo.SearchFiles
You'll be prompted for a query. Type in a gibberish or made up word (for example: "supercalifragilisticexpialidocious"). You'll see that there are no maching results in the lucene source code. Now try entering the word "string". That should return a whole bunch of documents. The results will page at every tenth result and ask you whether you want more results.
About the code
In this section we walk through the sources behind the command-line Lucene demo: where to find them, their parts and their function. This section is intended for Java developers wishing to understand how to use Lucene in their applications.
Location of the source
The files discussed here are linked into this documentation directly: * IndexFiles: code to create a Lucene index. * SearchFiles: code to search a Lucene index.
IndexFiles
As we discussed in the previous walk-through, the IndexFiles class creates a Lucene Index. Let's take a look at how it does this.
The main() method parses the command-line parameters, then in preparation for instantiating IndexWriter, opens a Directory, and instantiates StandardAnalyzer and IndexWriterConfig.
The value of the -index command-line parameter is the name of the filesystem directory where all index information should be stored. If IndexFiles is invoked with a relative path given in the -index command-line parameter, or if the -index command-line parameter is not given, causing the default relative index path "index" to be used, the index path will be created as a subdirectory of the current working directory (if it does not already exist). On some platforms, the index path may be created in a different directory (such as the user's home directory).
The -docs command-line parameter value is the location of the directory containing files to be indexed.
The -update command-line parameter tells IndexFiles not to delete the index if it already exists. When -update is not given, IndexFiles will first wipe the slate clean before indexing any documents.
Lucene Directorys are used by the IndexWriter to store information in the index. In addition to the FSDirectory implementation we are using, there are several other Directory subclasses that can write to RAM, to databases, etc.
Lucene Analyzers are processing pipelines that break up text into indexed tokens, a.k.a. terms, and optionally perform other operations on these tokens, e.g. downcasing, synonym insertion, filtering out unwanted tokens, etc. The Analyzer we are using is StandardAnalyzer, which creates tokens using the Word Break rules from the Unicode Text Segmentation algorithm specified in Unicode Standard Annex #29; converts tokens to lowercase; and then filters out stopwords. Stopwords are common language words such as articles (a, an, the, etc.) and other tokens that may have less value for searching. It should be noted that there are different rules for every language, and you should use the proper analyzer for each. Lucene currently provides Analyzers for a number of different languages (see the javadocs under lucene/analysis/common/src/java/org/apache/lucene/analysis).
The IndexWriterConfig instance holds all configuration for IndexWriter. For example, we set the OpenMode to use here based on the value of the -update command-line parameter.
Looking further down in the file, after IndexWriter is instantiated, you should see the indexDocs() code. This recursive function crawls the directories and creates Document objects. The Document is simply a data object to represent the text content from the file as well as its creation time and location. These instances are added to the IndexWriter. If the -update command-line parameter is given, the IndexWriterConfig OpenMode will be set to OpenMode.CREATE_OR_APPEND, and rather than adding documents to the index, the IndexWriter will update them in the index by attempting to find an already-indexed document with the same identifier (in our case, the file path serves as the identifier); deleting it from the index if it exists; and then adding the new document to the index.
Searching Files
The SearchFiles class is quite simple. It primarily collaborates with an IndexSearcher, StandardAnalyzer, (which is used in the IndexFiles class as well) and a QueryParser. The query parser is constructed with an analyzer used to interpret your query text in the same way the documents are interpreted: finding word boundaries, downcasing, and removing useless words like 'a', 'an' and 'the'. The Query object contains the results from the QueryParser which is passed to the searcher. Note that it's also possible to programmatically construct a rich Query object without using the query parser. The query parser just enables decoding the Lucene query syntax into the corresponding Query object.
SearchFiles uses the IndexSearcher.search method that returns TopDocs with max n hits. The results are printed in pages, sorted by score (i.e. relevance).
Classes
IndexFiles
Index all text files under a directory.
This is a command-line application demonstrating simple Lucene indexing. Run it with no command-line arguments for usage information.
SearchFiles
Simple command-line based search demo.