🚀 Intelligent search made easy
Searchkick learns what your users are looking for. As more people search, it gets smarter and the results get better. It’s friendly for developers - and magical for your users.
Searchkick handles:
- stemming -
tomatoesmatchestomato - special characters -
jalapenomatchesjalapeño - extra whitespace -
dishwashermatchesdish washer - misspellings -
zuchinimatcheszucchini - custom synonyms -
qtipmatchescotton swab
Plus:
- query like SQL - no need to learn a new query language
- reindex without downtime
- easily personalize results for each user
- autocomplete
- “Did you mean” suggestions
- works with ActiveRecord, Mongoid, and NoBrainer
💬 Get handcrafted updates for new features
🍊 Battle-tested at Instacart
Install Elasticsearch. For Homebrew, use:
brew install elasticsearch
# start the server
elasticsearchAdd this line to your application’s Gemfile:
gem 'searchkick'Add searchkick to models you want to search.
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
searchkick
endAdd data to the search index.
Product.reindexAnd to query, use:
products = Product.search "apples"
products.each do |product|
puts product.name
endSearchkick supports the complete Elasticsearch Search API. As your search becomes more advanced, we recommend you use the Elasticsearch DSL for maximum flexibility.
Query like SQL
Product.search "apples", where: {in_stock: true}, limit: 10, offset: 50Search specific fields
fields: [:name, :brand]Where
where: {
expires_at: {gt: Time.now}, # lt, gte, lte also available
orders_count: 1..10, # equivalent to {gte: 1, lte: 10}
aisle_id: [25, 30], # in
store_id: {not: 2}, # not
aisle_id: {not: [25, 30]}, # not in
user_ids: {all: [1, 3]}, # all elements in array
category: /frozen .+/, # regexp
_or: [{in_stock: true}, {backordered: true}]
}Order
order: {_score: :desc} # most relevant first - defaultAll of these sort options are supported
Limit / offset
limit: 20, offset: 40Select
select_v2: ["name"]Searches return a Searchkick::Results object. This responds like an array to most methods.
results = Product.search("milk")
results.size
results.any?
results.each { |result| ... }By default, ids are fetched from Elasticsearch and records are fetched from your database. To fetch everything from Elasticsearch, use:
Product.search("apples", load: false)Get total results
results.total_countGet the time the search took (in milliseconds)
results.tookGet the full response from Elasticsearch
results.responseBoost important fields
fields: ["title^10", "description"]Boost by the value of a field (field must be numeric)
boost_by: [:orders_count] # give popular documents a little boost
boost_by: {orders_count: {factor: 10}} # default factor is 1Boost matching documents
boost_where: {user_id: 1}
boost_where: {user_id: {value: 1, factor: 100}} # default factor is 1000
boost_where: {user_id: [{value: 1, factor: 100}, {value: 2, factor: 200}]}Conversions are also a great way to boost.
Use a * for the query.
Product.search "*"Plays nicely with kaminari and will_paginate.
# controller
@products = Product.search "milk", page: params[:page], per_page: 20View with kaminari
<%= paginate @products %>View with will_paginate
<%= will_paginate @products %>By default, results must match all words in the query.
Product.search "fresh honey" # fresh AND honeyTo change this, use:
Product.search "fresh honey", operator: "or" # fresh OR honeyBy default, results must match the entire word - back will not match backpack. You can change this behavior with:
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
searchkick word_start: [:name]
endAnd to search (after you reindex):
Product.search "back", fields: [:name], match: :word_startAvailable options are:
:word # default
:word_start
:word_middle
:word_end
:text_start
:text_middle
:text_endUser.search params[:q], fields: [{email: :exact}, :name]User.search "fresh honey", match: :phraseSearchkick defaults to English for stemming. To change this, use:
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
searchkick language: "german"
endclass Product < ActiveRecord::Base
searchkick synonyms: [["scallion", "green onion"], ["qtip", "cotton swab"]]
# or
# searchkick synonyms: -> { CSV.read("/some/path/synonyms.csv") }
endCall Product.reindex after changing synonyms.
