SWISH-CONFIG - Configuration File Directives
This document lists the available configuration directives available in Swish-e.
What files Swish-e indexes and how they are indexed, and where the index is
written can be controlled by a configuration file.
The configuration file is a text file composed of comments, blank lines, and
configuration directives. The order of the directives is not important.
Some directives may be used more than once in the configuration file, while
others can only be used once (e.g. additional directives will overwrite
preceding directives). Case of the directive is not important -- you may use
upper, lower, or mixed case.
Comments are any line that begin with a "#".
# This is a comment
As of 2.4.3 lines may be continued by placing a backslas as the last character
on the line:
IgnoreWords \
am \
the \
foo
Directives may take more than one parameter. Enclose single parameters that
include whitespace in quotes (single or double). Inside of quotes the
backslash escapes the next character.
ReplaceRules append "foo bar" <- define "foo bar" as a single parameter
If you need to include a quote character in the value either use a backslash to
escape it, or enclose it in quotes of the other type.
Backslashes also have special meaning in regular expressions.
FileFilterMatch pdftotext "'%p' -" /\.pdf$/
This says that the dot is a real dot (instead of matching any character). If you
place the regular expression in quotes then you must use double-backslashes.
FileFilterMatch pdftotext "'%p' -" "/\\.pdf$/"
Swish-e will convert the double backslash into a single backslash before passing
the parameter to the regular expression compiler.
Commented example configuration files are included in the
conf directory
of the Swish-e distribution.
Some command line arguments can override directives specified in the
configuration file. Please see also the SWISH-RUN for instructions on running
Swish-e, and the SWISH-SEARCH page for information and examples on how to
search your index.
The configuration file is specified to Swish-e by the "-c" switch. For
example,
swish-e -c myconfig.conf
You may also split your directives up into different configuration files. This
allows you to have a master configuration file used for many different
indexes, and smaller configuration files for each separate index. You can
specify the different configuration files when running from the command line
with the "-c" switch (see SWISH-RUN), or you may include other
Configuration file with the
IncludeConfigFile directive below.
Typically, in a configuration file the directives are grouped together in some
logical order -- that is, directives that control the source of the documents
would be grouped together first, and directives that control how each document
is filtered or its words index in another group of directives. (The directives
listed below are grouped in this order).
The configuration file directives are listed below in these groups:
- •
- "Administrative Headers Directives" -- You may
add administrative information to the header of the index file.
- •
- "Document Source Directives" -- Directives for
selecting the source documents and the location of the index file.
- •
- "Document Contents Directives" -- Directives that
control how a document content is indexed.
- •
- "Directives for the File Access method only" --
These directives are only applicable to the File Access indexing
method.
- •
- "Directives for the HTTP Access Method Only" --
Likewise, these only apply to the HTTP Access method.
- •
- "Directives for the prog Access Method Only" --
These only apply to the prog Access method.
- •
- "Document Filter Directives" -- This is a special
section that describes using document filters with Swish-e.
Alphabetical Listing of Directives
- •
- AbsoluteLinks [yes⎪NO]
- •
- BeginCharacters *string of characters*
- •
- BumpPositionCounterCharacters *string*
- •
- Buzzwords [*list of buzzwords*⎪File: path]
- •
- CompressPositions [yes⎪NO]
- •
- ConvertHTMLEntities [YES⎪no]
- •
- DefaultContents
[TXT⎪HTML⎪XML⎪TXT2⎪HTML2⎪XML2⎪TXT*⎪HTML*⎪XML*]
- •
- Delay *seconds*
- •
- DontBumpPositionOnEndTags *list of names*
- •
- DontBumpPositionOnStartTags *list of names*
- •
- EnableAltSearchSyntax [yes⎪NO]
- •
- EndCharacters *string of characters*
- •
- EquivalentServer *server alias*
- •
- ExtractPath *metaname*
[replace⎪remove⎪prepend⎪append⎪regex]
- •
- FileFilter *suffix* *program* [options]
- •
- FileFilterMatch *program* *options* *regex* [*regex*
...]
- •
- FileInfoCompression [yes⎪NO]
- •
- FileMatch [contains⎪is⎪regex] *regular
expression*
- •
- FileRules [contains⎪is⎪regex] *regular
expression*
- •
- FuzzyIndexingMode
[NONE⎪Stemming⎪Soundex⎪Metaphone⎪DoubleMetaphone]
- •
- FollowSymLinks [yes⎪NO]
- •
- HTMLLinksMetaName *metaname*
- •
- IgnoreFirstChar *string of characters*
- •
- IgnoreLastChar *string of characters*
- •
- IgnoreLimit *integer integer*
- •
- IgnoreMetaTags *list of names*
- •
- IgnoreNumberChars *list of characters*
- •
- IgnoreTotalWordCountWhenRanking [YES⎪no]
- •
- IgnoreWords [*list of stop words*⎪File: path]
- •
- ImageLinksMetaName *metaname*
- •
- IncludeConfigFile
- •
- IndexAdmin *text*
- •
- IndexAltTagMetaName *tagname*⎪as-text
- •
- IndexComments [yes⎪NO]
- •
- IndexContents
[TXT⎪HTML⎪XML⎪TXT2⎪HTML2⎪XML2⎪TXT*⎪HTML*⎪XML*]
*file extensions*
- •
- IndexDescription *text*
- •
- IndexDir [URL⎪directories or files]
- •
- IndexFile *path*
- •
- IndexName *text*
- •
- IndexOnly *list of file suffixes*
- •
- IndexPointer *text*
- •
- IndexReport [0⎪1⎪2⎪3]
- •
- MaxDepth *integer*
- •
- MaxWordLimit *integer*
- •
- MetaNameAlias *meta name* *list of aliases*
- •
- MetaNames *list of names*
- •
- MinWordLimit *integer*
- •
- NoContents *list of file suffixes*
- •
- obeyRobotsNoIndex [yes⎪NO]
- •
- ParserWarnLevel [0⎪1⎪2⎪3]
- •
- PreSortedIndex *list of property names*
- •
- PropCompressionLevel [0-9]
- •
- PropertyNameAlias *property name* *list of aliases*
- •
- PropertyNames *list of meta names*
- •
- PropertyNamesCompareCase *list of meta names*
- •
- PropertyNamesIgnoreCase *list of meta names*
- •
- PropertyNamesNoStripChars *list of meta names*
- •
- PropertyNamesDate *list of meta names*
- •
- PropertyNamesNumeric *list of meta names*
- •
- PropertyNamesMaxLength integer *list of meta names*
- •
- PropertyNamesSortKeyLength integer *list of meta
names*
- •
- ReplaceRules
[replace⎪remove⎪prepend⎪append⎪regex]
- •
- ResultExtFormatName name -x format string
- •
- SpiderDirectory *path*
- •
- StoreDescription [XML <tag>⎪HTML
<meta>⎪TXT size]
- •
- "SwishProgParameters *list of parameters*
- •
- SwishSearchDefaultRule
[<AND-WORD>⎪<or-word>]
- •
- TmpDir *path*
- •
- TranslateCharacters [*string1
string2*⎪:ascii7:]
- •
- TruncateDocSize *number of characters*
- •
- UndefinedMetaTags
[error⎪ignore⎪INDEX⎪auto]
- •
- UndefinedXMLAttributes
[DISABLE⎪error⎪ignore⎪index⎪auto]
- •
- UseStemming [yes⎪NO]
- •
- UseSoundex [yes⎪NO]
- •
- UseWords [*list of words*⎪File: path]
- •
- WordCharacters *string of characters*
- •
- XMLClassAttributes *list of XML attribute names*
Directives that Control Swish
These configuration directives control the general behavior of Swish-e.
- IncludeConfigFile *path to config file*
- This directive can be used to include configuration
directives located in another file.
IncludeConfigFile /usr/local/swish/conf/site_config.config
- IndexReport [0⎪1⎪2⎪3]
- This is how detailed you want reporting while indexing. You
can specify numbers 0 to 3. 0 is totally silent, 3 is the most verbose.
The default is 1.
This may be overridden from the command line via the "-v" switch
(see SWISH-RUN).
- ParserWarnLevel [0⎪1⎪2⎪3]
- Sets the error level when using the libxml2 parser for XML
and HTML. libxml2 will point out structural errors in your documents.
0 = no report
1 = fatal errors
2 = errors
3 = warnings
Currently (as of 2.4.4 - early 2005) libxml2 only reports errors at level 2.
The default as of 2.4.4 is "2" which should report any errors
that might indicate a problem parsing a document.
The exception to this is UTF-8 to Latin-1 conversion errors are reported at
level 3 (changed from 1 in 2.4.4). Although these errors indicate a
problem indexing text, they are only reported at level 3 because they can
be very common.
It is recommended that you index at ParserWarnLevel 3 when first starting
out to see what errors and warnings are reported. Then reduce the level
when you understand what documents are causing parsing problems and
why.
- IndexFile *path*
- Index file specifies the location of the generated index
file. If not specified, Swish-e will create the file index.swish-e
in the current directory.
