A mongoose plugin that indexes models into elasticsearch. I kept running into cases where I needed full text search capabilities in my mongodb based models only to discover mongodb has none. In addition to full text search, I also needed the ability to filter ranges of data points in the searches and even highlight matches. For these reasons, elastic search was a perfect fit and hence this project.
The current version is 0.1.0-rc.1
npm install mongoosastic
Or add it to your package.json
To make a model indexed into elastic search simply add the plugin.
var mongoose = require('mongoose')
, mongoosastic = require('mongoosastic')
, Schema = mongoose.Schema
var User = new Schema({
name: String
, email: String
, city: String
})
User.plugin(mongoosastic)
This will by default simply use the pluralization of the model name as the index while using the model name itself as the type. So if you create a new User object and save it, you can see it by navigating to http://localhost:9200/users/user/_search (this assumes elasticsearch is running locally on port 9200).
The default behavior is all fields get indexed into elasticsearch. This can be a little wasteful especially considering that the document is now just being duplicated between mongodb and elasticsearch so you should consider opting to index only certain fields by specifying ''es_indexed'' on the fields you want to store:
var User = new Schema({
name: {type:String, es_indexed:true}
, email: String
, city: String
})
User.plugin(mongoosastic)
In this case only the name field will be indexed for searching.
####Indexing Nested Models In order to index nested models you can refer following example.
var Comment = new Schema({
title: String
, body: String
, author: String
})
var User = new Schema({
name: {type:String, es_indexed:true}
, email: String
, city: String
, comments: {type:[Comment], es_indexed:true}
})
User.plugin(mongoosastic)
Finally, adding the plugin will add a new method to the model called search which can be used to make simple to complex searches.
User.search({query:"john"}, function(err, results) {
// results here
});
Already have a mongodb collection that you'd like to index using this plugin? No problem! Simply call the synchronize method on your model to open a mongoose stream and start indexing documents individually.
var BookSchema = new Schema({
title: String
});
BookSchema.plugin(mongoosastic);
var Book = mongoose.model('Book', BookSchema)
, stream = Book.synchronize()
, count = 0;
stream.on('data', function(err, doc){
count++;
});
stream.on('close', function(){
console.log('indexed ' + count + ' documents!');
});
stream.on('error', function(err){
console.log(err);
});
One caveat... this is kinda slow for now. Use with care.
Schemas can be configured to have special options per field. These match with the existing field mapping configurations defined by elasticsearch with the only difference being they are all prefixed by "es_".
So for example. If you wanted to index a book model and have the boost for title set to 2.0 (giving it greater priority when searching) you'd define it as follows:
var BookSchema = new Schema({
title: {type:String, es_boost:2.0}
, author: {type:String, es_null_value:"Unknown Author"}
, publicationDate: {type:Date, es_type:'date'}
});
This example uses a few other mapping fields... such as null_value and type (which overrides whatever value the schema type is, useful if you want stronger typing such as float).
The way this can be mapped in elastic search is by creating a mapping for the index the model belongs to. Currently to the best of my knowledge mappings are create once when creating an index and can only be modified by destroying the index.
As such, creating the mapping is a one time operation and can be done as follows (using the BookSchema as an example):
var BookSchema = new Schema({
title: {type:String, es_boost:2.0}
, author: {type:String, es_null_value:"Unknown Author"}
, publicationDate: {type:Date, es_type:'date'}
BookSchema.plugin(mongoosastic);
var Book = mongoose.model('Book', BookSchema);
Book.createMapping(function(err, mapping){
// do neat things here
});
This feature is still a work in progress. As of this writing you'll have
to manage whether or not you need to create the mapping, mongoosastic
will make no assumptions and simply attempt to create the mapping. If
the mapping already exists, an Exception detailing such will be
populated in the err
argument.
There are various types that can be defined in elasticsearch. Check out http://www.elasticsearch.org/guide/reference/mapping/ for more information. Here are examples to the currently possible definitions in mongoosastic:
var ExampleSchema = new Schema({
// String (core type)
string: {type:String, es_boost:2.0},
// Number (core type)
number: {type:Number, es_type:'integer'},
// Date (core type)
date: {type:Date, es_type:'date'},
// Array type
array: {type:Array, es_type:'string'},
// Object type
object: {
field1: {type: String},
field2: {type: String}
},
// Nested type
nested: [SubSchema],
// Multi field type
multi_field: {
type: String,
es_type: 'multi_field',
es_fields: {
multi_field: { type: 'string', index: 'analyzed' },
untouched: { type: 'string', index: 'not_analyzed' }
}
},
// Geo point type
geo: {
type: String,
es_type: 'geo_point'
},
// Geo point type with lat_lon fields
geo_with_lat_lon: {
geo_point: {
type: String,
es_type: 'geo_point',
es_lat_lon: true
},
lat: { type: Number },
lon: { type: Number }
}
});
// Used as nested schema above.
var SubSchema = new Schema({
field1: {type: String},
field2: {type: String}
});
The full query DSL of elasticsearch is exposed through the search method. For example, if you wanted to find all people between ages 21 and 30:
Person.search({
query:{
range: {
age:{
from:21
, to: 30
}
}
}
}, function(err, people){
// all the people who fit the age group are here!