For directional synonyms, use:
synonyms: ["lightbulb => halogenlamp"]The above approach works well when your synonym list is static, but in practice, this is often not the case. When you analyze search conversions, you often want to add new synonyms or tags without a full reindex. You can use a library like ActsAsTaggableOn and do:
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
acts_as_taggable
scope :search_import, -> { includes(:tags) }
def search_data
{
name_tagged: "#{name} #{tags.map(&:name).join(" ")}"
}
end
endSearch with:
Product.search query, fields: [:name_tagged]Prepopulate English synonyms with the WordNet database.
Download WordNet 3.0 to each Elasticsearch server and move wn_s.pl to the /var/lib directory.
cd /tmp
curl -o wordnet.tar.gz http://wordnetcode.princeton.edu/3.0/WNprolog-3.0.tar.gz
tar -zxvf wordnet.tar.gz
mv prolog/wn_s.pl /var/libTell each model to use it:
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
searchkick wordnet: true
endBy default, Searchkick handles misspelled queries by returning results with an edit distance of one.
You can change this with:
Product.search "zucini", misspellings: {edit_distance: 2} # zucchiniTo prevent poor precision and improve performance for correctly spelled queries (which should be a majority for most applications), Searchkick can first perform a search without misspellings, and if there are too few results, perform another with them.
Product.search "zuchini", misspellings: {below: 5}If there are fewer than 5 results, a 2nd search is performed with misspellings enabled. The result of this query is returned.
Turn off misspellings with:
Product.search "zuchini", misspellings: false # no zucchiniSearch 🍨🍰 and get ice cream cake!
Add this line to your application’s Gemfile:
gem 'gemoji-parser'And use:
Product.search "🍨🍰", emoji: trueControl what data is indexed with the search_data method. Call Product.reindex after changing this method.
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :department
def search_data
{
name: name,
department_name: department.name,
on_sale: sale_price.present?
}
end
endSearchkick uses find_in_batches to import documents. To eager load associations, use the search_import scope.
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
scope :search_import, -> { includes(:department) }
endBy default, all records are indexed. To control which records are indexed, use the should_index? method together with the search_import scope.
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
scope :search_import, -> { where(active: true) }
def should_index?
active # only index active records
end
endIf a reindex is interrupted, you can resume it with:
Product.reindex(resume: true)- when you install or upgrade searchkick
- change the
search_datamethod - change the
searchkickmethod
- App starts
There are three strategies for keeping the index synced with your database.
- Immediate (default)
Anytime a record is inserted, updated, or deleted
- Asynchronous
Use background jobs for better performance
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
searchkick callbacks: :async
endAnd install Active Job for Rails 4.1 and below. Jobs are added to a queue named searchkick.
- Manual
Turn off automatic syncing
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
searchkick callbacks: false
endYou can also do bulk updates.
Searchkick.callbacks(:bulk) do
User.find_each(&:update_fields)
endOr temporarily skip updates.
Searchkick.callbacks(false) do
User.find_each(&:update_fields)
endData is not automatically synced when an association is updated. If this is desired, add a callback to reindex:
class Image < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :product
after_commit :reindex_product
def reindex_product
product.reindex # or reindex_async
end
endWe highly recommend tracking searches and conversions.
Searchjoy makes it easy.
Product.search "apple", track: {user_id: current_user.id}See the docs for how to install and use.
Searchkick can use conversion data to learn what users are looking for. If a user searches for “ice cream” and adds Ben & Jerry’s Chunky Monkey to the cart (our conversion metric at Instacart), that item gets a little more weight for similar searches.
The first step is to define your conversion metric and start tracking conversions. The database works well for low volume, but feel free to use Redis or another datastore.
You do not need to clean up the search queries. Searchkick automatically treats apple and APPLES the same.