IndexFile /usr/local/swish/site.index
- obeyRobotsNoIndex [yes⎪NO]
- When enabled, Swish-e will not index any HTML file that
contains:
<meta name="robots" content="noindex">
The default is to ignore these meta tags and index the document. This tag is
described at http://www.robotstxt.org/wc/exclusion.html.
Note: This feature is only available with the libxml2 HTML parser.
Also, if you are using the libxml2 parser (HTML2 and XML2) then you can use
the following comments in your documents to prevent indexing:
<!-- SwishCommand noindex -->
<!-- SwishCommand index -->
and/or these may be used also:
<!-- noindex -->
<!-- index -->
For example, these are very helpful to prevent indexing of common headers,
footers, and menus.
NOTE: This following items are currently not available. These items
require Swish-e to parse the configuration file while searching.
- EnableAltSearchSyntax [yes⎪NO]
-
NOTE: This following item is currently not
available.
Enable alternate search syntax. Allows the usage of a basic
"Altavista(c)", "Lycos(c)", etc. like search syntax.
This means a search query can contain "+" and "-" as
syntax parameter.
Example:
swish-e -w "+word1 +word2 -word3 word4 word5"
"+" = following word has to be in all found documents
"-" = following word may not be in any document found
" " = following word will be searched in documents
- SwishSearhOperators <and-word> <or-word>
<not-word>
-
NOTE: This following item is currently not
available.
Using this config directive you can change the boolean search operators of
Swish-e, e.g. to adapt these to your language. The default is: AND OR NOT
Example (german):
SwishSearchOperators UND ODER NICHT
- SwishSearchDefaultRule
[<AND-WORD>⎪<or-word>]
-
NOTE: This following item is currently not
available.
"SwishSearchDefaultRule" defines the default Boolean operator to
use if none is specified between words or phrases. The default is
"AND".
The word you specify must match one of the available
"SwishSearchOperators".
Example:
SwishSearchOperators UND ODER NICHT
# Make it act like a web search engine
SwishSearchDefaultRule ODER
- ResultExtFormatName name -x format string
-
NOTE: This following item is currently not
available.
The output of Swish-e can be defined by specifying a format string with the
"-x" command line argument. Using
"ResultExtFormatName" you can assign a predefined format string
to a name.
Examples:
ResultExtFormatName moreinfo "%c⎪%r⎪%t⎪%p⎪<author>⎪<publishyear>\n"
Then when searching you can specify the format string's name
swish-e ... -x moreinfo ...
See the "-x" switch in SWISH-RUN for more information about output
formats.
Administrative Headers Directives
Swish-e stores configuration information in the header of the index file. This
information can be retrieved while searching or by functions in the Swish-e C
library. There are a number of fields available for your own use. None of
these fields are required:
- IndexName *text*
- IndexDescription *text*
- IndexPointer *text*
- IndexAdmin *text*
- These variables specify information that goes into index
files to help users and administrators. IndexName should be the name of
your index, like a book title. IndexDescription is a short description of
the index or a URL pointing to a more full description. IndexPointer
should be a pointer to the original information, most likely a URL.
IndexAdmin should be the name of the index maintainer and can include name
and email information. These values should not be more than 70 or so
characters and should be contained in quotes. Note that the automatically
generated date in index files is in D/M/Y and 24-hour format.
Examples:
IndexName "Linux Documentation"
IndexDescription "This is an index of /usr/doc on our Linux machine."
IndexPointer http://localhost/swish/linux/index.html
IndexAdmin webmaster
Document Source Directives
These directives control
what documents are indexed and
how they
are accessed. See also Directives for the File Access method only and
Directives for the HTTP Access Method Only for directives that are specific to
those access methods.
- IndexDir [directories or files⎪URL⎪external
program]
- IndexDir defines the source of the documents for Swish-e.
Swish-e currently supports three file access methods: File system,
HTTP (also called spidering), and prog for reading
files from an external program.
The "-S" command line argument is used to select the file access
method.
swish-e -c swish.config -S fs - file system
swish-e -c swish.config -S http - internal http spider
swish-e -c swish.config -S prog - external program of any type
For the fs method of access IndexDir is a space-separated list
of files and directories to index. Use a forward slash as the path
separator in MS Windows.
For the http method the IndexDir setting is a list of
space-separated URLs.
For the prog method the IndexDir setting is a list of
space-separated programs to run (which generate documents for swish to
index).
You may specify more than one IndexDir directive.
Any sub-directories of any listed directory will also be indexed.
Note: While processing directories, Swish-e will ignore any files or
directories that begin with a dot ("."). You may index files or
directories that begin with a dot by specifying their name with
"IndexDir" or "-i".
Examples:
# Index this directory an any subdirectories
IndexDir /usr/local/home/http
# Index the docs directory in current directory
IndexDir ./docs
# Index these files in the current directory
IndexDir ./index.html ./page1.html ./page2.html
# and index this directory, too
IndexDir ../public_html
For the HTTP method of access specify the URL's from which you want
the spidering to begin.
Example:
IndexDir http://www.my-site.com/index.html
IndexDir http://localhost/index.html
Obviously, using the HTTP method to index is much slower than
indexing local files. Be well aware that some sites do not appreciate
spidering and may block your IP address. You may wish to contact the
remote site before spidering their web site. More information about
spidering can be found in Directives for the HTTP Access Method Only
below.
For the prog method of access IndexDir specifies the path to the
program(s) to execute. The external program must correctly format the
documents being passed back to Swish-e. Examples of external programs are
provided in the prog-bin directory.
IndexDir ./myprogram.pl
See prog for details.
Note: Not all directives work with all methods.
- NoContents *list of file suffixes*
- Files with these suffixes will not have their
contents indexed, but will have their path name (file name) indexed
instead.
If the file's type is HTML or HTML2 (as set by "IndexContents" or
"DefaultContents") then the file will be parsed for a HTML title
and that title will be indexed. Note that you must set the file's type
with "IndexContents" or "DefaultContents":
".html" and ".htm" are NOT type HTML by default. For
example:
IndexContents HTML* .htm .html
If a title is found, it will still be checked for "FileRules
title", and the file will be skipped if a match is found. See
"FileRules".
If the file's type is not HTML, or it is HTML and no title is found, then
the file's path will be indexed.
For example, this will allow searching by image file name.
NoContents .gif .xbm .au .mov .mpg .pdf .ps
Note: Using this directive will not cause files with those suffixes
to be indexed. That is, if you use "IndexOnly" to limit the
types of files that are indexed, then you must specify in
"IndexOnly" the same suffixes listed in "NoContents".
This does not work:
# Wrong!
IndexOnly .htm .html
NoContents .gif .xbm .au .mov .mpg .pdf .ps
A "-S prog" program may set the "No-Contents:" header to
enable this feature for a specific document (although it would be smarter
for the "-S prog" program to simply only send the pathname or
title to be indexed.
- ReplaceRules
[replace⎪remove⎪prepend⎪append⎪regex]
- ReplaceRules allows you to make changes to file pathnames
before they're indexed. These changed file names or URLs will be returned
in search results.
For example, you may index your files locally (with the File system indexing
method), yet return a URL in search results. This directive can be used to
map the file names to their respective URLs on your web server.
There are five operations you can specify: replace, append,
remove, prepend, and regex They will parse the
pathname in the order you've typed these commands.
This directive uses C library regex.h regular expressions.
replace "the string you want replaced" "what to change it to"
remove "a string to remove"
prepend "a string to add before the result"
append "a string to add after the result"
regex "/search string/replace string/options"
Remember, quotes are needed if an expression contains white space, and
backslashes have special meaning.
Regex is an Extended Regular Expression. The first character found is the
delimiter (but it's not smart enough to use matched chars such as [], (),
and {}).
The replace string may use substitution variables:
$0 the entire matched (sub)string
$1-$9 returns patterns captured in "(" ")" pairs
$` the string before the matched pattern
$' the string after the matched pattern
The options change the behavior of expression:
i ignore the case when matching
g repeat the substitution for the entire pattern
Examples:
ReplaceRules replace testdir/ anotherdir/
ReplaceRules replace [a-z_0-9]*_m.*\.html index.html
ReplaceRules remove testdir/
ReplaceRules prepend http://localhost/
ReplaceRules append .html
ReplaceRules regex !^/web/(.+)/!http://$1.domain.com/!
replaces a file path:
/web/search/foo/index.html
with
http://search.domain.com/foo/index.html
ReplaceRules regex #^#http://localhost/www#
ReplaceRules prepend http://localhost/www (same thing)
# Remove all extensions from C source files
ReplaceRules remove .c # ERROR! That "." is *any char*
ReplaceRules remove \.c # much better...
ReplaceRules remove "\\.c" # if in quotes you need double-backslash!
ReplaceRules remove "\.c" # ERROR! "\." -> "." and is *any char*
- IndexContents
[TXT⎪HTML⎪XML⎪TXT2⎪HTML2⎪XML2⎪TXT*⎪HTML*⎪XML*]
*file extensions*
- The "IndexContents" directive assigns one of
Swish-e's document parsers to a document, based on the its extension.
Swish-e currently knows how to parse TXT, HTML, and XML documents.
The XML2, HTML2, and TXT2 parsers are currently only available when Swish-e
is configured to use libxml2.
