Make possible to update an index schema
MeiliDB
A full-text search database based on the fast LMDB key-value store.
Features
- Provides 6 default ranking criteria used to bucket sort documents
- Accepts custom criteria and can apply them in any custom order
- Support ranged queries, useful for paginating results
- Can distinct and filter returned documents based on context defined rules
- Can store complete documents or only user schema specified fields
- The default tokenizer can index latin and kanji based languages
- Returns the matching text areas, useful to highlight matched words in results
- Accepts query time search config like the searchable attributes
- Supports runtime incremental indexing
It uses LMDB as the internal key-value store. The key-value store allows us to handle updates and queries with small memory and CPU overheads. The whole ranking system is data oriented and provides great performances.
You can read the deep dive if you want more information on the engine, it describes the whole process of generating updates and handling queries or you can take a look at the typos and ranking rules if you want to know the default rules used to sort the documents.
We will be proud if you submit issues and pull requests. You can help to grow this project and start contributing by checking issues tagged "good-first-issue". It is a good start!
The project is only a library yet. It means that there is no binary provided yet. To get started, you can check the examples wich are made to work with the data located in the datasets/
folder.
MeiliDB will be a binary in a near future so you will be able to use it as a database out-of-the-box. We should be able to query it using HTTP. This is our current goal, see the milestones. In the end, the binary will be a bunch of network protocols and wrappers around the library - which will also be published on crates.io. Both the binary and the library will follow the same update cycle.
Performances
With a database composed of 100 353 documents with 352 attributes each and 3 of them indexed. So more than 300 000 fields indexed for 35 million stored we can handle more than 2.8k req/sec with an average response time of 9 ms on an Intel i7-7700 (8) @ 4.2GHz.
Requests are made using wrk and scripted to simulate real users queries.
Running 10s test @ http://localhost:2230
2 threads and 25 connections
Thread Stats Avg Stdev Max +/- Stdev
Latency 9.52ms 7.61ms 99.25ms 84.58%
Req/Sec 1.41k 119.11 1.78k 64.50%
28080 requests in 10.01s, 7.42MB read
Requests/sec: 2806.46
Transfer/sec: 759.17KB
Notes
With Rust 1.32 the allocator has been changed to use the system allocator. We have seen much better performances when using jemalloc as the global allocator.
Usage and examples
Currently MeiliDB do not provide an http server but you can run the example binary.
The index subcommand has been made to create an index and inject documents into it. Using the command line below, the index will be named movies and the 19 700 movies of the datasets/
will be injected in MeiliDB.
cargo run --release --example from_file -- \
index example.mdb datasets/movies/data.csv \
--schema datasets/movies/schema.toml
Once the first command is done, you can query the freshly created movies index using the search subcomand. In this example we filtered the dataset to only show non-adult movies using the non-definitive !adult
syntax filter.
cargo run --release --example from_file -- \
search example.mdb
--number 4 \
--filter '!adult' \
id popularity adult original_title