Using Search

Setup

Riak search 2.0 is an integration of Solr (for indexing and querying) and Riak (for storage and distribution). There are a few points of interest that a user of Riak search will have to keep in mind in order to properly store and later query for values.

  1. Schemas explain to Solr how to index fields
  2. Indexes are named Solr indexes against which you will query
  3. Bucket-index association signals to Riak when to index values (this also includes bucket type-index association)

Riak search uses active anti-entropy (AAE) to ensure that the data is consistent between the Riak backends and the Solr indexes. When using Riak search, you should not disable AAE without understanding the risks of divergence between the data in the Riak backends and the Solr indexes and how that can impact your application. More information about how Riak search uses AAE is in the Riak search reference.

Riak Search must first be configured with a Solr schema so that Solr knows how to index value fields. If you don’t define one, you’re provided with a default schema named _yz_default, which can be found on GitHub.

The examples in this document will presume the default. You can read more about creating custom schemas in Search Schema, which you’ll likely want to use in a production environment.

Next, you must create a named Solr index through Riak Search. This index represents a collection of similar data that you connect with to perform queries. When creating an index, you can optionally provide a schema. If you do not, the default schema will be used. Here we’ll curl create an index named famous with the default schema.

Both schema and index creation will be covered immediately below.

Note on index names

Note that index names may only be ASCII values from 32-127 (spaces, standard punctuation, digits, and word characters). This may change in the future to allow full Unicode support.

All curl examples in this document assume that you have set an environment variable named RIAK_HOST, which points to a Riak base URL, such as http://localhost:8098. The appropriate value for RIAK_HOST will depend on your configuration.

Creating an Index

Let’s start by creating an index called famous that uses the default schema.

YokozunaIndex famousIndex = new YokozunaIndex("famous");
StoreIndex storeIndex =
    new StoreIndex.Builder(famousIndex).build();
client.execute(storeIndex);
client.create_search_index('famous')
$response = (new \Basho\Riak\Command\Builder\Search\StoreIndex($riak))
  ->withName('famouse')
  ->build()
  ->execute();
client.create_search_index('famous')
var idx = new SearchIndex("famous");
var rslt = client.PutSearchIndex(idx);
var storeIndex_cb = function (err, rslt) {
    if (err) {
        throw new Error(err);
    }
    if (!rslt) {
        // error...
    }
};

var store = new Riak.Commands.YZ.StoreIndex.Builder()
    .withIndexName("famous")
    .withCallback(storeIndex_cb)
    .build();

client.execute(store);
riakc_pb_socket:create_search_index(Pid, <<"famous">>).
cmd, err := riak.NewStoreIndexCommandBuilder().
    WithIndexName("famous").
    WithTimeout(time.Second * 30).
    Build()
if err != nil {
    return err
}

err = cluster.Execute(cmd)
export RIAK_HOST="http://localhost:8098"

curl -XPUT $RIAK_HOST/search/index/famous

Getting started with Riak clients

If you are connecting to Riak using one of Basho’s official client libraries, you can find more information about getting started with your client in the Developing with Riak KV: Getting Started section.

Note that the above command is exactly the same as the following, which explicitly defines the default schema.

YokozunaIndex famousIndex = new YokozunaIndex("famous", "_yz_default");
StoreIndex storeIndex = new StoreIndex.Builder(famousIndex)
        .build();
client.execute(storeIndex);
client.create_search_index("famous", "_yz_default")
$response = (new \Basho\Riak\Command\Builder\Search\StoreIndex($riak))
  ->withName('scores')
  ->usingSchema('_yz_default')
  ->build()
  ->execute();
client.create_search_index('famous', '_yz_default')
var idx = new SearchIndex("famous", "_yz_default");
var rslt = client.PutSearchIndex(idx);
var store = new Riak.Commands.YZ.StoreIndex.Builder()
    .withIndexName("famous")
    .withSchemaName("_yz_default")
    .withCallback(storeIndex_cb)
    .build();

client.execute(store);
riakc_pb_socket:create_search_index(Pid, <<"famous">>, <<"_yz_default">>, []).
cmd, err := riak.NewStoreIndexCommandBuilder().
    WithIndexName("famous").
    WithSchemaName("_yz_default").
    WithTimeout(time.Second * 30).
    Build()
if err != nil {
    return err
}

err = cluster.Execute(cmd)
curl -XPUT $RIAK_HOST/search/index/famous \
     -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
     -d '{"schema":"_yz_default"}'

Associating an Index

The last set-up item that you need to perform is to associate your Solr index with either a bucket type or a custom bucket. You only need do this once per bucket type, and all buckets within that type will use the same Solr index. For example, to associate a bucket type named animals with the famous index, you can set the bucket type property search_index to animals. If a Solr index is to be used by only one Riak bucket, you can set the search_index property on that bucket. If more than one bucket is to share a Solr index, a bucket type should be used. More on bucket types in the section directly below.