You may use XML*, HTML*, and TXT* to select the parser automatically. If
libxml2 is installed then it will be used to parse the content. Otherwise,
Swish-e's internal parsers will be used.
Documents that are not assigned a parser with "IndexContents"
will, by default, use the HTML2 parser if libxml2 is installed, otherwise
will use Swish-e's internal HTML parser. The "DefaultContents"
directive may be used to assign a parser to documents that do not match a
file extension defined with the "IndexContents" directive.
Example:
IndexContents HTML* .htm .html .shtml
IndexContents TXT* .txt .log .text
IndexContents XML* .xml
HTML* is the default type for all files, unless otherwise specified (and
this default can be changed by the DefaultContents directive.
Swish-e parses titles from HTML files, if available, and keeps track of
the context of the text for context searching (see "-t" in
SWISH-RUN).
If using filters (with the "FileFilter" directive) to convert
documents you should include those extensions, too. For example, if using
a filter to convert .pdf to .html, you need to tell Swish-e that .pdf
should be indexed by the internal HTML parser:
FileFilter .pdf pdf2html
IndexContent HTML .pdf
See also Document Filter Directives.
Note: Some of this may be changed in the future to use content-types
instead of file extensions. See SWISH-3.0
- DefaultContents
[TXT⎪HTML⎪XML⎪TXT2⎪HTML2⎪XML2⎪TXT*⎪HTML*⎪XML*]
- This sets the default parser for documents that are not
specified in IndexContents. If not specified the default is HTML.
The XML2, HTML2, and TXT2 parsers are currently only available when Swish-e
is configured to use libxml2.
You may use XML*, HTML*, and TXT* to select the parser automatically. If
libxml2 is installed then it will be used to parse the content. Otherwise,
Swish-e's internal parsers will be used.
Example:
DefaultContents HTML
The "DefaultContents" directive should be used when
spidering, as HTML files may be returned without a file extension (such as
when requesting a directory and the default index.html is returned).
- FileInfoCompression [yes⎪NO]
- ** This directive is currently not supported **
Setting FileInfoCompression to "yes" will compress the
index file to save disk space. This may result in longer indexing times.
The default is "no".
Also see the "-e" switch in SWISH-RUN for saving RAM during
indexing.
Document Contents Directives
These directives control what information is extracted from your source
documents, and how that information is made available during searching.
- ConvertHTMLEntities [YES⎪no]
- ASCII entities can be converted automatically while
indexing documents of type HTML (not for HTML2). For performance reasons
you may wish to set this to "no" if your documents do not
contain HTML entities. The default is "yes".
If "ConvertHTMLEntities" is set "no" the entities will
be indexed without conversion.
NOTE: Entities within XML files and files parsed with libxml2
(HTML2) are converted regardless of this setting.
- MetaNames *list of names*
- META names are a way to define "fields" in your
XML and HTML documents. You can use the META names in your queries to
limit the search to just the words contained in that META name of your
document. For example, you might have a META tagged field in your
documents called "subjects" and then you can search your
documents for the word "foo" but only return documents where
"foo" is within the "subjects" META tag.
swish-e -w subjects=foo
(See also the "-t" switch in SWISH-RUN for information about
context searching in HTML documents.)
The MetaNames directive is a space separated list. For example:
MetaNames meta1 meta2 keywords subjects
You may also use "UndefinedMetaTags" to specify automatic
extraction of meta names from your HTML and XML documents, and also to
ignore indexing content of meta tags.
META tags can have two formats in your HTML source documents:
<META NAME="meta1" CONTENT="some content">
and (if using the HTML2/libxml2 parser)
<meta1>
some content
</meta1>
But this second version is invalid HTML, and will generate a warning if
ParserWarningLevel is set (libxml2 only).
And in XML documents, use the format:
<meta1>
Some Content
</meta1>
Then you can limit your search to just META meta1 like this:
swish-e -w 'meta1=(apples or oranges)'
You may nest the XML and the start/end tag versions:
<keywords>
<tag1>
some content
</tag1>
<tag2>
some other content
</tag2>
<keywords>
Then you can search in both tag2 and tag2 with:
swish-e -w 'keywords=(query words)'
Swish-e indexes all text as some metaname. The default is
"swishdefault", so these two queries are the same:
swish-e -w foo
swish-e -w swishdefault=foo
When indexing HTML Swish-e indexes the HTML title as default text, so when
searching Swish-e will find matches in both the HTML body and the HTML
title. Swish also, by default, indexes content of meta tags. So:
swish-e -w foo
will find "foo" in the body, the title, or any meta tags.
Currently, there's no way to prevent Swish-e from indexing the title
contents along with the body contents, but see
"UndefinedMetaTags" for how to control the indexing of meta
tags.
If you would like to search just the title text, you may use:
MetaNames swishtitle
This will index the title text separately under the built-in swish internal
meta name "swishtitle". You may then search like
swish-e -w foo -- search for "foo" in title, body (and undefined meta tags)
swish-e -w swishtitle=foo -- search for "foo" in title only
In addition to swishtitle, you can limit searches to documents' path with:
MetaNames swishdocpath
Then to search for "foo" but also limit searches to documents that
include "manual" or "tutorial" in their path:
swish-e -w foo swishdocpath=(manual or tutorial)
See also "ExtractPath".
- MetaNameAlias *meta name* *list of aliases*
- MetaNameAlias assigns aliases for a meta name. For example,
if your documents contain meta tags "description",
"summary", and "overview" that all give a summary of
your documents you could do this:
MetaNames summary
MetaNameAlias summary description overview
Then all three tags will get indexed as meta tag "summary". You
can then search all the fields as:
-w summary=foo
The Alias work at search time, too. So these will also limit the search to
the "summary" meta name.
-w description=foo
-w overview=foo
- MetaNamesRank integer *list of meta names*
- You can assign a bias to metanames that will affect how
ranking is calculated. The range of values is from -10 to +10, with zero
being no bias.
MetaNamesRank 4 subject
MetaNamesRank 3 swishdefault
MetaNamesRank 2 author publisher
MetaNamesRank -5 wrongwords
This feature is still considered experimental. If you use it, please send
feedback to the discussion list.
- HTMLLinksMetaName *metaname*
- Allows indexing of HTML links. Normally, HTML links (href
tags) are not indexed by Swish-e. This directive defines a metaname, and
links will be indexed under this meta name.
Example:
HTMLLinksMetaName links
Now, to limit searches to files with a link to "home.html" do
this:
-w links='"home.html"'
The double quotes force a phrase search.
To make Swish-e index links as normal text, you may use:
HTMLLinksMetaName swishdefault
This feature is only available with the libxml2 HTML parser.
- ImageLinksMetaName *metaname*
- Allows indexing of image links under a metaname. Normally,
image URLs are not indexed.
Example:
ImagesLinksMetaName images
Now, if you would like to find pages that include a nice image of a beach:
-w images='beach'
To make Swish-e index links as normal text, you may use:
ImageLinksMetaName swishdefault
This feature is only available with the libxml2 HTML parser.
- IndexAltTagMetaName *tagname*⎪as-text
- Allows indexing of images <IMG> ALT tag text. Specify
either a tag name which will be used as a metaname, or the special text
"as-text" which says to index the ALT text as if it were plain
text at the current location.
For example, by specifying a tag name:
IndexAltTagMetaName bar
would make this markup:
<foo>
<img src="/someimage.png" alt="Alt text here">
</foo>
appear like
<foo>
<bar>Alt text here</bar>
</foo>
Then the normal rules ("MetaNames" and "PropertyNames")
apply to how that text is indexed.
If you use the special tag "as-text" then
<foo>
<img src="/someimage.png" alt="Alt text here">
</foo>
simply becomes
<foo>
Alt text here
</foo>
This feature is only available when using the libxml2 parser (HTML2 and
XML2).
- AbsoluteLinks [yes⎪NO]
- If this is set true then Swish-e will attempt to convert
relative URIs extracted from HTML documents for use with
"HTMLLinksMetaName" and "ImageLinksMetaName" into
absolute URIs. Swish-e will use any <BASE> tag found in the
document, otherwise it will use the file's pathname. The pathname used
will be the pathname *after* "ReplaceRules" has been applied to
the document's pathname.
For example, say you wish to index image links under the metaname
"images".
ImageLinksMetaName images
If an image is located in http://localhost/vacations/france/index.html and
"AbsoluteLinks" is set to no, then a image within that document:
<img src="beach.jpeg">
will only index "beach.jpeg".
But, if you want more detail when searching, you can enable
"AbsoluteLinks" and Swish-e will index
"http://localhost/vacations/france/beach.jpeg". You can then
look for images of beaches, but only in France:
-w images=(beach and france)
This also means you can search for any images within France:
-w images=(france)
This feature is only available with the libxml2 HTML parser.
- UndefinedMetaTags
[error⎪ignore⎪INDEX⎪auto]
- This directive defines the behavior of Swish-e during
indexing when a meta name is found but is not listed in
MetaNames. There are four choices:
- error
- If a meta name is found that is not listed in
MetaNames then indexing will be halted and an error reported.