Next, add conversions to the index.
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :searches, class_name: "Searchjoy::Search", as: :convertable
searchkick conversions: ["conversions"] # name of field
def search_data
{
name: name,
conversions: searches.group(:query).uniq.count(:user_id)
# {"ice cream" => 234, "chocolate" => 67, "cream" => 2}
}
end
endReindex and set up a cron job to add new conversions daily.
rake searchkick:reindex CLASS=ProductOrder results differently for each user. For example, show a user’s previously purchased products before other results.
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
def search_data
{
name: name,
orderer_ids: orders.pluck(:user_id) # boost this product for these users
}
end
endReindex and search with:
Product.search "milk", boost_where: {orderer_ids: current_user.id}Autocomplete predicts what a user will type, making the search experience faster and easier.
Note: If you only have a few thousand records, don’t use Searchkick for autocomplete. It’s much faster to load all records into JavaScript and autocomplete there (eliminates network requests).
First, specify which fields use this feature. This is necessary since autocomplete can increase the index size significantly, but don’t worry - this gives you blazing faster queries.
class Book < ActiveRecord::Base
searchkick word_start: [:title, :author]
endReindex and search with:
Book.search "tipping poi", match: :word_startTypically, you want to use a JavaScript library like typeahead.js or jQuery UI.
First, add a route and controller action.
# app/controllers/books_controller.rb
class BooksController < ApplicationController
def autocomplete
render json: Book.search(params[:query], {
fields: ["title^5", "author"],
match: :word_start,
limit: 10,
load: false,
misspellings: {below: 5}
}).map(&:title)
end
endThen add the search box and JavaScript code to a view.
<input type="text" id="query" name="query" />
<script src="jquery.js"></script>
<script src="typeahead.bundle.js"></script>
<script>
var books = new Bloodhound({
datumTokenizer: Bloodhound.tokenizers.whitespace,
queryTokenizer: Bloodhound.tokenizers.whitespace,
remote: {
url: '/books/autocomplete?query=%QUERY',
wildcard: '%QUERY'
}
});
$('#query').typeahead(null, {
source: books
});
</script>class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
searchkick suggest: [:name] # fields to generate suggestions
endReindex and search with:
products = Product.search "peantu butta", suggest: true
products.suggestions # ["peanut butter"]Aggregations provide aggregated search data.
products = Product.search "chuck taylor", aggs: [:product_type, :gender, :brand]
products.aggsBy default, where conditions apply to aggregations.
Product.search "wingtips", where: {color: "brandy"}, aggs: [:size]
# aggregations for brandy wingtips are returnedChange this with:
Product.search "wingtips", where: {color: "brandy"}, aggs: [:size], smart_aggs: false
# aggregations for all wingtips are returnedSet where conditions for each aggregation separately with:
Product.search "wingtips", aggs: {size: {where: {color: "brandy"}}}Limit
Product.search "apples", aggs: {store_id: {limit: 10}}Order
Product.search "wingtips", aggs: {color: {order: {"_term" => "asc"}}} # alphabeticallyAll of these options are supported
Ranges
price_ranges = [{to: 20}, {from: 20, to: 50}, {from: 50}]
Product.search "*", aggs: {price: {ranges: price_ranges}}Minimum document count
Product.search "apples", aggs: {store_id: {min_doc_count: 2}}Date histogram
Product.search "pear", aggs: {products_per_year: {date_histogram: {field: :created_at, interval: :year}}}- Replace
facetswithaggsin searches. Note: Stats facets are not supported at this time.
products = Product.search "chuck taylor", facets: [:brand]
# to
products = Product.search "chuck taylor", aggs: [:brand]- Replace the
facetsmethod withaggsfor results.
products.facets
# to
products.aggsThe keys in results differ slightly. Instead of:
{
"_type":"terms",
"missing":0,
"total":45,
"other":34,
"terms":[
{"term":14.0,"count":11}
]
}You get:
{
"doc_count":45,
"doc_count_error_upper_bound":0,
"sum_other_doc_count":34,
"buckets":[
{"key":14.0,"doc_count":11}
]
}Update your application to handle this.
