Search Manual / Version 2310
Table Of ContentsThe process of multi-language search configuration consists of the following steps, that are described in the next paragraphs:
Defining text tokenization and filtering in different field types
Defining index fields for different languages
Defining the fields from which the language is determined
Defining where the detected language is stored.
Configuring language dependent field handling
Configuring the search request handler
Note
It's not necessary to adapt the feeder configuration for multi-language support. Feeders
just feed text into some fields (for example name
and textbody
)
and the search engine puts the text into the correct language-dependent fields.
Configuring different field types
Text tokenization and filtering in Apache Solr can be configured in the file conf/schema.xml
of a Solr config set. For example in <solr-home>/configsets/content/conf/schema.xml
for the content
config set.
For each field, a field type is defined. That is, which kind of data is written to this
field. In the default content
config set, for example, the field textbody
is of type
text_general
. The field type is connected with a certain analyzer which is used
to tokenize and filter the text. The default configuration contains some field types with
different analyzers, for example:
text_general
, configured with Solr StandardTokenizer with reasonable cross-language defaultstext_zh
, configured for tokenization of Simplified and Traditional Chinese (outcommented by default)
Apache Solr provides special field types for lots of languages in its example configuration, for example
text_ja
for Japanese and text_ko
for Korean. Most of these
field types are not defined in the default configuration of the
CoreMedia Search Engine to keep the configuration files simple and avoid
unnecessary overhead. If required, add field types from the Solr example configuration to your configuration.
You can find these additional field types in the configuration file
server/solr/configsets/_default/conf/managed-schema
after downloading and unpacking the Apache Solr distribution. You can download Solr from
http://solr.apache.org.
Example
If you index text of one language only and want to use a special field type, you can simply change field
definitions from type text_general
to the chosen field type in schema.xml
, for
example to text_de
for German text.
<fields> ... <field name="textbody" type="text_de" ... /> </fields>
Configuring multi-language index fields
You need to define language-dependent fields for all languages that need a special analyzer. To do so, simply add a new field element with the name followed by the language code. Section 6.6, “Supported Languages in Solr Language Detection” in the reference shows the list of supported languages.
Note
Note, that language-dependent fields must be indexed. A field declaration with attribute
indexed="false"
cannot be used as language-dependent field.
Fields in the content
config set must also be declared with attribute
stored="true"
or docValues="true"
to make it possible to use partial
updates in the Content Feeder.
The following example shows fields and additional types in
<solr-home>/configsets/content/conf/schema.xml
for using dedicated field types for Simplified
Chinese, Japanese, Korean while using the field type text_general
for other languages. The example
shows the fields name
and textbody
of the content
config set.
To enable sorting on field name
, it uses Solr field types based on SortableTextField
.
<field name="name" type="text_gen_sort" indexed="true" stored="true"/> <field name="name_ja" type="text_ja_sort" indexed="true" stored="true"/> <field name="name_zh-cn" type="text_zh_sort" indexed="true" stored="true"/> <field name="name_ko" type="text_ko_sort" indexed="true" stored="true"/> ... <field name="textbody" type="text_general" indexed="true" stored="false" multiValued="true"/> <field name="textbody_ja" type="text_ja" indexed="true" stored="false" multiValued="true"/> <field name="textbody_zh-cn" type="text_zh" indexed="true" stored="false" multiValued="true"/> <field name="textbody_ko" type="text_ko" indexed="true" stored="false" multiValued="true"/> <!-- field types "text_general", "text_gen_sort" and "text_zh" are already defined in the default configuration, the latter needs to be enabled, because it's outcommented by default --> <!-- field types "text_ja" and "text_ko" can be copied from the Apache Solr example configuration --> <!-- field types "text_ja_sort", "text_zh_sort" and "text_ko_sort" can be copied from the field types without "_sort" suffix, adapting the name and replacing "solr.TextField" with "solr.SortableTextField" --> ...