- ignore
- The contents of the meta tag are ignored and not
indexed unless a metaname has been defined with the "MetaNames"
directive.
- index
- The contents of the meta tag are indexed, but placed in the
main index unless there's an enclosing metatag already in force. This is
the default.
- auto
- This method create meta tags automatically for HTML meta
names and XML elements. Using this is the same as specifying all the meta
names explicitly in a MetaNames directive.
- UndefinedXMLAttributes
[DISABLE⎪error⎪ignore⎪index⎪auto]
- This is similar to "UndefinedMetaTags", but only
applies to XML documents (parsed with libxml2). This allows indexing of
attribute content, and provides a way to index the content under a
metaname. For example, "UndefinedXMLAttributes" can make
<person age="23">
John Doe
</person>
look like the following to swish:
<person>
<person.age>
23
</person.age>
John Doe
</person>
What happens to the text "23" will depend on the setting of
"UndefinedXMLAttributes":
- disable
- XML attributes are not parsed and not indexed. This is the
default.
- error
- If the concatenated meta name (e.g. person.age) is not
listed in MetaNames then indexing will be halted and an error
reported.
- ignore
- The contents of the meta tag are ignored and not
indexed unless a metaname has been defined with the "MetaNames"
directive.
- index
- The contents of the meta tag are indexed, but placed in the
main index unless there's an enclosing metatag already in force.
- auto
- This method will create meta tags from the combined element
and attributes (and XML Class name) This options should be used with
caution as it can generate a lot of metaname entries.
See also the example below "XMLClassAttribues".
- XMLClassAttributes *list of XML attribute names*
- Combines an XML class name with the element name to make up
a metaname. For example:
XMLClassAttributes class
<person class="first">
John
</person>
<person class="last">
Doe
</person>
Will appear to Swish-e as:
<person>
<person.first>
John
</person.first>
</person>
<person>
<person.last>
Doe
</person.last>
</person>
How the data is indexed depends on "MetaNames" and
"UndefinedMetaTags".
Here's an example using the following configuration which combines the two
directives "XMLClassAttributes" and
"UndefinedXMLAttributes".
XMLClassAttributes class
UndefinedMetaTags auto
UndefinedXMLAttributes auto
IndexContents XML2 .xml
The source XML file looks like:
<xml> <person class="student" phone="555-1212" age="102"> John </person>
<person greeting="howdy">Bill</person> </xml>
Swish-e parses as:
./swish-e -c 2 -i 1.xml -T parsed_tags parsed_text -v 0
Indexing Data Source: "File-System"
<xml> (MetaName)
<person> (MetaName)
<person.student> (MetaName)
<person.student.phone> (MetaName)
555-1212
</person.student.phone>
<person.student.age> (MetaName)
102
</person.student.age>
John
</person>
<person> (MetaName)
<person.greeting> (MetaName)
howdy
</person.greeting>
Bill
</person>
</xml>
Indexing done!
One thing to note is that the first <person> block finds a class name
"student" so all metanames that are created from attributes use
the combined name "person.student". The second <person>
block doesn't contain a "class" so, the attribute name is
combined directly with the element name (e.g.
"person.greeting").
- ExtractPath *metaname*
[replace⎪remove⎪prepend⎪append⎪regex]
- This directive can be used to index extracted parts of a
document's path. A common use would be to limit searches to specific areas
of your file tree.
The extracted string will be indexed under the specified meta name.
See "ReplaceRules" for a description of the various pattern
replacement methods, but you will use the regex method.
For example, say your file system (or web tree) was organized into
departments:
/web/sales/foo...
/web/parts/foo...
/web/accounting/foo...
And you wanted a way to limit searches to just documents under
"sales".
ExtractPath department regex !^/web/([^/]+)/.*$!$1!
Which says, extract out the department name (as substring $1) and index it
as meta name "department". Then to limit a search to the sales
department:
swish-e -w foo AND department=sales
Note that the "regex" method uses a substitution pattern, so to
index only a sub-string match the entire document path in the
regular expression, as shown above. Otherwise any part that is not matched
will end up in the substitution pattern.
See the "ExtractPathDefault" option for a way to set a value if
not patterns match.
Although unlikely, you may use more than one "ExtractPath"
directive. More than one directive of the same meta name will
operate successively (in order listed in the configuration file) on the
path. This allows you to use regular expressions on the results of the
previous pattern substitution (as if piping the output from one expression
to the patter of the next).
ExtractPath foo regex !^(...).+$!$1!
ExtractPath foo regex !^.+(.)$!$1!
So, the third letter is indexed as meta name "foo" if both
patterns match.
ExtractPath foo regex !^X(...).+$!$1!
ExtractPath foo regex !^.+(.)$!$1!
Now (not the "X"), if the first pattern doesn't match, the last
character of the path name is indexed. You must be clear on this behavior
if you are using more than one "ExtractPath" directive with the
same metaname.
The document path operated on is the real path swish used to access the
document. That is, the "ReplaceRules" directive has no effect on
the path used with "ExtractPath".
The full path is used for each meta name if more than one
"ExtractPath" directive is used. That is, changes to the path
used in "ExtractPath foo" do not affect the path used by
"ExtractPath bar".
- ExtractPathDefault *metaname* default_value
- This can be used with "ExtractPath" to set a
default string to index under the given metaname if none of the
"ExtractPath" patterns match.
For example, say your want to index each document with a metaname
"department" based on the following path examples:
/web/sales/foo...
/web/parts/foo...
/web/accounting/foo...
But you are also indexing documents that do not follow that pattern and you
want to search those separately, too.
ExtractPath department regex !^/web/([^/]+)/.*$!$1!
ExtractPathDefault department other
Now, you may search like this:
-w foo department=(sales) - limit searches to the sales documents
-w foo department=(parts) - limit searches to the parts documents
-w foo department=(accounting) - limit searches to the accounting documents
-w foo department=(other) - everything but sales, parts, and accounting.
This basically is a shortcut for:
-w foo not department=(sales or parts or accounting)
but you don't need to keep track of what was extracted.
- PropertyNames *list of meta names*
- PropertyNamesCompareCase *list of meta names*
- PropertyNamesIgnoreCase *list of meta names*
- Swish-e allows you to specify certain META tags that can be
used as document properties. The contents of any META tag
that has been identified as a document property can be returned as part of
the search results along with the rank, file name, title, and document
size (see the "-p" and "-x" switches in SWISH-RUN).
Properties are useful for returning additional data from documents in search
results -- this saves the effort of reading and parsing the source files
while reading Swish-e search results, and is especially useful when the
source documents are no longer available or slow to access (e.g. over
http).
Another feature of properties is that Swish-e can use the PropertyNames for
sorting the search results (see the "-s" switch).
PropertyNames author subjects
Two variations are available. "PropertyNamesCompareCase" and
"PropertyNamesIgnoreCase". These tell Swish-e to either ignore
or compare case when sorting results. The default for
"PropertyNames" is to ignore the case.
PropertyNamesIgnoreCase subject
PropertyNamesCompareCase keyword
The defaults for "internal" properties are:
swishtitle -- ignore the case
swishdocpath -- compare case
swishdescription -- compare case
These can be overridden with "PropertyNamesCompareCase" and
"PropertyNamesIgnoreCase".
PropertyNamesCompareCase swishtitle
Use of PropertyNames will increase the size of your index files, sometimes
significantly. Properties will be compressed if Swish-e is compiled with
zlib as described in the INSTALL manual page.
If Swish-e finds more than one property of the same name in a document the
property's contents will be concatinated for strings, and a warning issues
for numeric (or date) properties.
- PropertyNamesNoStripChars
- PropertyNamesNoStripChars specifies that the listed
properties should not have strings of low ASCII characters replaced with a
space character. Properties will be stored as found in the document.
When printing properties with the swish-e binary newlines are replaced with
a space character. Use the swish-e library (or SWISH::API perl module) to
fetch properties without newlines replaced.
- PropertyNamesNumeric
- This directive is similar to "PropertyNames", but
it flags the property as being a string of digits (integer value) that
will be stored as binary data instead of a string. This allows sorting
with "-s" and limiting with "-L" to sort and limit the
property correctly.
Swish-e uses strtoul(3) to convert the string into an unsigned long integer.
Therefore, only positive integers can be stored.
Future versions of Swish-e may be able to store different property types
(such as negative integers and real numbers). This directive may change in
future releases of Swish.
- PropertyNamesDate
- This directive is exactly like
"PropertyNamesNumeric", but it also flags the number as a
machine timestamp (seconds since Epoch), and will print a formatted date
when returning this property. See "-x" in SWISH-RUN.
Swish-e will not parse dates when indexing; you must use a timestamp.
- PropertyNameAlias *property name* *list of aliases*
- This allows aliases for a property name. For example, if
you are indexing HTML files, plus XML files that are written in English,
German, and Spanish and thus use the tags "title",
"titel", and "título" you can use:
PropertyNameAlias swishtitle title titel título titulo
Note that "swishtitle" is the built-in property used to store the
title of a document, and therefore you do not need to specify it as a
PropertyName before use.