Associating via Bucket Type

We suggest that you use bucket types to namespace and configure all buckets you use. Bucket types have a lower overhead within the cluster than the default bucket namespace but require an additional set-up step on the command line.

When creating a new bucket type, you can create a bucket type without any properties and set individual buckets to be indexed. The step below creates and activates the bucket type:

riak-admin bucket-type create animals '{"props":{}}'
riak-admin bucket-type activate animals

And this step applies the index to the cats bucket, which bears the animals bucket type we just created and activated:

curl -XPUT $RIAK_HOST/types/animals/buckets/cats/props \
     -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
     -d '{"props":{"search_index":"famous"}}'

Another possibility is to set the search_index as a default property of the bucket type. This means any bucket under that type will inherit that setting and have its values indexed.

riak-admin bucket-type create animals '{"props":{"search_index":"famous"}}'
riak-admin bucket-type activate animals

If you ever need to turn off indexing for a bucket, set the search_index property to the _dont_index_ sentinel value.

Associating an Index via Custom Bucket Properties

Although we recommend that you use all new buckets under a bucket type, if you have existing data with a type-free bucket (i.e. under the default bucket type) you can set the search_index property for a specific bucket.

Namespace catsBucket = new Namespace("cats");
StoreBucketPropsOperation storePropsOp = new StoreBucketPropsOperation.Builder(catsBucket)
        .withSearchIndex("famous")
        .build();
client.execute(storePropsOp);
bucket = client.bucket('cats')
bucket.properties = {'search_index' => 'famous'}
(new \Basho\Riak\Command\Builder\Search\AssociateIndex($riak))
    ->withName('famous')
    ->buildBucket('cats')
    ->build()
    ->execute();
bucket = client.bucket('cats')
bucket.set_properties({'search_index': 'famous'})
var properties = new RiakBucketProperties();
properties.SetSearchIndex("famous");
var rslt = client.SetBucketProperties("cats", properties);
var bucketProps_cb = function (err, rslt) {
    if (err) {
        throw new Error(err);
    }
    // success
};

var store = new Riak.Commands.KV.StoreBucketProps.Builder()
    .withBucket("cats")
    .withSearchIndex("famous")
    .withCallback(bucketProps_cb)
    .build();

client.execute(store);
riakc_pb_socket:set_search_index(Pid, <<"cats">>, <<"famous">>).
cmd, err := riak.NewStoreBucketPropsCommandBuilder().
    WithBucketType("animals").
    WithBucket("cats").
    WithSearchIndex("famous").
    Build()
if err != nil {
    return err
}

err = cluster.Execute(cmd)
curl -XPUT $RIAK_HOST/buckets/cats/props \
     -H'content-type:application/json' \
     -d'{"props":{"search_index":"famous"}}'

Once you have created the index association, any new data will be indexed on ingest according to your schema.

Riak Search Security Setup

Security is a new feature as of Riak 2.0 that lets an administrator limit access to certain resources. In the case of search, your options are to limit administration of schemas or indexes (the search.admin permission) to certain users, and to limit querying (the search.query permission) to any index or to a specific index. The example below shows the various options.

riak-admin security grant search.admin on schema to username
riak-admin security grant search.admin on index to username
riak-admin security grant search.query on index to username
riak-admin security grant search.query on index famous to username

Those permissions can also be revoked:

riak-admin security revoke search.admin on schema from username
riak-admin security revoke search.admin on index from username
riak-admin security revoke search.query on index from username
riak-admin security revoke search.query on index famous from username

Indexing Values

Note on indexing and lag times

There is typically a one-second delay between storing an object in Riak and that object being available in Search queries. You should take this into account when writing Riak client tests, benchmarking, and so on. More information can be found in the Solr documentation.

With a Solr schema, index, and association in place (and possibly a security setup as well), we’re ready to start using Riak Search. First, populate the cat bucket with values, in this case information about four cats: Liono, Cheetara, Snarf, and Panthro.

Depending on the driver you use, you may have to specify the content type, which for this example is application/json. In the case of Ruby and Python the content type is automatically set for you based on the object given.

Namespace animalsBucket = new Namespace("animals");
String json = "application/json";

RiakObject liono = new RiakObject()
        .setContentType(json)
        .setValue(BinaryValue.create("{\"name_s\":\"Lion-o\",\"age_i\":30,\"leader_b\":true}"));
RiakObject cheetara = new RiakObject()
        .setContentType(json)
        .setValue(BinaryValue.create("{\"name_s\":\"Cheetara\",\"age_i\":30,\"leader_b\":false}"));
RiakObject snarf = new RiakObject()
        .setContentType(json)
        .setValue(BinaryValue.create("{\"name_s\":\"Snarf\",\"age_i\":43,\"leader_b\":false}"));
RiakObject panthro = new RiakObject()
        .setContentType(json)
        .setValue(BinaryValue.create("{\"name_s\":\"Panthro\",\"age_i\":36,\"leader_b\":false}"));
Location lionoLoc = new Location(animalsBucket, "liono");
Location cheetaraLoc = new Location(animalsBucket, "cheetara");
Location snarfLoc = new Location(animalsBucket, "snarf");
Location panthroLoc = new Location(animalsBucket, "panthro");