In the above example, Japanese text goes into name_ja
and
textbody_ja
, Simplified Chinese text goes into
name_zh-cn
and textbody_zh-cn
, Korean text goes into
name_ko
and textbody_ko
and text from all other
languages is indexed in the fields name
and textbody
.
Besides Simplified Chinese you can also configure Traditional Chinese text with the fields
name_zh-tw
and textbody_zh-tw
. The language code
zh
from previous CoreMedia releases is not generated anymore, but existing
fields name_zh
and textbody_zh
are still used as
fallback when indexing and searching.
Configuring language detection
By default, the Search Engine detects the language of the index fields
name
and textbody
for
Content Feeder indices (config set content
) and of index field
textbody
for CAE Feeder indices
(config set cae
). Both use the field language
to store the detected language.
Language detection is skipped if the field language
has been set by the feeder.
You can change these settings in the config set's
file conf/solrconfig.xml
below the element
<updateRequestProcessorChain>
with class
LangDetectLanguageIdentifierUpdateProcessorFactory
:
<processor class="org.apache.solr.update.processor. LangDetectLanguageIdentifierUpdateProcessorFactory"> <str name="langid.fl">textbody,name</str> <str name="langid.langField">language</str> <str name="langid.fallback">en</str> </processor>
The parameter langid.langField
defines the index field that will be filled with the
language code of the document. Section 6.6, “Supported Languages in Solr Language Detection” in the
reference shows the list of supported languages. The value in parameter langid.fl
is a
comma-separated list of index fields that are used for language detection. The parameter
langid.fallback
configures English as fallback if the language can not be detected from the text.
For more details about the Solr LangDetectLanguageIdentifierUpdateProcessorFactory
, see
Solr Reference Guide: Language Detection.
Configuring language-dependent field handling
In order to be flexible, the Search Engine separates language detection and the handling of language-dependent fields. Therefore, field handling is configured in a separate class.
You can change these language-dependent field handling settings in the config set's file
conf/solrconfig.xml
below the element
<updateRequestProcessorChain>
with class
LanguageDependentFieldsProcessorFactory
.
<processor class="com.coremedia.solr.update.processor. LanguageDependentFieldsProcessorFactory"> <str name="languageField">language</str> <str name="textFields">textbody,name</str> </processor>
The parameter languageField
defines the index field that contains the language code of the
document. This must be the same value as configured for language detection above.
The value in the parameter textFields
is a comma-separated list of fields whose content should be
put into language-dependent fields if such fields exist for the language. Normally, this is the same value
as configured for language detection except if you want to exclude some text fields from language detection.
Configuring the search request handler
By default, the search request handlers for Content Feeder and
CAE Feeder indices are configured in solrconfig.xml
to search across
multiple index fields. For example, the config set content
configures the /editor
search request handler with the qf
parameter to search in fields textbody
,
name
and numericid
. Matches in the
field name
are scored higher than matches in textbody
because of the
configured ^2
boost. Note that the language-dependent
fields name_*
and textbody_*
are not configured here but will be picked up
automatically.
<requestHandler name="/editor" class="solr.SearchHandler"> <lst name="defaults"> <str name="defType">cmdismax</str> <str name="echoParams">none</str> <float name="tie">0.1</float> <str name="qf">textbody name^2 numericid^10</str> <str name="pf">textbody name^2</str> <str name="mm">100%</str> <str name="q.alt">*:*</str> <str name="suggest.spellcheck.dictionary">textbody</str> </lst> <arr name="last-components"> <str>suggest</str> <str>spellcheck</str> </arr> </requestHandler>
Adapt the configuration of the request handler's qf
and pf
parameters if you want to use other default search fields.
The predefined request handlers can also be used in custom search applications. They can be selected in
SolrJ by calling SolrQuery.setParam(CommonParams.QT, "/cmdismax");
. If you prefer
Solr's standard search handler you will have to explicitly search across language-dependent
fields, by constructing "OR" queries in a Lucene query syntax or by configuring all fields for
standard Solr dismax or edismax query parsers, for instance.