- PropertyNamesMaxLength integer *list of meta names*
- This option will set the max length of the text stored in a
property. You must specify a number between 0 and the max integer size on
your platform, and a list of properties. The properties specified must not
be aliases.
If any of the property names do not exist they will be created (e.g. you do
not need to define the property with PropertyNames first).
In general, this feature will only be useful when parsing HTML or XML with
the libxml2 parser.
For example:
PropertyNamesMaxLength 1000 swishdescription
PropertyNameAlias swishdescription body
Is somewhat like
StoreDescription HTML <body> 1000
StoreDescription XML <body> 1000
StoreDescription HTML2 <body> 1000
StoreDescription XML2 <body> 1000
but StoreDescription allows setting the tag for each parser type.
PropertyNamesMaxLength 1000 headings
PropertyNameAlias headings h1 h2 h3 h4
collects all the heading text into a single property called
"headings", not to exceed 1000 characters.
- PropertyNamesSortKeyLength integer *list of meta
names*
- Sets the length of the string used when sorting. The
default is 100 characters. The -T metanames debugging option will list the
current values for an index.
This setting is used when sorting during indexing, and perhaps when sorting
while searching. It also effects the order when limiting to a range of
values with the -L option.
- PreSortedIndex *list of property names*
- By default Swish-e generates presorted tables while
indexing for each property name. This allows faster sorting when
generating results. On large document collections this presorting may add
to the indexing time, and also adds to the total size of the index. This
directive can be used to customize exactly which properties will be
presorted.
If "PreSortedIndex" it is not present in the config file
(default action), all the properties will be presorted at indexing time.
If it is present without any parameter, no properties will be presorted.
Otherwise, only the property names specified will be presorted.
For example, if you only wish to sort results by a property called
"title":
PropertyNames title age time
PreSortedIndex title
- StoreDescription [XML <tag> size⎪HTML
<meta> size⎪TXT size]
-
StoreDescription allows you to store a document
description in the index file. This description can be returned in your
search results when the "-x" switch is used to include the
swishdescription for extended results, or by using "-p
swishdescription".
The document type (XML, HTML and TXT) must match the document type currently
being indexed as set by "IndexContents" or
"DefaultContents". See those directives for possible values. A
common problem is using "StoreDescription" yet not setting the
document's type with "IndexContents" or
"DefaultContents". Another problem is different types:
IndexContents HTML2 .html
StoreDescription HTML <body>
Then .html documents are assigned a type of HTML2 (and parsed by the libxml2
parser), but the description will not be stored since it is type HTML
instead of HTML2.
For text documents you specify the type TXT (or TXT2 or TXT*) and the number
of characters to capture.
StoreDescription TXT 20
The above stores only the first twenty characters from the text file in the
Swish-e index file.
For HTML, and XML file types, specify the tag to use for the description,
and optionally the number of characters to capture. If not specified will
capture the entire contents of the tag.
StoreDescription HTML <body> 20000
StoreDescription XML <desc> 40
Again, note that documents must be assigned a document type with
"IndexContents" or "DefaultContents" to use this
feature.
Swish-e will compress the descriptions (or any other large property) if
compiled to use zlib (see INSTALL). This is recommended when using
StoreDescription and a large number of documents. Compression of 30% to
50% is not uncommon with HTML files.
- PropCompressionLevel [0-9]
- This directive sets the compression level used when storing
properties to disk. A setting of zero is no compression, and a setting of
nine is the most compression.
The default depends on the default setting compiled with zlib, but is
typically six.
This option is useful when using "StoreDescription" to store a
large amount text in properties (or if using "PropertyNames"
with large property sizes).
Properties must be over a value defined in config.h (100 is the
default) before compression will be attempted. Swish-e will never store
the results of the compression if the compressed data is larger than the
original data.
This option is only available when Swish-e is compiled with zlib
support.
- TruncateDocSize *number of characters*
- TruncateDocSize limits the size of a document while
indexing documents and/or using filters. This config directive truncates
the numbers of read bytes of a document to the specified size. This means:
if a document is larger, read only the specified numbers of bytes of the
document.
Example:
TruncateDocSize 10000000
The default is zero, which means read all data.
Warning: If you use TruncateDocSize, use it with care! TruncateDocSize is a
safety belt only, to limit e.g. filteroutput, when accessing databases, or
to limit "runnaway" filters. Truncating doc input may destroy
document structures for Swish-e (e.g. swish may miss closing tags for XML
or HTML documents).
TruncateDocSize does not currently work with the "prog" input
source method.
- FuzzyIndexingMode
NONE⎪Stemming⎪Soundex⎪Metaphone⎪DoubleMetaphone
- Selects the type of index to create. Only one type of index
may be created.
It's a good idea to create both a normal index and a fuzzy index and allow
your search interface select which index to use. Many people find the
fuzzy searches to be too fuzzy.
The available fuzzy indexing options can be displayed by running
swish-e -T LIST_FUZZY_MODES
Available options include:
- None
- Words are stored in the index without any conversion. This
is the default.
- Stemming_*
- This options uses one of the installed Snowball stemmers
(http://snowball.tartarus.org/).
The installed stemmers can be viewed by running
swish-e -T LIST_FUZZY_MODES
For example, to use the Spanish stemming module:
FuzzyIndexingMode Stemming_es
- Stem or Stemming_en
-
**This option is no longer supported.**
Selects the legacy Swish-e English stemmer.
This is deprecated in favor of the Snowball English stemmer Stemming_en1.
Words are converted using the Porter stemming algorithm.
From: http://www.tartarus.org/~martin/PorterStemmer/
The Porter stemming algorithm (or Porter stemmer) is a
process for removing the commoner morphological and inflexional
endings from words in English. Its main use is as part of a
term normalisation process that is usually done when setting up
Information Retrieval systems.
This will help a search for "running" to also find "run"
and "runs", for example.
The stemming function does not convert words to their root, rather
programmatically removes endings on words in an attempt to make similar
words with different endings stem to the same string of characters. It's
not a perfect system, and searches on stemmed indexes often return curious
results. For example, two entirely different words may stem to the same
word.
Stemming also can be confusing when used with a wildcard (truncation). For
example, you might expect to find the word "running" by
searching for "runn*". But this fails when using a stemmed
index, as "running" stems to "run", yet searching for
"runn*" looks for words that start with "runn".
- Soundex
- Soundex was developed in the 1880s so records for people
with similar sounding names could be found more readily. Soundex is a
coded surname based on the way a surname sounds rather than spelling.
Surnames that sound similar, like Smith and Smyth, are filed together
under the same Soundex code. This is mostly useful for US English.
Soundex should not be used to search for sound-alike words. Metaphone would
be more appropriate for generic sound matching of words. Soundex should
only be used where you need to search multiple documents for proper names
which sound similar. This is primarily used for indexing genealogical
records. This may be useful for indexing other collections of data
consisting mostly of names. Many common name variations are matched by
Soundex. The only notable exception is the first letter of the name. The
first letter is not matched for sound.
- Metaphone and DoubleMetaphone
- Words are transformed into a short series of letters
representing the sound of the word (in English). Metaphone algorithms are
often used for looking up mis-spelled words in dictionary programs.
From: http://aspell.sourceforge.net/metaphone/
Lawrence Philips' Metaphone Algorithm is an algorithm which returns
the rough approximation of how an English word sounds.
The "DoubleMetaphone" mode will sometimes generate two different
metaphones for the same word. This is supposed to be useful when a word
may be pronounced more than one way.
A metaphone index should give results somewhere in between Soundex and
Stemming.
- UseStemming [yes⎪NO]
- Put yes to apply word stemming algorithm during indexing,
else no.
UseStemming no
UseStemming yes
When UseStemming is set to "yes" every word is stemmed before
placing it in to the index.
This option is deprecated. It has been superceded by
"FuzzyIndexingMode".
- UseSoundex [yes⎪NO]
- When UseSoundex is set to "yes" every word is
converted to a Soundex code before placing it in to the index.
This option is deprecated. It has been superceded by
"FuzzyIndexingMode".
- IgnoreTotalWordCountWhenRanking [YES⎪no]
- Put yes to ignore the total number of words in the file
when calculating ranking. Often better with merges and small files.
Default is yes.
IgnoreTotalWordCountWhenRanking no
The default was changed from no to yes in version 2.2.
NOTE: must be set to no if you intend to use the -R 1 option
when searching.
- MinWordLimit *integer*
- Set the minimum length of an word. Shorter words will not
be indexed. The default is 1 (as defined in src/config.h).
MinWordLimit 5
- MaxWordLimit *integer*
- Set the maximum length of an indexable word. Every longer
word will not be indexed. The Default is 40 (as defined in
src/config.h).
- WordCharacters *string of characters*
- IgnoreFirstChar *string of characters*
- IgnoreLastChar *string of characters*
- BeginCharacters *string of characters*
- EndCharacters *string of characters*
- These settings define what a word consists of to the
Swish-e indexing engine. Compiled in defaults are in src/config.h.
When indexing Swish-e uses WordCharacters to split up the document
into words. Words are defined by any string of non-blank characters that
contain only the characters listed in WordCharacters. If a string of
characters includes a character that is not in WordCharacters then the
word will be spit into two or more separate words.