});
See the elasticsearch Query DSL docs for more information.
By default objects returned from performing a search will be the objects as is in elastic search. This is useful in cases where only what was indexed needs to be displayed (think a list of results) while the actual mongoose object contains the full data when viewing one of the results.
However, if you want the results to be actual mongoose objects you can provide {hydrate:true} as the second argument to a search call.
User.search({query:"john"}, {hydrate:true}, function(err, results) {
// results here
});
You can also pass in a hydrateOptions
object with information on
how to query for the mongoose object.
User.search({query:"john"}, {hydrate:true, hydrateOptions: {select: 'name age'}}, function(err, results) {
// results here
});
Note using hydrate will be a degree slower as it will perform an elasticsearch query and then do a query against mongodb for all the ids returned from the search result.
You can also default this to always be the case by providing it as a plugin option (as well as setting default hydrate options):
var User = new Schema({
name: {type:String, es_indexed:true}
, email: String
, city: String
})
User.plugin(mongoosastic, {hydrate:true, hydrateOptions: {lean: true}})
While developing mongoose I came across a scenario where we needed to be
able to save models (and search them) but a single action would
"publish" those models to be searched from a public site. To address
this I create a new method: index
.
Usage is as simple as calling index on an existing model.
Dude.findOne({name:'Jeffery Lebowski', function(err, dude){
dude.awesome = true;
dude.index(function(err, res){
console.log("egads! I've been indexed!");
});
});
The index method takes 3 arguments:
index
(optional) - the index to publish to. Defaults to the index the model was setup with.type
(optional) - the type to publish as. Defaults to the type the model was setup with.callback
- callback function to be invoked when model has been indexed.
Note that indexing a model does not mean it will be persisted to mongodb. Use save for that.
Options are:
index
- the index in elastic search to use. Defaults to the pluralization of the model name.type
- the type this model represents in elastic search. Defaults to the model name.host
- the host elastic search is running onport
- the port elastic search is running onhydrate
- whether or not to lookup results in mongodb before returning results from a search. Defaults to false.
Experimental Options:
useRiver
- true for use streaming and other capabilities
Perhaps you have an existing index and you want to specify the index and type used to index your document? No problem!!
var SupervisorSchema = new Schema({
name: String
, department: String
});
SupervisorSchema.plugin(mongoosastic, {index: 'employees', type:'manager'});
var Supervisor = mongoose.model('supervisor', SupervisorSchema);
The Elasticsearch MongoDB River functionality if very new and very beta. The latest it has been tested against is as follows:
- MongoDB v2.4.1
- Elasticsearch v0.20.6
- elasticsearch-river-mongodb v1.6.5
The above configuration has exhibited the most stability.
Mongodb must be running with replica sets.
Install the elasticsearch-river-mongodb plugin
Advanced Configurations
var options = {
useRiver: {
gridfs: false/true
}
}
to create your River only call
YourModel.river(function() {})
By default river tests do not run as it can be difficult to setup. If you wish to run river tests set the environment variable MONGOOSASTIC_RIVER=true
Pull requests are always welcome as long as an accompanying test case is associated.
This project is configured to use git flow and the following conventions are used:
develop
- represents current active development and can possibly be unstable.master
- pristine copy of repository, represents the currently stable release found in the npm index.feature/**
- represents a new feature being worked on
If you wish to contribute, the only requirement is to:
- branch a new feature branch from develop (if you're working on an issue, prefix it with the issue number)
- make the changes, with accompanying test cases
- issue a pull request against develop branch
Although I use git flow and prefix feature branches with "feature/" I don't require this for pull requests... all I care is that the feature branch name makes sense.
Pulls requests against master or pull requests branched from master will be rejected.
Someone picks up issue #39 on selective indexing.
Good branch names:
- 39-selective-indexing
- feature/39-selective-indexing
Someone submits a new feature that allows shard configuration:
Good branch names:
- feature/shard-configuration
- shard-configuration
- or file an issue, then create a feature branch
Feel free to ping me if you need help! :)
In order to run the tests you will need:
- An elasticsearch server running on port 9200
- A mongodb server
- mocha
With those installed, running ''npm test'' will run the tests with the preferred timeout (which is extended for integration tests.
Copyright (c) 2012 James R. Carr [email protected]
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.