StoreValue lionoStore = new StoreValue.Builder(liono).withLocation(lionoLoc).build();
// The other StoreValue operations can be built the same way

client.execute(lionoStore);
// The other storage operations can be performed the same way
bucket = client.bucket_type('animals').bucket("cats")

cat = bucket.get_or_new("liono")
cat.data = {"name_s" => "Lion-o", "age_i" => 30, "leader_b" => true}
cat.store

cat = bucket.get_or_new("cheetara")
cat.data = {"name_s" => "Cheetara", "age_i" => 28, "leader_b" => false}
cat.store

cat = bucket.get_or_new("snarf")
cat.data = {"name_s" => "Snarf", "age_i" => 43}
cat.store

cat = bucket.get_or_new("panthro")
cat.data = {"name_s" => "Panthro", "age_i" => 36}
cat.store
$bucket = new \Basho\Riak\Bucket('cats', 'animals');

$storeObjectBuilder = (new \Basho\Riak\Command\Builder\StoreObject($riak))
  ->withLocation(new \Basho\Riak\Location('liono', $bucket))
  ->buildJsonObject(['name_s' => 'Lion-o', 'age_i' => 30, 'leader_b' => true]);

$storeObjectBuilder->build()->execute();

$storeObjectBuilder->withLocation(new \Basho\Riak\Location('cheetara', $bucket))
  ->buildJsonObject(['name_s' => 'Cheetara', 'age_i' => 28, 'leader_b' => false]);

$storeObjectBuilder->build()->execute();

$storeObjectBuilder->withLocation(new \Basho\Riak\Location('snarf', $bucket))
  ->buildJsonObject(['name_s' => 'Snarf', 'age_i' => 43]);

$storeObjectBuilder->build()->execute();

$storeObjectBuilder->withLocation(new \Basho\Riak\Location('panthro', $bucket))
  ->buildJsonObject(['name_s' => 'Panthro', 'age_i' => 36]);

$storeObjectBuilder->build()->execute();
bucket = client.bucket_type('animals').bucket('cats')

cat = bucket.new('liono', {'name_s': 'Lion-o', 'age_i': 30, 'leader_b': True})
cat.store()

cat = bucket.new('cheetara', {'name_s':'Cheetara', 'age_i':28, 'leader_b': True})
cat.store()

cat = bucket.new('snarf', {'name_s':'Snarf', 'age_i':43})
cat.store()

cat = bucket.new('panthro', {'name_s':'Panthro', 'age_i':36})
cat.store()
var lionoId = new RiakObjectId("animals", "cats", "liono");
var lionoObj = new { name_s = "Lion-o", age_i = 30, leader = true };
var lionoRiakObj = new RiakObject(lionoId, lionoObj);

var cheetaraId = new RiakObjectId("animals", "cats", "cheetara");
var cheetaraObj = new { name_s = "Cheetara", age_i = 30, leader = false };
var cheetaraRiakObj = new RiakObject(cheetaraId, cheetaraObj);

var snarfId = new RiakObjectId("animals", "cats", "snarf");
var snarfObj = new { name_s = "Snarf", age_i = 43, leader = false };
var snarfRiakObj = new RiakObject(snarfId, snarfObj);

var panthroId = new RiakObjectId("animals", "cats", "panthro");
var panthroObj = new { name_s = "Panthro", age_i = 36, leader = false };
var panthroRiakObj = new RiakObject(panthroId, panthroObj);

var rslts = client.Put(new[] {
    lionoRiakObj, cheetaraRiakObj, snarfRiakObj, panthroRiakObj
});
function store_cb(err, rslt, async_cb) {
    if (err) {
        throw new Error(err);
    }
    async_cb(null, rslt);
}

var objs = [
    [ 'liono', { name_s: 'Lion-o', age_i: 30, leader: true } ],
    [ 'cheetara', { name_s: 'Cheetara', age_i: 30, leader: false } ],
    [ 'snarf', { name_s: 'Snarf', age_i: 43, leader: false } ],
    [ 'panthro', { name_s: 'Panthro', age_i: 36, leader: false } ],
];

var storeFuncs = [];
objs.forEach(function (o) {
    var storeFunc = function (async_cb) {
        var key = o[0];
        var value = o[1];
        var riakObj = new Riak.Commands.KV.RiakObject();
        riakObj.setContentType('application/json');
        riakObj.setBucketType('animals');
        riakObj.setBucket('cats');
        riakObj.setKey(key);
        riakObj.setValue(value);
        client.storeValue({ value: riakObj }, function (err, rslt) {
            store_cb(err, rslt, async_cb);
        });
    };
    storeFuncs.push(storeFunc);
});

async.parallel(storeFuncs, function (err, rslts) {
    if (err) {
        throw new Error(err);
    }
    // NB: all objects stored and indexed...
});
CO = riakc_obj:new({<<"animals">>, <<"cats">>}, <<"liono">>,
    <<"{\"name_s\":\"Lion-o\", \"age_i\":30, \"leader_b\":true}">>,
    "application/json"),
riakc_pb_socket:put(Pid, CO),