-
By default,
whereconditions apply to aggregations. This is equivalent tosmart_facets: true. If you havesmart_facets: true, you can remove it. If this is not desired, setsmart_aggs: false. -
If you have any range facets with dates, change the key from
rangestodate_ranges.
facets: {date_field: {ranges: date_ranges}}
# to
aggs: {date_field: {date_ranges: date_ranges}}Facets have been deprecated in favor of aggregations as of Searchkick 1.0. See how to upgrade.
products = Product.search "chuck taylor", facets: [:product_type, :gender, :brand]
p products.facetsBy default, where conditions are not applied to facets (for backward compatibility).
Product.search "wingtips", where: {color: "brandy"}, facets: [:size]
# facets *not* filtered by color :(Change this with:
Product.search "wingtips", where: {color: "brandy"}, facets: [:size], smart_facets: trueor set where conditions for each facet separately:
Product.search "wingtips", facets: {size: {where: {color: "brandy"}}}Limit
Product.search "apples", facets: {store_id: {limit: 10}}Ranges
price_ranges = [{to: 20}, {from: 20, to: 50}, {from: 50}]
Product.search "*", facets: {price: {ranges: price_ranges}}Use the stats option to get to max, min, mean, and total scores for each facet
Product.search "*", facets: {store_id: {stats: true}}Specify which fields to index with highlighting.
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
searchkick highlight: [:name]
endHighlight the search query in the results.
bands = Band.search "cinema", fields: [:name], highlight: trueNote: The fields option is required, unless highlight options are given - see below.
View the highlighted fields with:
bands.with_details.each do |band, details|
puts details[:highlight][:name] # "Two Door <em>Cinema</em> Club"
endTo change the tag, use:
Band.search "cinema", fields: [:name], highlight: {tag: "<strong>"}To highlight and search different fields, use:
Band.search "cinema", fields: [:name], highlight: {fields: [:description]}Additional options, including fragment size, can be specified for each field:
Band.search "cinema", fields: [:name], highlight: {fields: {name: {fragment_size: 200}}}You can find available highlight options in the Elasticsearch reference.
Find similar items.
product = Product.first
product.similar(fields: ["name"], where: {size: "12 oz"})class City < ActiveRecord::Base
searchkick locations: ["location"]
def search_data
attributes.merge location: {lat: latitude, lon: longitude}
end
endReindex and search with:
City.search "san", where: {location: {near: {lat: 37, lon: -114}, within: "100mi"}} # or 160kmBounded by a box
City.search "san", where: {location: {top_left: {lat: 38, lon: -123}, bottom_right: {lat: 37, lon: -122}}}Bounded by a polygon
City.search "san", where: {location: {geo_polygon: {points: [{lat: 38, lon: -123}, {lat: 39, lon: -123}, {lat: 37, lon: 122}]}}}Boost results by distance - closer results are boosted more
City.search "san", boost_by_distance: {field: :location, origin: {lat: 37, lon: -122}}Also supports additional options
City.search "san", boost_by_distance: {field: :location, origin: {lat: 37, lon: -122}, function: :linear, scale: "30mi", decay: 0.5}You can also index and search geo shapes.
class City < ActiveRecord::Base
searchkick geo_shape: {
bounds: {tree: "geohash", precision: "1km"}
}
def search_data
attributes.merge(
bounds: {
type: "envelope",
coordinates: [{lat: 4, lon: 1}, {lat: 2, lon: 3}]
}
)
end
endSee the Elasticsearch documentation for details.