For example:
WordCharacters abde
Would turn "abcde" into two words "ab" and
"de".
Next, of these words, any characters defined in IgnoreFirstChar are
stripped off the start of the word, and IgnoreLastChar characters
are stripped off the end of the word. This allows, for example, periods
within a word (www.slashdot.com), but not at the end of a word. Characters
in IgnoreFirstChar and IgnoreLastChar must be in WordCharacters.
Finally, the resulting words MUST begin with one of the characters listed in
BeginCharacters and end with one of the characters listed in
EndCharacters. BeginCharacters and EndCharacters must be a subset
of the characters in WordCharacters. Often, WordCharacters,
BeginCharacters and EndCharacters will all be the same.
Note that the same process applies to the query while searching.
Getting these settings correct will take careful consideration and practice.
It's helpful to create an index of a single test file, and then look at
the words that are placed in the index (see the "-v 4",
"-D" and "-k" searching switches).
Currently there is only support for eight-bit characters.
Example:
WordCharacters .abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
BeginCharacters abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
EndCharacters abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
IgnoreFirstChar .
IgnoreLastChar .
So the string
Please visit http://www.example.com/path/to/file.html.
will be indexed as the following words:
please
visit
http
www.example.com
path
to
file.html
Which means that you can search for "www.example.com" as a single
word, but searching for just "example" will not find the
document.
Note: when indexing HTML documents HTML entities are converted to their
character equivalents before being processed with these directives. This
is a change from previous versions of Swish-e where you were required to
include the characters "0123456789&#;" to index entities.
See also "ConvertHTMLEntities"
- Buzzwords [*list of buzzwords*⎪File: path]
- The Buzzwords option allows you to specify words that will
be indexed regardless of WordCharacters, BeginCharacters, EndCharacters,
stemming, soundex and many of the other checks done on words while
indexing.
Buzzwords are case insensitive.
Buzzwords should be separated by spaces and may span multiple directives. If
the special format "File:filename" is used then the Buzzwords
will be read from an external file during indexing.
Examples:
Buzzwords C++ TCP/IP
Buzzwords File: ./buzzwords.lst
If a Buzzword contains search operator characters they must be backslashed
when searching. For example:
Buzzwords C++ TCP/IP web=http
./swish-e -w 'web\=http'
Buzzwords are found by splitting the text on whitespace, removing
"IgnoreFirstChar" and "IgnoreLastChar" characters from
the word, and then comparing with the list of "Buzzwords".
Therefore, if adding "Buzzwords" to an index you will probably
want to define "IgnoreFirstChar" and "IgnoreLastChar"
settings.
Note: Buzzwords specific settings for "IgnoreFirstChar" and
"IgnoreLastChar" may be used in the future.
- CompressPositions [yes⎪NO]
- This option enables zlib compression for individual word
data in the index file. The default is NO, that is the index word data is
not compressed by default.
Enabling this option can reduced the size of the index file, but at the
expense of slower wildcard search times.
The default changed from YES to NO starting with version 2.4.3.
- IgnoreWords [*list of stop words*⎪File: path]
- The IgnoreWords option allows you to specify words to
ignore, called stopwords. The default is to not use any stopwords.
Words should be separated by spaces and may span multiple directives. If the
special format "File:filename" is used then the stop words will
be read from an external file during indexing.
In previous versions of Swish-e you could use the directive
IgnoreWords swishdefault - obsolete!
to include a default list of compiled in stopwords. This keyword is no
longer supported.
Examples:
IgnoreWords www http a an the of and or
IgnoreWords File: ./stopwords.de
- UseWords [*list of words*⎪File: path]
- UseWords defines the words that Swish-e will index.
Only the words listed will be indexed.
You can specify a list of words following the directive (you may specify
more than one "UseWords" directive in a config file), and/or use
the "File:" form to specify a path to a file containing the
words:
UseWords perl python pascal fortran basic cobal php
UseWords File: /path/to/my/wordlist
Please drop the Swish-e list a note if you actually use this feature. It may
be removed from future versions.
- IgnoreLimit *integer integer*
- This automatically omits words that appear too often in the
files (these words are called stopwords). Specify a whole percentage and a
number, such as "80 256". This omits words that occur in over
80% of the files and appear in over 256 files. Comment out to turn off
auto-stopwording.
IgnoreLimit 50 1000
Swish-e must do extra processing to adjust the entire index when this
feature is used. It is recommended that instead of using this feature that
you decided what words are stopwords and add them to IngoreWords in
your configuration file. To do this, use IgnoreLimit one time and note the
stop words that are found while indexing. Add this list to IgnoreWords,
and then remove IgnoreLimit from the configuration file.
- IgnoreMetaTags *list of names*
- "IgnoreMetaTags" defines a list of metatags to
ignore while indexing XML files (and HTML files if using libxml2 for
parsing HTML). All text within the tags will be ignored -- both for
indexing ("MetaNames") and properties
("PropertyNames"). To still parse properties, yet do not index
the text, see "UndefinedMetaTags".
This option is useful to avoid indexing specific data from a file. For
example:
<person>
<first_name>
William
</first_name> <last_name>
Shakespeare
</last_name> <updated_date>
April 25, 1999
</updated_date>
</person>
In the above example you might not want to index the updated date,
and therefore prevent finding this record by searching
-w 'person=(April)'
This is solved by:
IgnoreMetaTags updated_date
See also "UndefinedMetaTags".
- IgnoreNumberChars *list of characters*
- Experimental Feature
This experimental feature can be used to define a set of characters that
describe a number. If a word is found to contain only those characters it
will not be indexed. The characters listed must be part of
"WordCharacters" settings. In other words, the "word"
checked is a word that Swish-e would otherwise index.
For example,
IgnoreNumberChars 0123456789$.,
Then Swish-e would not index the following:
123
123,456.78
$123.45
You might be tempted to avoid indexing hex numbers with:
IgnoreNumberChars 0123456789abcdef
which will not index 0D31, but will also not index the word "bad".
This is an experimental feature that may change in future versions. One
possible change is to use regular expressions instead.
- IndexComments [NO⎪yes]
- This option allows the user decide if to index the contents
of HTML comments. Default is no. Set to yes if comment indexing is
required.
IndexComments yes
Note: This is a change in the default behavior prior to version 2.2.
- TranslateCharacters [*string1
string2*⎪:ascii7:]
- The TranslateCharacters directive maps the characters in
string1 to the characters listed in string2.
For example:
# This will index a_b as a-b and ámo as amo
TranslateCharacters _á -a
"TranslateCharacters :ascii7:" is a predefined set of characters
that will translate eight bit characters to ascii7 characters. Using the
:ascii7: rule will translate "Ääç" to
"aac". This means: searching "Çelik",
"çelik" or "celik" will all match the same
word.
TranslateCharacters is done early in the indexing process, after converting
HTML entities but before splitting the input text into words based on
WordCharacters. So characters you are translating from do
not need to be listed in word characters.
The same character translations take place when searching.
- BumpPositionCounterCharacters *string*
- When indexing Swish-e assigns a word position to each word.
This enables phrase searching. There may be cases where you would like to
prevent phrase matching. The BumpPositionCounterCharacters directive
allows you to specify a set of characters that when found in the text will
increment the word position -- effectively preventing phrase matches
across that character.
For example, if you have a tag:
<subjects>
computer programming ⎪ apple computers
</subjects>
You might want to prevent matching "programming apple" in that
meta name.
BumpPositionCounterCharacters ⎪
There is no default, and you may list a string of characters.
- DontBumpPositionOnEndTags *list of names*
- DontBumpPositionOnStartTags *list of names*
- Since metatags are typically separate data fields, the word
position counter is automatically bumped between metatags (actually,
bumped when a start tag is found and when an end tag is found). This
prevents matching a phrase that spans more than one metaname.
"DontBumpPositionOnEndTags" and
"DontBumpPositionOnStartTags" disables this feature for the
listed metanames.
For example,
<person>
<first_name>
William
</first_name>
<last_name>
Shakespeare
</last_name>
<updated_date>
April 25, 1999
</updated_date>
</person>
In the configuration file:
DontBumpPositionOnEndTags first_name
DontBumpPositionOnStartTags last_name
This configuration allows this phrase search
-w 'person=("william shakespeare")'
but this phrase search will fail
-w 'person=("shakespeare april")'
Directives for the File Access method only
Some directives have different uses depending on the source of the documents.
These directives are only valid when using the
File system method of
indexing.
- IndexOnly *list of file suffixes*
- This directive specifies the allowable file suffixes
(extensions) while indexing. The default is to index all files specified
in IndexDir.
# Only index .html .htm and .q files
IndexOnly .html .htm .q
"IndexOnly" checks that the file end in the characters listed. It
does not check "extensions". "IndexOnly" is tested
right before "FileRules" is processed.
- FollowSymLinks [yes⎪NO]
- Put "yes" to follow symbolic links in indexing,
else "no". Default is no.
FollowSymLinks no
FollowSymLinks yes
Note that when set to "no" extra stat(2) system calls must
be made for each file. For large number of files you may see a small
reduction in indexing time by setting this to "yes".
See also the "-l" switch in SWISH-RUN.