C1 = riakc_obj:new({<<"animals">>, <<"cats">>}, <<"cheetara">>,
    <<"{\"name_s\":\"Cheetara\", \"age_i\":28, \"leader_b\":false}">>,
    "application/json"),
riakc_pb_socket:put(Pid, C1),

C2 = riakc_obj:new({<<"animals">>, <<"cats">>}, <<"snarf">>,
    <<"{\"name_s\":\"Snarf\", \"age_i\":43}">>,
    "application/json"),
riakc_pb_socket:put(Pid, C2),

C3 = riakc_obj:new({<<"animals">>, <<"cats">>}, <<"panthro">>,
    <<"{\"name_s\":\"Panthro\", \"age_i\":36}">>,
    "application/json"),
riakc_pb_socket:put(Pid, C3),
o1 := &riak.Object{
    Key:             "liono",
    Value:           []byte("{\"name_s\":\"Lion-o\",\"age_i\":30,\"leader_b\":true}"),
}
o2 := &riak.Object{
    Key:             "cheetara",
    Value:           []byte("{\"name_s\":\"Cheetara\",\"age_i\":30,\"leader_b\":false}"),
}
o3 := &riak.Object{
    Key:             "snarf",
    Value:           []byte("{\"name_s\":\"Snarf\",\"age_i\":43,\"leader_b\":false}"),
}
o4 := &riak.Object{
    Key:             "panthro",
    Value:           []byte("{\"name_s\":\"Panthro\",\"age_i\":36,\"leader_b\":false}"),
}

objs := [...]*riak.Object{o1, o2, o3, o4}

wg := &sync.WaitGroup{}
for _, obj := range objs {
    obj.ContentType = "application/json"
    obj.Charset = "utf-8"
    obj.ContentEncoding = "utf-8"

    cmd, err := riak.NewStoreValueCommandBuilder().
        WithBucketType("animals").
        WithBucket("cats").
        WithContent(obj).
        Build()
    if err != nil {
        return err
    }

    args := &riak.Async{
        Command: cmd,
        Wait:    wg,
    }
    if err := cluster.ExecuteAsync(args); err != nil {
        return err
    }
}

wg.Wait()
curl -XPUT $RIAK_HOST/types/animals/buckets/cats/keys/liono \
     -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
     -d '{"name_s":"Lion-o", "age_i":30, "leader_b":true}'

curl -XPUT $RIAK_HOST/types/animals/buckets/cats/keys/cheetara \
     -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
     -d '{"name_s":"Cheetara", "age_i":28, "leader_b":false}'

curl -XPUT $RIAK_HOST/types/animals/buckets/cats/keys/snarf \
     -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
     -d '{"name_s":"Snarf", "age_i":43}'

curl -XPUT $RIAK_HOST/types/animals/buckets/cats/keys/panthro \
     -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
     -d '{"name_s":"Panthro", "age_i":36}'

If you’ve used Riak before, you may have noticed that this is no different from storing values without Riak Search. That’s because we designed Riak Search with the following design goal in mind:

Write it like Riak, query it like Solr

But how does Riak Search know how to index values, given that you can store opaque values in Riak? For that, we employ extractors.

Extractors

Extractors are modules in Riak that accept a Riak value with a certain content type and convert it into a list of fields that can be indexed by Solr. This is done transparently and automatically as part of the indexing process. You can even create your own custom extractors.

Our current example uses the JSON extractor, but Riak Search also extracts indexable fields from the following content types:

  • JSON (application/json)
  • XML (application/xml, text/xml)
  • Plain text (text/plain)
  • Riak Data Types
    • counter (application/riak_counter)
    • map (application/riak_map)
    • set (application/riak_set)
  • noop (unknown content type)

More on Riak Data Types can be found in Riak Data Types and Search.

In the examples we’ve seen, the JSON field name_s is translated to a Solr index document field insert. Solr will index any field that it recognizes, based on the index’s schema. The default schema (_yz_default) uses the suffix to decide the field type (_s represents a string, _i is an integer, _b is binary and so on).

If the content type allows for nested values (e.g. JSON and XML), the extractors will flatten each field, separated by dots. For example, if you have this XML:

<person>
  <pets>
    <pet>
      <name_s>Spot</name_s>
    </pet>
  </pets>
</person>

The extractor will convert it to the Solr field person.pets.pet.name_s with value Spot. Lists of values are assumed to be Solr multi-valued fields.

{"people_ss":["Ryan", "Eric", "Brett"]}

The above JSON will insert a list of three values into Solr to be indexed: people_ss=Ryan, people_ss=Eric, people_ss=Brett.

