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This is a Solr binding for Allegro CL. Solr is an open-source freetext indexing/searching platform from the Apache Lucene project. See the following URL for its details.

http://lucene.apache.org/solr/

This package allows Allegro CL applications to communicate with a running Solr server, add and delete documents, and run queries to retrieve indexed records.

The package comes with a solr.asd file. To use it just load :solr.

(push #p"path/to/solr/source/directory" asdf:*central-registry*)
(asdf:load-system :solr)

Accessing the database

The Solr server should be running. To access the server, you need to create an instance of solr with the endpoint url. For example, if the server is running on localhost:8983, you can say:

(defvar *solr* (make-instance 'solr :uri "http://localhost:8983/solr"))

This action itself doesn't actually connect to the database, but the instance solr can be passed to other solr APIs to access to the database.

Adding documents

To add a document, you can use solr-add and solr-add* API.

(solr-add *solr* '((:id . 123) (:name . "foobar") (:author . "xyzzy")))

(solr-add* *solr* list-of-records)

This adds the document with id=123, name="foobar" and author="xyzzy". The document record is semantically an unordered collection of named fields; you can pass an alist or a hashtable as a record. Field names are represented by keywords. Field values are mapped as follows:

Lisp numbers => Solr numbers
Lisp date-time object => Solr Datetime
Lisp strings => Solr text
Lisp t and nil => Solr boolean

Non-empty Lisp lists can be used to represent set of values.

By default, solr-add and solr-add* do not commit the change. solr-commit commits pending changes:

(solr-commit *solr*)

Or, you can discard uncommitted changes by solr-rollback:

(solr-rollback *solr*)

For convenience, solr-add and solr-add* accept a keyword argument commit, that automatically commits the change before returning:

(solr-add* *solr* list-of-records :commit t)

If you're adding large amount of documents, it is a good idea to send a bunch of documents together before committing using solr-add*, because it is much faster than adding documents one by one.

Occasionally you may want to call solr-optimize to optimize indices for faster query performance:

(solr-optimize *solr*)

Deleting documents

You can delete documents by listing document ids, or specifying queries:

(solr-delete *solr* :ids '(1 13 17))

(solr-delete *solr* :queries '("author:Shiro"))

The deletion takes effects after committing. solr-delete accepts the commit keyword argument for autocommit.

Querying documents

solr-query does the query, and takes large number of keyword arguments to customize the query. See the Solr documentation for the full set of features. Here's an example of solr-query call:

(solr-query *solr* :query "author:Shiro"
            :fields "id,name,author"
            :param-alist '((:rows . 100)))

It returns LXML, a S-expression representaton of XML. It's up to the caller to extract necessary information from the returned LXML, but we provide a few convenience procedures for some basic extraction.

(solr-result->response-count lxml)

This returns three values: the total number of matching documents, the starting record number, and the number of documents included in the response. Note that Solr does pagenation by default--if you don't pass the :rows keyword it will only return the first 10 matching records. To retrieve other documents you need to pass the :start keyword to solr-query.

Information on matching documents is in :doc XML elements.

(solr-result->doc-nodes lxml)

This procedure extracts and returns the list of doc elements, on which you can map to dig further information.

The extracted doc elements are still LXML. The following procedure further converts the field values to Lisp objects according to the LXML attributes:

(solr-result->doc-alist lxml)

Error handling

When the Solr server returns an error (e.g. invalid query format), a condition solr-error is raised. It contains the Solr response status code, response headers and response body. The response body is in LXML.

When the API failed to communicate with Solr server (e.g. the server isn't running), a socket-error condition is raised.