1INDEXER(1) Sphinxsearch INDEXER(1)
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6 indexer - Sphinxsearch fulltext index generator
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9 indexer [--config CONFIGFILE] [--rotate] [--noprogress | --quiet]
10 [--all | INDEX | ...]
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12 indexer --buildstops OUTPUTFILE COUNT [--config CONFIGFILE]
13 [--noprogress | --quiet] [--all | INDEX | ...]
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15 indexer --merge MAIN_INDEX DELTA_INDEX [--config CONFIGFILE] [--rotate]
16 [--noprogress | --quiet]
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19 Sphinx is a collection of programs that aim to provide high quality
20 fulltext search.
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22 indexer is the first of the two principle tools as part of Sphinx.
23 Invoked from either the command line directly, or as part of a larger
24 script, indexer is solely responsible for gathering the data that will
25 be searchable.
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27 The calling syntax for indexer is as follows:
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29 $ indexer [OPTIONS] [indexname1 [indexname2 [...]]]
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31 Essentially you would list the different possible indexes (that you
32 would later make available to search) in sphinx.conf, so when calling
33 indexer, as a minimum you need to be telling it what index (or indexes)
34 you want to index.
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36 If sphinx.conf contained details on 2 indexes, mybigindex and
37 mysmallindex, you could do the following:
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39 $ indexer mybigindex
40 $ indexer mysmallindex mybigindex
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42 As part of the configuration file, sphinx.conf, you specify one or more
43 indexes for your data. You might call indexer to reindex one of them,
44 ad-hoc, or you can tell it to process all indexes - you are not limited
45 to calling just one, or all at once, you can always pick some
46 combination of the available indexes.
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49 The majority of the options for indexer are given in the configuration
50 file, however there are some options you might need to specify on the
51 command line as well, as they can affect how the indexing operation is
52 performed. These options are:
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54 --all
55 Tells indexer to update every index listed in sphinx.conf, instead
56 of listing individual indexes. This would be useful in small
57 configurations, or cron-type or maintenance jobs where the entire
58 index set will get rebuilt each day, or week, or whatever period is
59 best.
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61 Example usage:
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63 $ indexer --config /home/myuser/sphinx.conf --all
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65 --buildstops outfile.txt NUM
66 Reviews the index source, as if it were indexing the data, and
67 produces a list of the terms that are being indexed. In other
68 words, it produces a list of all the searchable terms that are
69 becoming part of the index. Note; it does not update the index in
70 question, it simply processes the data 'as if' it were indexing,
71 including running queries defined with sql_query_pre or
72 sql_query_post. outputfile.txt will contain the list of words, one
73 per line, sorted by frequency with most frequent first, and NUM
74 specifies the maximum number of words that will be listed; if
75 sufficiently large to encompass every word in the index, only that
76 many words will be returned. Such a dictionary list could be used
77 for client application features around "Did you mean..."
78 functionality, usually in conjunction with --buildfreqs, below.
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80 Example:
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82 $ indexer myindex --buildstops word_freq.txt 1000
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84 This would produce a document in the current directory,
85 word_freq.txt with the 1,000 most common words in 'myindex',
86 ordered by most common first. Note that the file will pertain to
87 the last index indexed when specified with multiple indexes or
88 --all (i.e. the last one listed in the configuration file)
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90 --buildfreqs
91 Used in pair with --buildstops (and is ignored if --buildstops is
92 not specified). As --buildstops provides the list of words used
93 within the index, --buildfreqs adds the quantity present in the
94 index, which would be useful in establishing whether certain words
95 should be considered stopwords if they are too prevalent. It will
96 also help with developing "Did you mean..." features where you can
97 how much more common a given word compared to another, similar one.
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99 Example:
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101 $ indexer myindex --buildstops word_freq.txt 1000 --buildfreqs
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103 This would produce the word_freq.txt as above, however after each
104 word would be the number of times it occurred in the index in
105 question.
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107 --config CONFIGRILE, -c CONFIGFILE
108 Use the given file as configuration. Normally, it will look for
109 sphinx.conf in the installation directory
110 (e.g./usr/local/sphinx/etc/sphinx.conf if installed into
111 /usr/local/sphinx), followed by the current directory you are in
112 when calling indexer from the shell. This is most of use in shared
113 environments where the binary files are installed somewhere like
114 /usr/local/sphinx/ but you want to provide users with the ability
115 to make their own custom Sphinx set-ups, or if you want to run
116 multiple instances on a single server. In cases like those you
117 could allow them to create their own sphinx.conf files and pass
118 them to indexer with this option.
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120 For example:
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122 $ indexer --config /home/myuser/sphinx.conf myindex
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124 --dump-rows FILE
125 Dumps rows fetched by SQL source(s) into the specified file, in a
126 MySQL compatible syntax. Resulting dumps are the exact
127 representation of data as received by indexer and help to repeat
128 indexing-time issues.