- FileRules [type] [contains⎪is⎪regex] *regular
expression*
- FileMatch [type] [contains⎪is⎪regex] *regular
expression*
- FileRules and FileMatch are used to, respectively, exclude
and include files and directories to index. Since, by default, Swish-e
indexes all files and recurses all directories (but see also
"FollowSymLinks") you will typically only use
"FileRules" to exclude files or directories.
"FileMatch" is useful in a few cases, for example, to override
the behavior of "IndexOnly". Some examples are included below.
Except for "FileRules title ...", this feature is only available
for file access method (-S fs), which is the default indexing mode. Also,
any pathname modification with "ReplaceRules" happens after the
check for "FileRules". (It's unlikely that you would exclude
files with "FileRules" based on text you added with
"ReplaceRules"!)
The regular expression is a C regex.h extended regular expression. You may
supply more than one regular expression per line, or use separate
directives. Preceding the regular expression with the word "not"
negates the match.
The regular expression is compared against [type] as described below.
For historical reasons, you can specify "contains" or
"is". "is" simply forces the regular expression to
match at the start and end of the string (by internally prepending
"^" and appending "$" to the regular expression).
The "regex" option requires delimiter characters:
FileRules title regex /^private/i
The only advantage of "regex" is if you want to do case
insensitive matches, or simply like your regular expressions to look like
perl regular expressions. You must use matching delimiters; (), {}, and
[], are not currently supported for no good reason other than laziness.
Use quotes (" or ') around a pattern if it contains any white space.
Note that the backslash character becomes the escape character within
quotes.
For example, these sets generate the same regular expressions.
FileRules title is hello
FileRules title contains ^hello$
FileRules title regex /^hello$/
These all need quotes due to the included space character
FileRules title is "hello there"
FileRules title contains "^hello there$"
FileRules title regex "!^hello there$!"
These show how the backslash must be doubled inside of quotes. Swish-e
converts a double-backslash into a single backslash, and then passes that
single onto the regular expression compiler.
FileRules filename regex /\.pdf/
FileRules filename regex "/\\.pdf/"
FileRules filename regex !hello\\there! # need double for real backslash
FileRules filename regex "!hello\\\\there!" # need double-double inside of quotes
Matching Types
The following types of match strings my be supplied:
FileRules pathname
FileRules dirname
FileRules filename
FileRules directory
FileRules title
FileMatch pathname
FileMatch filename
FileMatch dirname
FileMatch directory
pathname matches the regular expression against the current
pathname. The pathname may or may not be absolute depending on what you
supplied to "IndexDir".
Example:
# Don't index paths that contain private or hidden
FileRules pathname contains (private⎪hidden)
# Same thing
FileRules pathname regex /(private⎪hidden)/
# Don't index exe files
FileRules pathname contains \.exe$
dirname and filename split the path name by the last
delimiter character into a directory name, and a file name. Then these are
compared against the patterns supplied. Directory names do not have
a trailing slash. All path names use the forward slash as a delimiter
within Swish-e.
Example:
# Same as last example - don't index *.exe files.
FileRules filename contains \.exe$
# Don't index any file called test.html files
FileRules filename contains ^test\.html$
# Same thing
FileRules filename is test\.html
# Don't index any directories that contain "old" (/usr/local/myold/docs)
FileRules dirname contains old
# Don't index any directories that contain the path segment "old" (/usr/local/old/foo)
FileRules dirname contains /old/
# Index only .htm, .html, plus any all-digit file names
IndexOnly .htm .html
FileMatch filename contains ^\d+$
# Same as previous, but maybe a little slower
FileRules filename regex not !\.(htm⎪html)$!
FileMatch filename contains ^\d+$
Swish-e checks these settings in the order of "pathname",
"dirname", and "filename", and "FileMatch"
patterns are checked before "FileRules", in general. This allows
you to exclude most files with "FileRules", yet allow in a few
special cases with "FileMatch". For example:
# Exclude all files of .exe, .bin, and .bat
FileRules filename contains \.(exe⎪bin⎪bat)$
# But, let these two in
FileMatch filename is baseball\.bat incoming_mail\.bin
# Same, but as a single pattern
FileMatch filename is (baseball\.bat⎪incoming_mail\.bin)
The "directory" type is somewhat unique. When Swish-e recurses
into a directory it will compare all the files in the directory
with the pattern and then decide if that entire directory should or should
not be indexed (or recursed). Note that you are matching against file
names in a directory -- and some of those names may be directory names.
A "FileRules directory" match will cause Swish-e to ignore all
files and sub-directories in the current directory.
Warning: A match with "FileMatch directory" says to index
everything in the *current* directory and ignore any
FileRules for this directory.
Example:
# Don't index any directories (and sub directories) that contain
# a file (or sub-directory) called "index.skip"
FileRules directory contains ^index\.skip$
# Don't index directories that contain a .htaccess file.
FileRules directory contains ^\.htaccess
Note: While processing directories, Swish-e will ignore any files or
directories that begin with a dot ("."). You may index files or
directories that begin with a dot by specifying their name with
"IndexDir" or "-i".
"title" checks for a pattern match in an HTML title.
Example:
FileRules title contains construction example pointers
# This example says to ignore case
FileRules title regex "/^Internal document/i"
Note: "FileRules title" works for any input method (fs, prog, or
http) that is parsed as HTML, and where a title was found in the document.
In case all this seems a bit confusing, processing a directory happens in
the following order.
First the directory name is checked:
FileRules dirname - reject entire directory if matches
Next the directory is scanned and each file name (which might be the name of
a sub-directory) is checked:
FileRules directory - reject entire dir if *any* files match
FileMatch directory - accept entire dir if *any* files match
Then, unless "FileMatch directory" matched, each file is tested
with FileMatch. A match says to index the file without further testing
(i.e. overrides FileRules and IndexOnly):
FileMatch pathname \
FileMatch dirname - file is accepted if any match
FileMatch filename /
otherwise
IndexOnly - file is checked for the correct file extension
FileRules pathname \
FileRules dirname - file is rejected if any match
FileRules filename /
finally, the file is indexed.
Files (not directories) listed with "IndexDir" or "-i"
are processed in a similar way:
FileMatch pathname \
FileMatch dirname - file is accepted if any match
FileMatch filename /
otherwise, the file is rejected if it doesn't have the correct extension or
a FileRules matches.
IndexOnly - file is checked for the correct file extension
FileRules pathname \
FileRules dirname - file is rejected if any match
FileRules filename /
Note: If things are not indexing as you expect, create a directory with some
test files and use the "-T regex" trace option to see how file
names are checked. Start with very simple tests!
Directives for the HTTP Access Method Only
The HTTP Access method is enabled by the "-S http" switch when
indexing. It works by running a Perl program called SwishSpider which fetches
documents from a web server.
Only text files (content-type of "text/*") are indexed with the HTTP
Access Method. Other document types (e.g. PDF or MSWord) may be indexed as
well. The SwishSpider will attempt to make use of the SWISH::Filter module
(included with the Swish-e distribution) to convert documents into a format
that Swish-e can index.
Note: The -S prog method of spidering (using spider.pl) can be a replacement for
the -S http method. It offers more configuration options and better spidering
speed.
These directives below are available when using the HTTP Access Method of
indexing.
- MaxDepth *integer*
- MaxDepth defines how many links the spider should follow
before stopping. A value of 0 configures the spider to traverse all links.
The default is MaxDepth 0.
MaxDepth 5
Note: The default was changed from 5 to 0 in release 2.4.0
- Delay *seconds*
- The number of seconds to wait between issuing requests to a
server. This setting allows for more friendly spidering of remote sites.
The default is 5 seconds.
Delay 1
Note: The default was changed from 60 to 5 seconds in release 2.4.0
- TmpDir *path*
- The location of a writable temp directory on your system.
The HTTP access method tells the Perl helper to place its files in this
location, and the "-e" switch causes Swish-e to use this
directory while indexing. There is no default.
TmpDir /tmp/swish
If this directory does not exist or is not writable Swish-e will fail with
an error during indexing.
Note, the environment variables of "TMPDIR", "TMP", and
"TEMP" (in that order) will override this setting.
- SpiderDirectory *path*
- The location of the Perl helper script called
swishspider. If you use a relative directory, it is relative to
your directory when you run Swish-e, not to the directory that Swish-e is
in. The default is the location swishspider was installed. Normally this
does not need to be set.
SpiderDirectory /usr/local/swish
- EquivalentServer *server alias*
- Often times the same site may be referred to by different
names. A common example is that often http://www.some-server.com and
http://some-server.com are the same. Each line should have a list of all
the method/names that should be considered equivalent. Multiple
EquivalentServer directives may be used. Each directive defines its own
set of equivalent servers.
EquivalentServer http://library.berkeley.edu http://www.lib.berkeley.edu
EquivalentServer http://sunsite.berkeley.edu:2000 http://sunsite.berkeley.edu
Directives for the prog Access Method Only
This section details the directives that are only available for the
"prog" document source feature of Swish-e. The "prog"
access method runs an external program that "feeds" documents to
Swish-e. This allows indexing and filtering of documents from any source.
