Skip to content

hassoudi/bertsearch

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

15 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Elasticsearch meets BERT

Below is a job search example:

An example of bertsearch

System architecture

System architecture

Getting Started

1. Download a pretrained BERT model

List of released pretrained BERT models (click to expand...)
BERT-Base, Uncased12-layer, 768-hidden, 12-heads, 110M parameters
BERT-Large, Uncased24-layer, 1024-hidden, 16-heads, 340M parameters
BERT-Base, Cased12-layer, 768-hidden, 12-heads , 110M parameters
BERT-Large, Cased24-layer, 1024-hidden, 16-heads, 340M parameters
BERT-Base, Multilingual Cased (New)104 languages, 12-layer, 768-hidden, 12-heads, 110M parameters
BERT-Base, Multilingual Cased (Old)102 languages, 12-layer, 768-hidden, 12-heads, 110M parameters
BERT-Base, ChineseChinese Simplified and Traditional, 12-layer, 768-hidden, 12-heads, 110M parameters
$ wget https://storage.googleapis.com/bert_models/2018_10_18/cased_L-12_H-768_A-12.zip
$ unzip cased_L-12_H-768_A-12.zip

2. Set environment variables

You need to set a pretrained BERT model and Elasticsearch's index name as environment variables:

$ export PATH_MODEL=./cased_L-12_H-768_A-12
$ export INDEX_NAME=jobsearch

3. Run Docker containers

$ docker-compose up

CAUTION: If possible, assign high memory(more than 8GB) to Docker's memory configuration because BERT container needs high memory.

4. Create index

You can use the create index API to add a new index to an Elasticsearch cluster. When creating an index, you can specify the following:

  • Settings for the index
  • Mappings for fields in the index
  • Index aliases

For example, if you want to create jobsearch index with title, text and text_vector fields, you can create the index by the following command:

$ python example/create_index.py --index_file=example/index.json --index_name=jobsearch
# index.json
{
  "settings": {
    "number_of_shards": 2,
    "number_of_replicas": 1
  },
  "mappings": {
    "dynamic": "true",
    "_source": {
      "enabled": "true"
    },
    "properties": {
      "title": {
        "type": "text"
      },
      "text": {
        "type": "text"
      },
      "text_vector": {
        "type": "dense_vector",
        "dims": 768
      }
    }
  }
}

CAUTION: The dims value of text_vector must need to match the dims of a pretrained BERT model.

5. Create documents

Once you created an index, you’re ready to index some document. The point here is to convert your document into a vector using BERT. The resulting vector is stored in the text_vector field. Let`s convert your data into a JSON document:

$ python example/create_documents.py --data=example/example.csv --index_name=jobsearch
# example/example.csv
"Title","Description"
"Saleswoman","lorem ipsum"
"Software Developer","lorem ipsum"
"Chief Financial Officer","lorem ipsum"
"General Manager","lorem ipsum"
"Network Administrator","lorem ipsum"

After finishing the script, you can get a JSON document like follows:

# documents.jsonl
{"_op_type": "index", "_index": "jobsearch", "text": "lorem ipsum", "title": "Saleswoman", "text_vector": [...]}
{"_op_type": "index", "_index": "jobsearch", "text": "lorem ipsum", "title": "Software Developer", "text_vector": [...]}
{"_op_type": "index", "_index": "jobsearch", "text": "lorem ipsum", "title": "Chief Financial Officer", "text_vector": [...]}
...

6. Index documents

After converting your data into a JSON, you can adds a JSON document to the specified index and makes it searchable.

$ python example/index_documents.py

7. Open browser

Go to http://127.0.0.1:5000.

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Python 53.9%
  • HTML 40.9%
  • Dockerfile 4.4%
  • Shell 0.8%