Find shapes intersecting with the query shape
City.search "san", where: {bounds: {geo_shape: {type: "polygon", coordinates: [[{lat: 38, lon: -123}, ...]]}}}Falling entirely within the query shape
City.search "san", where: {bounds: {geo_shape: {type: "circle", relation: "within", coordinates: [{lat: 38, lon: -123}], radius: "1km"}}}Not touching the query shape
City.search "san", where: {bounds: {geo_shape: {type: "envelope", relation: "disjoint", coordinates: [{lat: 38, lon: -123}, {lat: 37, lon: -122}]}}}Containing the query shape (Elasticsearch 2.2+)
City.search "san", where: {bounds: {geo_shape: {type: "envelope", relation: "contains", coordinates: [{lat: 38, lon: -123}, {lat: 37, lon: -122}]}}}Searchkick supports single table inheritance.
class Dog < Animal
endThe parent and child model can both reindex.
Animal.reindex
Dog.reindex # equivalentAnd to search, use:
Animal.search "*" # all animals
Dog.search "*" # just dogs
Animal.search "*", type: [Dog, Cat] # just cats and dogsNote: The suggest option retrieves suggestions from the parent at the moment.
Dog.search "airbudd", suggest: true # suggestions for all animalsTo help with debugging queries, you can use:
Product.search("soap", debug: true)This prints useful info to stdout.
See how Elasticsearch scores your queries with:
Product.search("soap", explain: true).responseSee how Elasticsearch tokenizes your queries with:
Product.searchkick_index.tokens("Dish Washer Soap", analyzer: "default_index")
# ["dish", "dishwash", "washer", "washersoap", "soap"]
Product.searchkick_index.tokens("dishwasher soap", analyzer: "searchkick_search")
# ["dishwashersoap"] - no match
Product.searchkick_index.tokens("dishwasher soap", analyzer: "searchkick_search2")
# ["dishwash", "soap"] - match!!Partial matches
Product.searchkick_index.tokens("San Diego", analyzer: "searchkick_word_start_index")
# ["s", "sa", "san", "d", "di", "die", "dieg", "diego"]
Product.searchkick_index.tokens("dieg", analyzer: "searchkick_word_search")
# ["dieg"] - match!!See the complete list of analyzers.
Searchkick uses ENV["ELASTICSEARCH_URL"] for the Elasticsearch server. This defaults to http://localhost:9200.
Choose an add-on: SearchBox, Bonsai, or Elastic Cloud.
# SearchBox
heroku addons:create searchbox:starter
heroku config:set ELASTICSEARCH_URL=`heroku config:get SEARCHBOX_URL`
# Bonsai
heroku addons:create bonsai
heroku config:set ELASTICSEARCH_URL=`heroku config:get BONSAI_URL`
# Found
heroku addons:create foundelasticsearch
heroku config:set ELASTICSEARCH_URL=`heroku config:get FOUNDELASTICSEARCH_URL`Then deploy and reindex:
heroku run rake searchkick:reindex CLASS=ProductInclude elasticsearch 1.0.15 or greater in your Gemfile.
gem "elasticsearch", ">= 1.0.15"Create an initializer config/initializers/elasticsearch.rb with:
ENV["ELASTICSEARCH_URL"] = "https://es-domain-1234.us-east-1.es.amazonaws.com"To use signed request, include in your Gemfile:
gem 'faraday_middleware-aws-signers-v4'and add to your initializer:
Searchkick.aws_credentials = {
access_key_id: ENV["AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID"],
secret_access_key: ENV["AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY"],
region: "us-east-1"
}Then deploy and reindex:
rake searchkick:reindex CLASS=ProductCreate an initializer config/initializers/elasticsearch.rb with:
ENV["ELASTICSEARCH_URL"] = "http://username:[email protected]"Then deploy and reindex:
rake searchkick:reindex CLASS=ProductCreate an initializer config/initializers/elasticsearch.rb with multiple hosts:
ENV["ELASTICSEARCH_URL"] = "http://localhost:9200,http://localhost:9201"
Searchkick.client_options = {
retry_on_failure: true
}See elasticsearch-transport for a complete list of options.