You can also create your own custom extractors if your data doesn’t fit one of the default types. A full tutorial can be found in Custom Search Extractors.

Automatic Fields

When a Riak object is indexed, Riak Search automatically inserts a few extra fields as well. These are necessary for a variety of technical reasons, and for the most part you don’t need to think about them. However, there are a few fields which you may find useful:

  • _yz_rk (Riak key)
  • _yz_rt (Riak bucket type)
  • _yz_rb (Riak bucket)
  • _yz_err (extraction error)

You can query on the basis of these fields, just like any other normal Solr fields. Most of the time, however, you’ll use _yz_rk as a query result, which tells you the Riak key that matches the query you just ran. Let’s see this in detail by running some queries in the next section.

Querying

After the schema, index, association, and population/extraction/indexing are taken care of, you can get down to the fun part of querying your data.

Simple Query

The basic query parameter is q via HTTP, or the first parameter of your chosen driver’s search function (there are examples from all of our client libraries below). All distributed Solr queries are supported, which actually includes most of the single-node Solr queries. This example searches for all documents in which the name_s value begins with Lion by means of a glob (wildcard) match.

SearchOperation searchOp = new SearchOperation
        .Builder(BinaryValue.create("famous"), "name_s:Lion*")
        .build();
cluster.execute(searchOp);
// This will display the actual results as a List of Maps:
List<Map<String, List<String>>> results = searchOp.get().getAllResults();
// This will display the number of results:
System.out.println(results);
results = client.search("famous", "name_s:Lion*")
p results
p results['docs']
$response = (new \Basho\Riak\Command\Builder\Search\FetchObjects($riak))
  ->withIndexName('famous')
  ->withQuery('name_s:Lion*')
  ->build()
  ->execute();

$response->getNumFound(); // 1

var_dump($response->getDocs());
results = client.fulltext_search('famous', 'name_s:Lion*')
print results
print results['docs']
var search = new RiakSearchRequest
{
    Query = new RiakFluentSearch("famous", "name_s")
        .Search("Lion*")
        .Build()
};

var rslt = client.Search(search);
RiakSearchResult searchResult = rslt.Value;
foreach (RiakSearchResultDocument doc in searchResult.Documents)
{
    var args = new[] {
        doc.BucketType,
        doc.Bucket,
        doc.Key,
        string.Join(", ", doc.Fields.Select(f => f.Value).ToArray())
    };
    Debug.WriteLine(
        format: "BucketType: {0} Bucket: {1} Key: {2} Values: {3}",
        args: args);
}
function search_cb(err, rslt) {
    if (err) {
        throw new Error(err);
    }
    logger.info("docs:", JSON.stringify(rslt.docs));
}

var search = new Riak.Commands.YZ.Search.Builder()
    .withIndexName('famous')
    .withQuery('name_s:Lion*')
    .withCallback(search_cb)
    .build();
client.execute(search);
{ok, Results} = riakc_pb_socket:search(Pid, <<"famous">>, <<"name_s:Lion*">>),
io:fwrite("~p~n", [Results]),
Docs = Results#search_results.docs,
io:fwrite("~p~n", [Docs]).

%% Please note that this example relies on an Erlang record definition
%% for the search_result record found here:
%% https://github.com/basho/riak-erlang-client/blob/master/include/riakc.hrl
cmd, err := riak.NewSearchCommandBuilder().
    WithIndexName("famous").
    WithQuery("name_s:Lion*").
    Build();
if err != nil {
    return err
}

if err := cluster.Execute(cmd); err != nil {
    return err
}

sc := cmd.(*riak.SearchCommand)
if json, jerr := json.MarshalIndent(sc.Response.Docs, "", "  "); jerr != nil {
    return jerr
} else {
    fmt.Println(string(json))
}
curl "$RIAK_HOST/search/query/famous?wt=json&q=name_s:Lion*" | jsonpp

The response to a query will be an object containing details about the response, such as a query’s max score and a list of documents which match the given query. It’s worth noting two things:

  • The documents returned are Search documents (a set of Solr field/values), not a Riak value
  • The HTTP response is a direct Solr response, while the drivers use Protocol Buffers and are encoded with different field names

This is a common HTTP response value:

{
  "numFound": 1,
  "start": 0,
  "maxScore": 1.0,
  "docs": [
    {
      "leader_b": true,
      "age_i": 30,
      "name_s": "Lion-o",
      "_yz_id": "default_cats_liono_37",
      "_yz_rk": "liono",
      "_yz_rt": "default",
      "_yz_rb": "cats"
    }
  ]
}

The most important field returned is docs, which is the list of objects that each contain fields about matching index documents. The values you’ll use most often are _yz_rt (Riak bucket type), _yz_rb (Riak bucket), _yz_rk (Riak key), and score which represent the similarity of the matching doc to the query via Lucene scoring.