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130 --merge DST-INDEX SRC-INDEX
131 Physically merge together two indexes. For example if you have a
132 main+delta scheme, where the main index rarely changes, but the
133 delta index is rebuilt frequently, and --merge would be used to
134 combine the two. The operation moves from right to left - the
135 contents of SRC-INDEX get examined and physically combined with the
136 contents of DST-INDEX and the result is left in DST-INDEX. In
137 pseudo-code, it might be expressed as: DST-INDEX += SRC-INDEX
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139 An example:
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141 $ indexer --merge main delta --rotate
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143 In the above example, where the main is the master, rarely modified
144 index, and delta is the less frequently modified one, you might use
145 the above to call indexer to combine the contents of the delta into
146 the main index and rotate the indexes.
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148 --merge-dst-range ATTR MIN MAX
149 Run the filter range given upon merging. Specifically, as the merge
150 is applied to the destination index (as part of --merge, and is
151 ignored if --merge is not specified), indexer will also filter the
152 documents ending up in the destination index, and only documents
153 will pass through the filter given will end up in the final index.
154 This could be used for example, in an index where there is a
155 'deleted' attribute, where 0 means 'not deleted'. Such an index
156 could be merged with:
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158 $ indexer --merge main delta --merge-dst-range deleted 0 0
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160 Any documents marked as deleted (value 1) would be removed from the
161 newly-merged destination index. It can be added several times to
162 the command line, to add successive filters to the merge, all of
163 which must be met in order for a document to become part of the
164 final index.
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166 --merge-killlists, --merge-klists
167 Used in pair with --merge. Usually when merging indexer uses
168 kill-list of source index (i.e., the one which is merged into) as
169 the filter to wipe out the matching docs from the destination
170 index. At the same time the kill-list of the destination itself
171 isn't touched at all. When using --merge-killlists, (or it shorter
172 form --merge-klists) the indexer will not filter the dst-index docs
173 with src-index killlist, but it will merge their kill-lists
174 together, so the final result index will have the kill-list
175 containing the merged source kill-lists.
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177 --noprogress
178 Don't display progress details as they occur; instead, the final
179 status details (such as documents indexed, speed of indexing and so
180 on are only reported at completion of indexing. In instances where
181 the script is not being run on a console (or 'tty'), this will be
182 on by default.
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184 Example usage:
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186 $ indexer --rotate --all --noprogress
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188 --print-queries
189 Prints out SQL queries that indexer sends to the database, along
190 with SQL connection and disconnection events. That is useful to
191 diagnose and fix problems with SQL sources.
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193 --quiet
194 Tells indexer not to output anything, unless there is an error.
195 Again, most used for cron-type, or other script jobs where the
196 output is irrelevant or unnecessary, except in the event of some
197 kind of error.
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199 Example usage:
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201 $ indexer --rotate --all --quiet
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203 --rotate
204 Used for rotating indexes. Unless you have the situation where you
205 can take the search function offline without troubling users, you
206 will almost certainly need to keep search running whilst indexing
207 new documents. --rotate creates a second index, parallel to the
208 first (in the same place, simply including .new in the filenames).
209 Once complete, indexer notifies searchd via sending the SIGHUP
210 signal, and searchd will attempt to rename the indexes (renaming
211 the existing ones to include .old and renaming the .new to replace
212 them), and then start serving from the newer files. Depending on
213 the setting of seamless_rotate, there may be a slight delay in
214 being able to search the newer indexes.
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216 Example usage:
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218 $ indexer --rotate --all
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220 --sighup-each
221 is useful when you are rebuilding many big indexes, and want each
222 one rotated into searchd as soon as possible. With --sighup-each,
223 indexer will send a SIGHUP signal to searchd after succesfully
224 completing the work on each index. (The default behavior is to send
225 a single SIGHUP after all the indexes were built.)
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227 --verbose
228 Guarantees that every row that caused problems indexing (duplicate,
229 zero, or missing document ID; or file field IO issues; etc) will be
230 reported. By default, this option is off, and problem summaries may
231 be reported instead.
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234 Andrey Aksenoff (shodan@sphinxsearch.com). This manual page is written
235 by Alexey Vinogradov (klirichek@sphinxsearch.com), using the one
236 written by Christian Hofstaedtler ch+debian-packages@zeha.at for the
237 Debian system (but may be used by others). Permission is granted to
238 copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU
239 General Public License, Version 2 any later version published by the
240 Free Software Foundation.
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242 On Debian systems, the complete text of the GNU General Public License
243 can be found in /usr/share/common-licenses/GPL.
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246 searchd(1), search(1), indextool(1), spelldump(1)
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248 Sphinx and it's programs are documented fully by the Sphinx reference
249 manual available in /usr/share/doc/sphinxsearch.
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2532.2.11-release 07/19/2016 INDEXER(1)