Add the following to config/environments/production.rb:
config.lograge.custom_options = lambda do |event|
options = {}
options[:search] = event.payload[:searchkick_runtime] if event.payload[:searchkick_runtime].to_f > 0
options
endSee Production Rails for other good practices.
For the best performance, add Typhoeus to your Gemfile.
gem 'typhoeus'And create an initializer to reduce log noise with:
Ethon.logger = Logger.new("/dev/null")If you run into issues on Windows, check out this post.
By default, all string fields are searchable. Speed up indexing and reduce index size by only making some fields searchable.
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
searchkick searchable: [:name]
endBy default, all fields are filterable (can be used in where option). Speed up indexing and reduce index size by only making some fields filterable.
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
searchkick filterable: [:store_id]
endSearchkick supports Elasticsearch’s routing feature.
class Business < ActiveRecord::Base
searchkick routing: true
def search_routing
city_id
end
endReindex and search with:
Business.search "ice cream", routing: params[:city_id]Prefer to use the Elasticsearch DSL but still want awesome features like zero-downtime reindexing?
Create a custom mapping:
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
searchkick mappings: {
product: {
properties: {
name: {type: "string", analyzer: "keyword"}
}
}
}
endNote: If you use a custom mapping, you'll need to use custom searching as well.
To keep the mappings and settings generated by Searchkick, use:
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
searchkick merge_mappings: true, mappings: {...}
endAnd use the body option to search:
products = Product.search body: {match: {name: "milk"}}Note: This replaces the entire body, so other options are ignored.
View the response with:
products.responseTo modify the query generated by Searchkick, use:
products = Product.search "milk", body_options: {min_score: 1}or
products =
Product.search "apples" do |body|
body[:min_score] = 1
endTo batch search requests for performance, use:
fresh_products = Product.search("fresh", execute: false)
frozen_products = Product.search("frozen", execute: false)
Searchkick.multi_search([fresh_products, frozen_products])Then use fresh_products and frozen_products as typical results.
Note: Errors are not raised as with single requests. Use the error method on each query to check for errors. Also, if you use the below option for misspellings, misspellings will be disabled.
Search across multiple indices with:
Searchkick.search "milk", index_name: [Product, Category]Boost specific indices with:
indices_boost: {Category => 2, Product => 1}To query nested data, use dot notation.
User.search "san", fields: ["address.city"], where: {"address.zip_code" => 12345}Reindex one record
product = Product.find 10
product.reindex
# or to reindex in the background
product.reindex_asyncReindex more than one record without recreating the index
# do this ...
some_company.products.each { |p| p.reindex }
# or this ...
Product.searchkick_index.import(some_company.products)
# don't do the following as it will recreate the index with some_company's products only
some_company.products.reindexReindex large set of records in batches
Product.where("id > 100000").find_in_batches do |batch|
Product.searchkick_index.import(batch)
endReindex a subset of attributes (partial reindex)
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
def search_prices
{
price: price,
sale_price: sale_price
}
end
end
Product.reindex(:search_prices)Remove old indices
Product.searchkick_index.clean_indicesUse custom settings
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
searchkick settings: {number_of_shards: 3}
endUse a different index name
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
searchkick index_name: "products_v2"
endUse a dynamic index name
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
searchkick index_name: -> { "#{name.tableize}-#{I18n.locale}" }
endPrefix the index name
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
searchkick index_prefix: "datakick"
endMultiple conversion fields
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :searches, class_name: "Searchjoy::Search"
# searchkick also supports multiple "conversions" fields
searchkick conversions: ["unique_user_conversions", "total_conversions"]
def search_data
{
name: name,
unique_user_conversions: searches.group(:query).uniq.count(:user_id),