In this example the query fields are returned because they’re stored in Solr. This depends on your schema. If they are not stored, you’ll have to perform a separate Riak GET operation to retrieve the value using the _yz_rk value.

// Using the results object from above
Map<String, List<String> doc = results.get(0);
String bucketType = doc.get("_yz_rt").get(0);
String bucket = doc.get("yz_rb").get(0);
String key = doc.get("_yz_rk").get(0);
Namespace namespace = new Namespace(bucketType, bucket);
Location objectLocation = new Location(namespace, key);
FetchValue fetchOp = new FetchValue.Builder(objectLocation)
        .build();
RiakObject obj = client.execute(fetchOp).getValue(RiakObject.class);
System.out.println(obj.getValue());

// {"name_s": "Lion-o", "age_i": 30, "leader_b": true}
doc = results['docs'].first
btype = Riak::BucketType.new(client, doc["_yz_rt"]) # animals
bucket = Riak::Bucket.new(client, doc["_yz_rb"])    # cats
object = bucket.get( doc["_yz_rk"] )                # liono
p object.data

# {"name_s" => "Lion-o", "age_i" => 30, "leader_b" => true}
$doc = $response->getDocs()[0];
$btype = $doc->_yz_rt; // animals
$bucket = $doc->_yz_rb; // cats
$key = $doc->_yz_rk; // liono
$name = $doc->name_s; // Lion-o

$object = (new \Basho\Riak\Command\Builder\FetchObject($riak))
  ->buildLocation($key, $bucket, $btype)
  ->build()
  ->execute()
  ->getObject();

var_dump($object->getData());
doc = results['docs'][0]
bucket = client.bucket_type(doc['_yz_rt']).bucket(doc['_yz_rb']) # animals/cats
object = bucket.get(doc['_yz_rk'])    # liono
print object.data

# {"name_s": "Lion-o", "age_i": 30, "leader_b": true}
RiakSearchResult searchResult = searchRslt.Value;

RiakSearchResultDocument doc = searchResult.Documents.First();
var id = new RiakObjectId(doc.BucketType, doc.Bucket, doc.Key);
var rslt = client.Get(id);

RiakObject obj = rslt.Value;
Debug.WriteLine(Encoding.UTF8.GetString(obj.Value));

// {"name_s":"Lion-o","age_i":30,"leader_b":true}
var doc = rslt.docs.pop();
var args = {
    bucketType: doc._yz_rt,
    bucket: doc._yz_rb,
    key: doc._yz_rk,
    convertToJs: true
};
client.fetchValue(args, function (err, rslt) {
    if (err) {
        throw new Error(err);
    }
    logger.info(rslt.values[0].value);
});
[{Index,Doc}|_] = Docs,
BType  = proplists:get_value(<<"_yz_rt">>, Doc),  %% <<"animals">>
Bucket = proplists:get_value(<<"_yz_rb">>, Doc),  %% <<"cats">>
Key    = proplists:get_value(<<"_yz_rk">>, Doc),  %% <<"liono">>
{ok, Obj} = riakc_pb_socket:get(Pid, {BType, Bucket}, Key),
Val = riakc_obj:get_value(Obj),
io:fwrite("~s~n", [Val]).

%% {"name_s":"Lion-o", "age_i":30, "leader_b":true}
doc := sc.Response.Docs[0] // NB: SearchDoc struct type

cmd, err = riak.NewFetchValueCommandBuilder().
    WithBucketType(doc.BucketType).
    WithBucket(doc.Bucket).
    WithKey(doc.Key).
    Build()
if err != nil {
    return err
}

if err := cluster.Execute(cmd); err != nil {
    return err
}
curl $RIAK_HOST/types/animals/buckets/cats/keys/liono

# Response:

{"name_s":"Lion-o", "age_i":30, "leader_b":true}

This was one simple glob query example. There are many query options, a more complete list of which can be found by digging into searching Solr. Let’s look at a few others.

Range Queries

Range queries are searches within a range of numerical or date/datemath values.

To find the ages of all famous cats who are 30 or younger: age_i:[0 TO 30]. If you wanted to find all cats 30 or older, you could include a glob as a top end of the range: age_i:[30 TO *].

String index = "famous";
String query = "age_i:[30 TO *]";
SearchOperation searchOp = new SearchOperation
        .Builder(BinaryValue.create(index), query)
        .build();
cluster.execute(searchOp);
SearchOperation.Response results = searchOp.get();
client.search("famous", "age_i:[30 TO *]")
$response = (new \Basho\Riak\Command\Builder\Search\FetchObjects($riak))
  ->withIndexName('famous')
  ->withQuery('age_i:[30 TO *]')
  ->build()
  ->execute();
client.fulltext_search('famous', 'age_i:[30 TO *]')
var search = new RiakSearchRequest("famous", "age_i:[30 TO *]");

