Catalog indexing strategies¶
You may have two different interests in regard to indexing your custom content type objects:
Making particular fields searchable via Plone’s main search facility;
Indexing particular fields for custom lookup.
Making content searchable¶
Plone’s main index is called SearchableText. This is the index which is searched when you use the main portal search. Fields in your custom content types are not necessarily added to SearchableText. Fields added via Dublin-core behaviors are automatically part of SearchableText; others are not.
So, you may need to explicitly add fields to SearchableText if you wish their information to be findable via the main search. There are all sorts of highly customizable ways to do this, but the easiest is to use the collective.dexteritytextindexer add-on package.
Add collective.dexteritytextindexer
to your buildout and you will gain a new Dexterity behavior that will allow you to easily add fields to SearchableText. Once you turn on this behavior, you will then need to specify fields for addition to SearchableText.
Note
Note that if you turn on the Dynamic SearchableText indexer behavior
for a content type, then you must specify all fields that need SearchableText indexing. Dublin core fields like Title and Description are no longer automatically handled.
Once you have turned on the indexer behavior, edit the XML field model to add indexer:searchable="true"
to the field
tag for each field you wish to add to the SearchableText index.
See the collective.dexteritytextindexer package documentation for details and for information on how to use it via Python schema.
Creating and using custom indexes¶
How to create custom catalog indexes
The ZODB is a hierarchical object store where objects of different schemata and sizes can live side by side. This is great for managing individual content items, but not optimal for searching across the content repository. A naive search would need to walk the entire object graph, loading each object into memory and comparing object metadata with search criteria. On a large site, this would quickly become prohibitive.
Luckily, Zope comes with a technology called the ZCatalog, which is basically a table structure optimised for searching.
In Plone, there’s a ZCatalog instance called portal_catalog
.
Standard event handlers will index content in the catalog when it is created or modified, and unindex when the content is removed.
The catalog manages indexes, which can be searched, and metadata (also known as columns), which are object attributes for which the value is copied into the catalog.
When we perform a search, the result is a lazily loaded list of objects known as catalog brains.
Catalog brains contain the value of metadata columns (but not indexes) as attributes.
The functions getURL()
, getPath()
and getObject()
can be used to get the URL and path of the indexed content item, and to load the full item into memory.
Note
Dexterity objects are more lightweight than Archetypes objects. This means that loading objects into memory is not quite as undesirable as is sometimes assumed. If you’re working with references, parent objects, or a small number of child objects, it is usually OK to load objects directly to work with them. However, if you are working with a large or unknown-but-potentially-large number of objects, you should consider using catalog searches to find them and use catalog metadata to store frequently used values. There is an important trade-off to be made between limiting object access and bloating the catalog with unneeded indexes and metadata, though. In particular, large strings (such as the body text of a document) or binary data (such as the contents of image or file fields) should not be stored as catalog metadata.
Plone comes with a number of standard indexes and metadata columns.
These correspond to much of the Dublin Core set of metadata as well as several Plone-specific attributes.
You can view the indexes, columns and the contents of the catalog through the ZMI pages of the portal_catalog
tool.
If you’ve never done this, it is probably instructive to have a look, both to understand how the indexes and columns may apply to your own content types, and to learn what searches are already possible.
Indexes come in various types. The most common ones are:
FieldIndex
the most common type, used to index a single value.
KeywordIndex
used to index lists of values where you want to be able to search for a subset of the values. As the name implies, commonly used for keyword fields, such as the
Subject
Dublin Core metadata field.DateIndex
used to index Zope 2
DateTime
objects. Note that if your type uses a Pythondatetime
object, you’ll need to convert it to a Zope 2DateTime
using a custom indexer!DateRangeIndex
used mainly for the effective date range.
ZCTextIndex
used mainly for the
SearchableText
index. This is the index used for full-text search.ExtendedPathIndex
a variant of
PathIndex
, which is used for thepath
index. This is used to search for content by path and optionally depth.
Adding new indexes and metadata columns¶
When an object is indexed, the catalog will by default attempt to find attributes and methods that match index and column names on the object. Methods will be called (with no arguments) in an attempt to get a value. If a value is found, it is indexed.
Note
Objects are normally acquisition-wrapped when they are indexed, which means that an indexed value may be acquired from a parent. This can be confusing, especially if you are building container types and creating new indexes for them. If child objects don’t have attributes/methods with names corresponding to indexes, the parent object’s value will be indexed for all children as well.
Catalog indexes and metadata can be installed with the catalog.xml
GenericSetup import step. It is useful to look at the one in Plone (parts/omelette/Products/CMFPlone/profiles/default/catalog.xml
).
As an example, let’s index the track
property of a Session
in the catalog, and add a metadata column for this property as well. In
profiles/default/catalog.xml
, we have:
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<object name="portal_catalog">
<index name="track" meta_type="FieldIndex">
<indexed_attr value="track"/>
</index>
<column value="track"/>
</object>
Notice how we specify both the index name and the indexed attribute. It is possible to use an index name (the key you use when searching) that is different to the indexed attribute, although they are usually the same. The metadata column is just the name of an attribute.
Creating custom indexers¶
Indexing based on attributes can sometimes be limiting. First of all, the catalog is indiscriminate in that it attempts to index every attribute that’s listed against an index or metadata column for every object. Secondly, it is not always feasible to add a method or attribute to a class just to calculate an indexed value.
