Lucene suggest

 
The  Big Data Zone is presented by  Splunk, the maker of data analysis solutions such as  Hunk, an analytics tool for Hadoop, and the  Splunk Web Framework.
Live suggestions as you type into a search box, sometimes called suggest or autocomplete, is now a standard, essential search feature ever since Google set a high bar after going live  just over four years ago

In Lucene we have several different suggest implementations, under the suggest module; today I'm describing the new  AnalyzingSuggester (to be committed soon; it should be available in 4.1). 

To use it, you provide the set of suggest targets, which is the full set of strings and weights that may be suggested. The targets can come from anywhere; typically you'd process your query logs to create the targets, giving a higher weight to those queries that appear more frequently. If you sell movies you might use all movie titles with a weight according to sales popularity. 
(提示词库,根据用户日志进行提取)

You also provide an analyzer, which is used to process each target into analyzed form. Under the hood, the analyzed form is indexed into an  FST. At lookup time, the incoming query is processed by the same analyzer and the FST is searched for all completions sharing the analyzed form as a prefix. 

Even though the matching is performed on the analyzed form, what's suggested is the original target (i.e., the unanalyzed input). Because Lucene has such a rich set of analyzer components, this can be used to create some useful suggesters:
  • With an analyzer that folds or normalizes case, accents, etc. (e.g., using ICUFoldingFilter), the suggestions will match irrespective of case and accents. For example, the query "ame..." would suggest Amélie.
  • With an analyzer that removes stopwords and normalizes case, the query "ghost..." would suggest "The Ghost of Christmas Past".
  • Even graph TokenStreams, such as SynonymFilter, will work: in such cases we enumerate and index all analyzed paths into the FST. If the analyzer recognizes "wifi" and "wireless network" as synonyms, and you have the suggest target "wifi router" then the user query "wire..." would suggest "wifi router".
  • Japanese suggesters may now be possible, with an analyzer that copies the reading (ReadingAttribute in the Kuromoji analyzer) as its output.

Given the diversity of analyzers, and the easy extensibility for applications to create their own analyzers, I'm sure there are many interesting use cases for this new AnalyzingSuggester: if you have an example please share with us on Lucene's user list ([email protected]). 

While this is a great step forward, there's still plenty to do with Lucene's suggesters. We need to allow for fuzzy matching on the query so we're more robust to typos (there's a rough prototype patch onLUCENE-3846). We need to predict based on only part of the query, instead of insisting on a full prefix match. There are a number of interesting elements to Google's autosuggest that we could draw inspiration from. As always, patches welcome!

 
 

FST
---http://blog.mikemccandless.com/2010/12/using-finite-state-transducers-in.html
 
That FST maps the sorted words  mop moth pop star stop  and  top  to their ordinal number (0, 1, 2, ...). As you traverse the arcs, you sum up the outputs, so  stop  hits 3 on the  s  and 1 on the  o , so its output ordinal is 4. The outputs can be arbitrary numbers or byte sequences, or combinations, etc. -- it's pluggable.

Essentially, an FST is a SortedMap<ByteSequence,SomeOutput>, if the arcs are in sorted order. With the right representation, it requires far less RAM than other SortedMap implementations, but has a higher CPU cost during lookup. The low memory footprint is vital for Lucene since an index can easily have many millions (sometimes, billions!) of unique terms.

There's a  great deal of theory  behind FSTs. They generally support the same operations as FSMs  (determinize, minimize, union, intersect, etc.). You can also compose them, where the outputs of one FST are intersected with the inputs of the next, resulting in a new FST.

There are some nice general-purpose FST toolkits ( OpenFst  looks great) that support all these operations, but for Lucene I decided to implement  this neat algorithm  which incrementally builds up the minimal unweighted FST from pre-sorted inputs. This is a perfect fit for Lucene since we already store all our terms in sorted (unicode) order.

The resulting implementation (currently a patch on  LUCENE-2792 ) is fast and memory efficient: it builds the 9.8 million terms in a 10 million Wikipedia index in ~8 seconds (on a fast computer), requiring less than 256 MB heap. The resulting FST is 69 MB. It can also build a  prefix trie , pruning by how many terms come through each node, with even less memory.

Note that because  addition is commutative , an FST with numeric outputs is not guaranteed to be minimal in my implementation; perhaps if I could generalize the algorithm to a weighted FST instead, which also stores a weight on each arc, that would yield the minimal FST. But I don't expect this will be a problem in practice for Lucene.

In the patch I modified the  SimpleText  codec, which was loading all terms into a TreeMap mapping the BytesRef term to an int docFreq and long filePointer, to use an FST instead, and all tests pass!

There are lots of other potential places in Lucene where we could use FSTs, since we often need map the index terms to "something". For example, the terms index maps to a long file position; the field cache maps to ordinals; the terms dictionary maps to codec-specific metadata, etc. We also have multi-term queries (eg Prefix, Wildcard, Fuzzy, Regexp) that need to test a large number of terms, that could work directly via intersection with the FST instead (many apps could easily fit their entire terms dict in RAM as an FST since the format is so compact). The FST could be used for a key/value store. Lots of fun things to try!
 
 
参考资料:
lucene (42)源代码学习之FST(Finite State Transducer)在SynonymFilter中的实现思想
http://sbp810050504.blog.51cto.com/2799422/1361551
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Finite State Transducer(FST)in NLP
http://www.douban.com/note/326761737/
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