/*
 * Fluent interface:
 *
 * var search = new RiakSearchRequest
 * {
 *     Query = new RiakFluentSearch("famous", "age_i")
 *         .Between("30", "*")
 *         .Build()
 * };
 */
var rslt = client.Search(search);
var search = new Riak.Commands.YZ.Search.Builder()
    .withIndexName('famous')
    .withQuery('age_i:[30 TO *]')
    .withCallback(search_cb)
    .build();
client.execute(search);
riakc_pb_socket:search(Pid, <<"famous">>, <<"age_i:[30 TO *]">>),
cmd, err := riak.NewSearchCommandBuilder().
    WithIndexName("famous").
    WithQuery("age_i:[30 TO *]").
    Build();
if err != nil {
    return err
}

if err := cluster.Execute(cmd); err != nil {
    return err
}
curl "$RIAK_HOST/search/query/famous?wt=json&q=age_i:%5B30%20TO%20*%5D" | jsonpp

Boolean

You can perform logical conjunctive, disjunctive, and negative operations on query elements as, respectively, AND, OR, and NOT. Let’s say we want to see who is capable of being a US Senator (at least 30 years old, and a leader). It requires a conjunctive query: leader_b:true AND age_i:[25 TO *].

String index = "famous";
String query = "leader_b:true AND age_i:[30 TO *]";
Search searchOp = new Search.Builder(index, query).build();
cluster.execute(searchOp);
SearchOperation.Response results = searchOp.get();
client.search("famous", "leader_b:true AND age_i:[30 TO *]")
$response = (new \Basho\Riak\Command\Builder\Search\FetchObjects($riak))
  ->withIndexName('famous')
  ->withQuery('leader_b:true AND age_i:[30 TO *]')
  ->build()
  ->execute();
client.fulltext_search('famous', 'leader_b:true AND age_i:[30 TO *]')
var search = new RiakSearchRequest
{
    Query = new RiakFluentSearch("famous", "leader_b")
        .Search("true").AndBetween("age_i", "30", "*")
        .Build()
};
var search = new Riak.Commands.YZ.Search.Builder()
    .withIndexName('famous')
    .withQuery('leader_b:true AND age_i:[30 TO *]')
    .withCallback(search_cb)
    .build();
client.execute(search);
riakc_pb_socket:search(Pid, <<"famous">>, <<"leader_b:true AND age_i:[30 TO *]">>),
cmd, err := riak.NewSearchCommandBuilder().
    WithIndexName("famous").
    WithQuery("leader_b:true AND age_i:[30 TO *]").
    Build();
if err != nil {
    return err
}

if err := cluster.Execute(cmd); err != nil {
    return err
}
curl "$RIAK_HOST/search/query/famous?wt=json&q=leader_b:true%20AND%20age_i:%5B25%20TO%20*%5D" | jsonpp

Deleting Indexes

Indexes may be deleted if they have no buckets associated with them:

String index = "famous";
YzDeleteIndexOperation deleteOp = new YzDeleteIndexOperation.Builder(index)
        .build();
cluster.execute(deleteOp);
client.delete_search_index('famous')
(new Command\Builder\Search\DeleteIndex($riak))
  ->withName('famous')
  ->build()
  ->execute();
client.delete_search_index('famous')
var rslt = client.DeleteSearchIndex("famous");
function delete_cb(err, rslt) {
    if (err) {
        throw new Error(err);
    }
    if (rslt === true) {
        // success
    } else {
        // error
    }
}

// NB: first make sure that no bucket types or buckets are using the index
var search = new Riak.Commands.YZ.DeleteIndex.Builder()
    .withIndexName('famous')
    .withCallback(delete_cb)
    .build();
client.execute(search);
riakc_pb_socket:delete_search_index(Pid, <<"famous">>, []),
cmd, err := riak.NewStoreBucketPropsCommandBuilder().
    WithBucketType("animals").
    WithBucket("cats").
    WithSearchIndex("_dont_index_").
    Build()
if err != nil {
    return err
}

if err := cluster.Execute(cmd); err != nil {
    return err
}

cmd, err = riak.NewDeleteIndexCommandBuilder().
    WithIndexName("famous").
    Build()
if err != nil {
    return err
}

if err := cluster.Execute(cmd); err != nil {
    return err
}
curl -XDELETE $RIAK_HOST/search/index/famous

If an index does have a bucket associated with it, then that index’s search_index property must be changed to either a different index name or to the sentinel value _dont_index_.

curl -XPUT $RIAK_HOST/types/animals/buckets/cats/props \
     -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
     -d '{"props":{"search_index":"_dont_index_"}}'

Pagination

A common requirement you may face is paginating searches, where an ordered set of matching documents are returned in non-overlapping sequential subsets (in other words, pages). This is easy to do with the start and rows parameters, where start is the number of documents to skip over (the offset) and rows are the number of results to return in one go.