Plone 3.3 and later ships with a package called plone.indexer to help make it easier to write custom indexers: components that are invoked to calculate the value which the catalog sees when it tries to index a given attribute. Indexers can be used to index a different value to the one stored on the object, or to allow indexing of a “virtual” attribute that does not actually exist on the object in question. Indexers are usually registered on a per-type basis, so you can have different implementations for different types of content.
To illustrate indexers, we will add three indexers to program.py
.
Two will provide values for the start
and end
indexes, normally used by Plone’s Event
type.
We actually have attributes with the correct name for these already, but they use Python datetime
objects whereas the DateIndex
requires a
Zope 2 DateTime.DateTime
object.
(Python didn’t have a datetime
module when this part of Zope was created!)
The third indexer will be used to provide a value for the Subject
index that takes its value from the tracks
list.
from DateTime import DateTime
from plone.indexer import indexer
...
@indexer(IProgram)
def startIndexer(obj):
if obj.start is None:
return None
return DateTime(obj.start.isoformat())
@indexer(IProgram)
def endIndexer(obj):
if obj.end is None:
return None
return DateTime(obj.end.isoformat())
@indexer(IProgram)
def tracksIndexer(obj):
return obj.tracks
And we need to register the indexers in ZCML:
<adapter factory=".indexers.startIndexer" name="start" />
<adapter factory=".indexers.endIndexer" name="end" />
<adapter factory=".indexers.tracksIndexer" name="Subject" />
Here, we use the @indexer
decorator to create an indexer.
This doesn’t register the indexer component, though, so we need to use ZCML to finalise the registration.
Crucially, this is where the indexer’s name
is defined.
This is the name of the indexed attribute for which the indexer is providing a value.
Note
Since all of these indexes are part of a standard Plone installation, we won’t register them in catalog.xml
.
If you are creating custom indexers and need to add new catalog indexes or columns for them, remember that the “indexed attribute” name (and the column name) must match the name of the indexer as set in its adapter registration.
Searching using your indexes¶
Once we have registered our indexers and re-installed our product (to ensure that the catalog.xml
import step is allowed to install new indexes in the catalog), we can use our new indexes just like we would any of the default indexes.
The pattern is always the same:
from plone import api
# get the tool
catalog = api.portal.get_tool(name='portal_catalog')
# execute a search
results = catalog(track='Track 1')
# examine the results
for brain in results:
start = brain.start
url = brain.getURL()
obj = brain.getObject() # Performance hit!
This shows a simple search using the portal_catalog
tool, which we look up from some context object.
We call the tool to perform a search, passing search criteria as keyword arguments, where the left hand side refers to an installed index and the right hand side is the search term.
Some of the more commonly used indexes are:
Title
the object’s title.
Description
the object’s description.
path
the object’s path. The argument is a string like
/foo/bar
. To get the path of an object (e.g. a parent folder), do'/'.join(folder.getPhysicalPath())
. Searching for an object’s path will return the object and any children. To depth-limit the search, e.g. to get only those 1 level deep, use a compound query, e.g.path={'query': '/'.join(folder.getPhysicalPath()), 'depth': 1}
. If a depth is specified, the object at the given path is not returned (but any children within the depth limit are).object_provides
used to match interfaces provided by the object. The argument is an interface name or list of interface names (of which any one may match). To get the name of a given interface, you can call
ISomeInterface.__identifier__
.portal_type
used to match the portal type. Note that users can rename portal types, so it is often better not to hardcode these. Often, using an
object_provides
search for a type-specific interface will be better. Conversely, if you are asking the user to select a particular type to search for, then they should be choosing from the currently installedportal_types
.SearchableText
used for full-text searches. This supports operands like
AND
andOR
in the search string.Creator
the username of the creator of a content item.
Subject
a
KeywordIndex
of object keywords.review_state
an object’s workflow state.
In addition, the search results can be sorted based on any FieldIndex
,
KeywordIndex
or DateIndex
using the following keyword arguments:
Use
sort_on='<index name>'
to sort on a particular index. For example,sort_on='sortable_title'
will produce a sensible title-based sort.sort_on='Date'
will sort on the publication date, or the creation date if this is not set.Add
sort_order='reverse'
to sort in reverse. The default issort_order='ascending'
.'descending'
can be used as an alias for'reverse'
.Add
sort_limit=10
to limit to approximately 10 search results. Note that it is possible to get more results due to index optimisations. Use a list slice on the catalog search results to be absolutely sure that you have got the maximum number of results, e.g.results = catalog(…, sort_limit=10)[:10]
. Also note that the use ofsort_limit
requires asort_on
as well.
Some of the more commonly used metadata columns are:
- Creator
the user who created the content object.
- Date
the publication date or creation date, whichever is later.
- Title
the object’s title.
- Description
the object’s description.
- getId
the object’s id (note that this is an attribute, not a function).
- review_state
the object’s workflow state.
- portal_type
the object’s portal type.
For more information about catalog indexes and searching, see the ZCatalog chapter in the Zope 2 book.
How to setup the index TTW:¶
Now that the fields are index-able, we need to create the index itself.
Go to the Zope Management Interface
Go on ‘portal_catalog’
Click ‘Indexes’ tab
There’s a drop down menu to the top right to let you choose what type of index to add - if you are using a plain text string field you would select ‘FieldIndex’
As the ‘id’ put in the programmatical name of your Dexterity type field that you want to index
Hit OK, tick your new index and click ‘Reindex’
You should now see content being indexed.
See the documentation for further information