This client has been written to interface with Sphinx. It is written by
Pat Allan, and has been influenced by both Dmytro Shteflyuk’s Ruby
client and the original PHP client – credit where credit’s due, after all.
It does not follow the same syntax as those two, though (not much point writing this otherwise) -
opting for a more Ruby-like structure.
As of version 1.0.0, Riddle now supports multiple versions of Sphinx in the one gem – you’ll need to require your specific version after a normal require, though.
require ‘riddle’ require ‘riddle/0.9.9’To get started, just instantiate a Client object:
client = Riddle::Client.new # defaults to localhost and port 3312 client = Riddle::Client.new “sphinxserver.domain.tld”, 3333 # custom settingsAnd then set the parameters to what you want, before running a query:
client.match_mode = :extended client.query “Pat Allan @state Victoria”The results from a query are similar to the other clients – but here’s the details. It’s a hash with
the following keys:
- :matches
- :fields
- :attributes
- :attribute_names
- :words
- :total
- :total_found
- :time
- :status
- :warning (if appropriate)
- :error (if appropriate)
The key :matches
returns an array of hashes – the actual search results. Each hash has the
document id (:doc
), the result weighting (:weight
), and a hash of the attributes for
the document (:attributes
).
The :fields
and :attribute_names
keys return list of fields and attributes for the
documents. The key :attributes
will return a hash of attribute name and type pairs, and
:words
returns a hash of hashes representing the words from the search, with the number of
documents and hits for each, along the lines of:
:total
, :total_found
and :time
return the number of matches available, the
total number of matches (which may be greater than the maximum available), and the time in milliseconds
that the query took to run.
:status
is the error code for the query – and if there was a related warning, it will be under
the :warning
key. Fatal errors will be described under :error
.
If you’ve installed the gem and wondering why there’s no tests – check out the git version. I’ve kept the specs out of the gem as I have a decent amount of test data in there, which really isn’t needed unless you want to submit patches.
Thanks to the following people who have contributed to Riddle in some shape or form:
- Andrew Aksyonoff
- Brad Greenlee
- Lachie Cox
- Jeremy Seitz
- Mark Lane
- Xavier Noria
- Henrik Nye
- Kristopher Chambers
- Rob Anderton
- Dylan Egan
- Jerry Vos
- Piotr Sarnacki
- Tim Preston
- Amir Yalon
- Sam Goldstein
- Matt Todd
- Paco Guzmán
- Greg Weber
- Enrico Thierbach
- Jason Lambert
- Saberma
- James Cook
- Alexey Artamonov