For example, assuming we want two results per page, getting the second page is easy, where start is calculated as (rows per page) * (page number - 1).

int rowsPerPage = 2;
int page = 2;
int start = rowsPerPage * (page - 1);

SearchOperation searchOp = new SearchOperation
        .Builder(BinaryValue.create("famous"), "*:*")
        .withStart(start)
        .withNumRows(rowsPerPage)
        .build();
client.execute(searchOp);
StoreOperation.Response response = searchOp.get();
ROWS_PER_PAGE=2
page = 2
start = ROWS_PER_PAGE * (page - 1)

client.search("famous", "*:*", {:start => start, :rows => ROWS_PER_PAGE})
$maxRows = 2;
$page = 2;
$start = $rowsPerPAge * (page - 1);

(new \Basho\Riak\Command\Builder\Search\FetchObjects($riak))
  ->withIndexName('famous')
  ->withQuery('*:*')
  ->withMaxRows($maxRows)
  ->withStartRow($start)
  ->build()
  ->execute();
ROWS_PER_PAGE=2
page = 2
start = ROWS_PER_PAGE * (page - 1)

client.fulltext_search('famous', '*:*', start=start, rows=ROWS_PER_PAGE)
int rowsPerPage = 2;
int page = 2;
int start = rowsPerPage * (page - 1);

var search = new RiakSearchRequest
{
    Start = start,
    Rows = rowsPerPage,
    Query = new RiakFluentSearch("famous", "*")
        .Search("*")
        .Build(),
};

var rslt = client.Search(search);
var rowsPerPage = 2;
var page = 2;
var start = rowsPerPage * (page - 1);

var search = new Riak.Commands.YZ.Search.Builder()
    .withIndexName('famous')
    .withQuery('*:*')
    .withStart(start)
    .withNumRows(rowsPerPage)
    .withCallback(search_cb)
    .build();
client.execute(search);
-define(ROWS_PER_PAGE, 2).

Page = 2,
Start = ?ROWS_PER_PAGE * (Page - 1),

riakc_pb_socket:search(Pid, <<"famous">>, <<"*:*">>, [{start, Start},{rows, ?ROWS_PER_PAGE}]),
rowsPerPage := uint32(2)
page := uint32(2)
start := rowsPerPage * (page - uint32(1))

cmd, err := riak.NewSearchCommandBuilder().
    WithIndexName("famous").
    WithQuery("*:*").
    WithStart(start).
    WithNumRows(rowsPerPage).
    Build();
if err != nil {
    return err
}

if err := cluster.Execute(cmd); err != nil {
    return err
}
ROWS_PER_PAGE=2
PAGE=2
START=$(($ROWS_PER_PAGE * ($PAGE-1)))

curl
curl "$RIAK_HOST/search/query/famous?wt=json&q=*:*&start=$START&rows=$ROWS_PER_PAGE" | jsonpp

Pagination Warning

Distributed pagination in Riak Search cannot be used reliably when sorting on fields that can have different values per replica of the same object, namely score and _yz_id. In the case of sorting by these fields, you may receive redundant objects. In the case of score, the top-N can return different results over multiple runs.

If you are paginating simply to get all keys that match and don’t care about the score, then you can sort on type-bucket-key (eg. _yz_rt asc, _yz_rb asc, _yz_rk asc) to get consistent results.

If you want to sort by score without repeating results then you must set rows >= numFound. This requires having some idea of how many rows will match before running the query.

This issue is caused by the way Search must minimally distribute a query across multiple Solr nodes (called a coverage plan) and then filter duplicate results to retrieve a full result set. Since this plan is frequently recalculated, successive page queries may use a different plan, and thus calculate alternate scores or filter different _yz_id values. We have plans to fix this shortcoming in a future version of Riak.

MapReduce

Riak Search allows for piping search results as inputs for MapReduce jobs. This is a useful cross-section for performing post-calculations of results or aggregations of ad-hoc queries. The Riak Search MapReduce integration works similarly to regular MapReduce, with the notable exception that your input is not a bucket, but rather index and query arguments to the yokozuna module and mapred_search function (an Erlang module:function pair that adds the Riak Search hook to MapReduce).

{
  "inputs": {
    "module": "yokozuna",
    "function": "mapred_search",
    "arg": ["famous","NOT leader_b:true"]
  },
  "query": [
    {
      "map": {
        "language": "javascript",
        "keep": false,
        "source": "function(v) { return [1]; }"
      }
    },
    {
      "reduce": {
        "language": "javascript",
        "keep": true,
        "name": "Riak.reduceSum"
      }
    }
  ]
}

In this example we’re searching for all famous cats that are not leaders and counting up the results using Javascript for both map and reduce. It should return the reduced sum of [3].

curl -XPOST $RIAK_HOST/mapred \
     -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
     -d '{"inputs":{"module":"yokozuna","function":"mapred_search","arg":["famous","NOT leader_b:true"]},"query":[{"map":{"language":"javascript","keep":false,"source":"function(v) { return [1]; }"}},{"reduce":{"language":"javascript","keep":true,"name":"Riak.reduceSum"}}]}'