.. _ref-installing-search-engines: ========================= Installing Search Engines ========================= Solr ==== Official Download Location: http://www.apache.org/dyn/closer.cgi/lucene/solr/ Solr is Java but comes in a pre-packaged form that requires very little other than the JRE and Jetty. It's very performant and has an advanced featureset. Haystack suggests using Solr 6.x, though it's possible to get it working on Solr 4.x+ with a little effort. Installation is relatively simple: For Solr 6.X:: curl -LO https://archive.apache.org/dist/lucene/solr/x.Y.0/solr-X.Y.0.tgz mkdir solr tar -C solr -xf solr-X.Y.0.tgz --strip-components=1 cd solr ./bin/solr start # start solr ./bin/solr create -c tester -n basic_config # create core named 'tester' By default this will create a core with a managed schema. This setup is dynamic but not useful for haystack, and we'll need to configure solr to use a static (classic) schema. Haystack can generate a viable schema.xml and solrconfig.xml for you from your application and reload the core for you (once Haystack is installed and setup). To do this run: ``./manage.py build_solr_schema --configure-directory= --reload-core``. In this example CoreConfigDir is something like ``../solr-6.5.0/server/solr/tester/conf``, and ``--reload-core`` is what triggers reloading of the core. Please refer to ``build_solr_schema`` in the :doc:`management-commands` for required configuration. For Solr 4.X:: curl -LO https://archive.apache.org/dist/lucene/solr/4.10.2/solr-4.10.2.tgz tar xvzf solr-4.10.2.tgz cd solr-4.10.2 cd example java -jar start.jar You’ll need to revise your schema. You can generate this from your application (once Haystack is installed and setup) by running ``./manage.py build_solr_schema``. Take the output from that command and place it in ``solr-4.10.2/example/solr/collection1/conf/schema.xml``. Then restart Solr. .. warning:: Please note; the template filename, the file YOU supply under TEMPLATE_DIR/search_configuration has changed to schema.xml from solr.xml. The previous template name solr.xml was a legacy holdover from older versions of solr. You'll also need to install the ``pysolr`` client library from PyPI:: $ pip install pysolr More Like This -------------- On Solr 6.X+ "More Like This" functionality is enabled by default. To enable the "More Like This" functionality on earlier versions of Solr, you'll need to enable the ``MoreLikeThisHandler``. Add the following line to your ``solrconfig.xml`` file within the ``config`` tag:: Spelling Suggestions -------------------- To enable the spelling suggestion functionality in Haystack, you'll need to enable the ``SpellCheckComponent``. The first thing to do is create a special field on your ``SearchIndex`` class that mirrors the ``text`` field, but uses ``FacetCharField``. This disables the post-processing that Solr does, which can mess up your suggestions. Something like the following is suggested:: class MySearchIndex(indexes.SearchIndex, indexes.Indexable): text = indexes.CharField(document=True, use_template=True) # ... normal fields then... suggestions = indexes.FacetCharField() def prepare(self, obj): prepared_data = super().prepare(obj) prepared_data['suggestions'] = prepared_data['text'] return prepared_data Then, you enable it in Solr by adding the following line to your ``solrconfig.xml`` file within the ``config`` tag:: text_general default text solr.DirectSolrSpellChecker internal 0.5 2 1 5 4 0.01 Then change your default handler from:: explicit 10 ... to ...:: explicit 10 default on true 10 5 5 true true 10 5 spellcheck Be warned that the ``suggestions`` portion will be specific to your ``SearchIndex`` classes (in this case, assuming the main field is called ``text``). Elasticsearch ============= Elasticsearch is similar to Solr — another Java application using Lucene — but focused on ease of deployment and clustering. See https://www.elastic.co/products/elasticsearch for more information. Haystack currently supports Elasticsearch 1.x, 2.x, 5.x, and 7.x. Follow the instructions on https://www.elastic.co/downloads/elasticsearch to download and install Elasticsearch and configure it for your environment. You'll also need to install the Elasticsearch binding: elasticsearch_ for the appropriate backend version — for example:: $ pip install "elasticsearch>=7,<8" .. _elasticsearch: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/elasticsearch/ Whoosh ====== Official Download Location: https://github.com/whoosh-community/whoosh Whoosh is pure Python, so it's a great option for getting started quickly and for development, though it does work for small scale live deployments. The current recommended version is 1.3.1+. You can install via PyPI_ using ``sudo easy_install whoosh`` or ``sudo pip install whoosh``. Note that, while capable otherwise, the Whoosh backend does not currently support "More Like This" or faceting. Support for these features has recently been added to Whoosh itself & may be present in a future release. .. _PyPI: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/Whoosh/ Xapian ====== Official Download Location: http://xapian.org/download Xapian is written in C++ so it requires compilation (unless your OS has a package for it). Installation looks like:: curl -O http://oligarchy.co.uk/xapian/1.2.18/xapian-core-1.2.18.tar.xz curl -O http://oligarchy.co.uk/xapian/1.2.18/xapian-bindings-1.2.18.tar.xz unxz xapian-core-1.2.18.tar.xz unxz xapian-bindings-1.2.18.tar.xz tar xvf xapian-core-1.2.18.tar tar xvf xapian-bindings-1.2.18.tar cd xapian-core-1.2.18 ./configure make sudo make install cd .. cd xapian-bindings-1.2.18 ./configure make sudo make install Xapian is a third-party supported backend. It is not included in Haystack proper due to licensing. To use it, you need both Haystack itself as well as ``xapian-haystack``. You can download the source from http://github.com/notanumber/xapian-haystack/tree/master. Installation instructions can be found on that page as well. The backend, written by David Sauve (notanumber), fully implements the `SearchQuerySet` API and is an excellent alternative to Solr.