# {"ice cream" => 234, "chocolate" => 67, "cream" => 2}
total_conversions: searches.group(:query).count
# {"ice cream" => 412, "chocolate" => 117, "cream" => 6}
}
end
endand during query time:
Product.search("banana") # boost by both fields (default)
Product.search("banana", conversions: "total_conversions") # only boost by total_conversions
Product.search("banana", conversions: false) # no conversion boostingChange timeout
Searchkick.timeout = 15 # defaults to 10Set a lower timeout for searches
Searchkick.search_timeout = 3Change the search method name in config/initializers/searchkick.rb
Searchkick.search_method_name = :lookupEager load associations
Product.search "milk", includes: [:brand, :stores]Turn off special characters
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
# A will not match Ä
searchkick special_characters: false
endUse a different similarity algorithm for scoring
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
searchkick similarity: "classic"
endChange import batch size
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
searchkick batch_size: 200 # defaults to 1000
endCreate index without importing
Product.reindex(import: false)Lazy searching
products = Product.search("carrots", execute: false)
products.each { ... } # search not executed until hereAdd request parameters, like search_type and query_cache
Product.search("carrots", request_params: {search_type: "dfs_query_then_fetch"})Reindex conditionally
Note: With ActiveRecord, use this feature with caution - transaction rollbacks can cause data inconsistencies
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
searchkick callbacks: false
# add the callbacks manually
after_save :reindex, if: -> (model) { model.name_changed? } # use your own condition
after_destroy :reindex
endReindex all models - Rails only
rake searchkick:reindex:allTurn on misspellings after a certain number of characters
Product.search "api", misspellings: {prefix_length: 2} # api, apt, no ahiNote: With this option, if the query length is the same as prefix_length, misspellings are turned off
Product.search "ah", misspellings: {prefix_length: 2} # ah, no ahaFor large data sets, check out Keeping Elasticsearch in Sync. Searchkick will make this easy in the future.
This section could use some love.
describe Product do
it "searches" do
Product.reindex
# test goes here...
end
endproduct = FactoryGirl.create(:product)
product.reindex(refresh: true)Check out this great post on the Apartment gem. Follow a similar pattern if you use another gem.
View the changelog.
Important notes are listed below.
- Added support for Elasticsearch 2.0
- Facets are deprecated in favor of aggregations - see how to upgrade
-
ActiveRecord 4.1+ and Mongoid 3+: Attempting to reindex with a scope now throws a
Searchkick::DangerousOperationerror to keep your from accidentally recreating your index with only a few records.Product.where(color: "brandy").reindex # error!
If this is what you intend to do, use:
Product.where(color: "brandy").reindex(accept_danger: true)
-
Misspellings are enabled by default for partial matches. Use
misspellings: falseto disable. -
Transpositions are enabled by default for misspellings. Use
misspellings: {transpositions: false}to disable.
If running Searchkick 0.6.0 or 0.7.0 and Elasticsearch 0.90, we recommend upgrading to Searchkick 0.6.1 or 0.7.1 to fix an issue that causes downtime when reindexing.
Before 0.3.0, locations were indexed incorrectly. When upgrading, be sure to reindex immediately.
Due to the distributed nature of Elasticsearch, you can get incorrect results when the number of documents in the index is low. You can read more about it here. To fix this, do:
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
searchkick settings: {number_of_shards: 1}
endFor convenience, this is set by default in the test environment.
Thanks to Karel Minarik for Elasticsearch Ruby and Tire, Jaroslav Kalistsuk for zero downtime reindexing, and Alex Leschenko for Elasticsearch autocomplete.
- More features for large data sets
- Improve section on testing
- Semantic search features
- Search multiple fields for different terms
- Search across models
- Search nested objects
- Much finer customization
Everyone is encouraged to help improve this project. Here are a few ways you can help:
- Report bugs
- Fix bugs and submit pull requests
- Write, clarify, or fix documentation
- Suggest or add new features
If you’re looking for ideas, try here.
To get started with development and testing:
git clone https://github.com/ankane/searchkick.git
cd searchkick
bundle install
rake test