See prog - general purpose access method in the SWISH-RUN man page for more
information.
A number of example programs for use with the "prog" access method are
provided in the
prog-bin directory. Please see those example if you
have questions about implementing a "prog" input program.
- SwishProgParameters *list of parameters*
- This is a list of parameters that will be sent to the
external program when running with the "prog" document source
method.
SwishProgParameters /path/to/config hello there
IndexDir /path/to/program.pl
Then running:
swish-e -c config -S prog
Swish-e will execute "/path/to/program.pl" and pass
"/path/to/config hello there" as three command line arguments to
the program. This directive makes it easy to pass settings from the
Swish-e configuration file to the external program.
For example, the "spider.pl" program (included in the
"prog-bin" directory) uses the "SwishProgParameters"
to specify what file to read for configuration information.
SwishProgParameters spider.config
IndexDir ./spider.pl
The "spider.pl" program also has a default action so you can avoid
using a configuration file:
SwishProgParameters default http://www.swishe.org/ http://some.other.site/
IndexDir ./spider.pl
And the spider program will use default settings for spidering those sites.
Swish-e can read documents from standard input, so another way to run an
external program with parameters is:
./spider.pl spider.conf ⎪ ./swish-e -S prog -i stdin
Notes when using MS Windows
You should use unix style path separators to specify your external program.
Swish will convert forward slashes to backslashes before calling the external
program. This is only true for the program name specified with
"IndexDir" or the "-i" command line option.
In addition, Swish-e will make sure the program specified actually exists, which
means you need to use the full name of the program.
For example, to run the perl spider program
spider.pl you would need a
Swish-e configuration file such as:
IndexDir e:/perl/bin/perl.exe
SwishProgParameters prog-bin/spider.pl default http://swish-e.org
and run indexing with the command:
swish-e -c swish.cfg -S prog -v 9
The "IndexDir" command tells Swish-e the name of the program to run.
Under unix you can just specify the name of the script, since unix will figure
out the program from the first line of the script.
The "SwishProgParameters" are the parameters passed to the program
specified by "IndexDir" (perl.exe in this case). The first parameter
is the perl script to run (
prog-bin/spider.pl). Perl passes the rest
of the parameters directly to the perl script. The second parameter
default tells the
spider.pl program to use default settings for
spidering (or you could specify a spider config file -- see "perldoc
spider.pl" for details), and lastly, the URL is passed into the spider
program.
Document Filter Directives
Internally, Swish-e knows how to parse only text, HTML, and XML documents. With
"filters" you can index other types of documents. For example, if
all your web pages are in gzip format a filter can uncompress these on the fly
for indexing.
You may wish to read the Swish-e FAQ question on filtering before continuing
here. How Do I filter documents?
There are two suggested methods for filtering.
Filtering with SWISH::Filter
The Swish-e distribution includes a Perl module called SWISH::Filter and
individual filters located in the
filters directory. This system uses
plug-in filters to extend the types of documents that Swish-e can index. The
plug-in filters do not actually do the filtering, but rather provide a
standard interface for accessing programs that can filter or convert
documents. The programs that do the filtering are not part of the Swish-e
distribution; they must be downloaded and installed separately.
The advantage of this method is that new filtering methods can be installed
easily.
This system is designed to work with the -S http and -prog methods, but may also
be used with the "FileFilter" feature and -S fs indexing method. See
$prefix/share/doc/swish-e/examples/filter-bin/swish_filter.pl for an
example.
See the
filters/README file for more information.
Filtering with the FileFilter feature
A filter is an external program that Swish-e executes while processing a
document of a given type. Swish-e will execute the filter program for each
file that matches the file suffix (extension) set in the
FileFilter or
FileFilterMatch directives.
FileFilterMatch matches using
regular expressions and is described below.
Filters may be used with any type of input method (i.e. -S fs, -S http, or -S
prog). But because
Swish-e calls the external program passing as
default arguments:
- $0
- the name of the filter program
- $1
- the physical path name of the file to read. This may be a
temporary file location if indexing by the http method.
- $2
- When indexing under the file system this will be the same
as $1 (the path to the source file), but when indexing under the http
method this will be the URL of the source document.
Swish-e can also pass other parameters to the filter program. These parameters
can be defined using the
FileFilter or
FileFilterMatch
directives. See Filter Options below.
The filter program must open the file, process its contents, and return it to
Swish-e by printing to STDOUT.
Note that this can add a significant amount of time to the indexing process if
your external program is a perl or shell script. If you have many files to
filter you should consider writing your filter in C instead of a shell or perl
script, or using the "prog" Access Method along with SWISH::Filter.
- FilterDir *path-to-directory*
- Deprecated.
This is the path to a directory where the filter programs are stored.
Swish-e looks in this directory to find the filter specified in the
FileFilter directive.
This directive is not needed if the filter program can be found in your
system's path. Even if your filter is not in your system's path you can
specify the full path to the filter in the FileFilter or FileFilterMatch
directives.
Example:
FilterDir /usr/local/swish/filters
- FileFilter *suffix* "filter-prog"
["filter-options"]
- This maps file suffix (extension) to a filter program. If
filter-prog starts with a directory delimiter (absolute path),
Swish-e doesn't use the FilterDir settings, but uses the given
filter-prog path directly.
On systems that have a working fork(2) system call the filter program
is run by forking swish then executing the filter. This mean the shell is
not used for running the filter and no arguments are passed through the
shell.
On other systems (e.g. Windows) the arguments are double-quoted and
popen(3) is used to run the program. This does pass argument though
the shell and may be a security concern depending on the abilities of the
shell.
Filter options:
Filter options are a string passed as arguments to the filter-prog.
Filter options can contain variables, replaced by Swish-e. If you omit
filter-options Swish-e will use default parameters for the options
listed above.
Default: %p %P
Which means: pass "workfile path" and "documentfile path" to filter.
Variables in filter options:
%% = %
%P = Full document pathname (e.g. URL, or path on filesystem)
%p = Full pathname to work file (maybe a tmpfile or the real document path on filesystem)
%F = Filename stripped from full document pathname
%f = Filename stripped from "work" pathname
%D = Directoryname stripped from full document pathname
%d = Directoryname stripped from full "work" pathname
Examples of strings passed:
%P = document pathname: http://myserver/path1/mydoc.txt
%p = work pathname: /tmp/tmp.1234.mydoc.txt
%F = mydoc.txt
%f = tmp.1234.mydoc.txt
%D = http://myserver/path1
%d = /tmp
Notes when using MS Windows
Windows uses double quotes to escape shell metacharacters, so if you need to
use quotes then use single quotes around the entire option string.
FileFiler .mydoc mydocfilter.exe '--title "text with spaces"'
You can specify the filter program using forward slashes (unix style). Swish
will convert the slashes to backslashes before running your program.
FileFilter .mydoc c:/some/path/mydocfilter.exe '-d "%d" -example -url "%P" "%f"'
Examples of filters:
FileFilter .doc /usr/local/bin/catdoc "-s8859-1 -d8859-1 %p"
FileFilter .pdf pdftotext "%p -"
FileFilter .html.gz gzip "-c %p"
FileFilter .mydoc "/some/path/mydocfilter" "-d %d -example -url %P %f"
The above examples are running a binary filter program. For more
complicated filtering needs you may use a scripting language such as Perl
or a shell script. Here's some examples of calling a shell and perl
script:
FileFilter .pdf pdf2html.sh
FileFilter .ps ghostscript-filter.pl
Using a scripting language (or any language that has a large startup cost)
can greatly increase the indexing time. For small indexing jobs,
this may not be an issue, but for large collections of files that require
processing by a scripting language, you may be better off using the
"-S prog" access method where the script will only be compiled
once, instead of for each document.
Filters are probably easier to write than a "-S prog" program.
Which you decide to use depends on your requirements. Examples of filter
scripts can be found in the filter-bin directory, and examples of
"-S prog" programs can be found in the prog-bin
directory.
- FileFilterMatch *filter-prog* *filter-options* *regex*
[*regex* ...]
- This is similar to "FileMatch" except uses
regular expressions to match against the file name. *filter-prog* is the
path to the program. Unlike "FileFilter" this does not
use the "FilterDir" option. Also unlike "FileFilter"
you must specify the *filter-options*.
Examples:
FileFilterMatch ./pdftotext "%p -" /\.pdf$/
Note that will also match a file called ".pdf", so you may want to
use something that requires a filename that has more than just an
extension. For example:
FileFilterMatch ./pdftotext "%p -" /.\.pdf$/
To specify more than one extension:
FileFilterMatch ./check_title.pl "%p" /\.html$/ /\.htm$/
Or a few ways to do the same thing:
FileFilterMatch ./check_title.pl %p /\.(html⎪html)$/
FileFilterMatch ./check_title.pl %p /\.html?$/
And to ignore case:
FileFilterMatch ./check_title.pl %p /\.html?$/i
You may also precede an expression with "not" to negate regular
expression that follow. For example, to match files that do not have an
extension:
FileFilterMatch ./convert "%p %P" not /\..+$/
$Id: SWISH-CONFIG.pod 1846 2006-10-20 20:18:30Z whmoseley $
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