RSolr

A Ruby client for Apache Solr. RSolr has been developed to be simple and extendable. It features transparent JRuby DirectSolrConnection support and a simple Hash-in, Hash-out architecture.

Installation:

gem sources -a http://gemcutter.org
sudo gem install rsolr

Related Resources & Projects

Simple usage:

require 'rubygems'
require 'rsolr'
solr = RSolr.connect :url=>'http://solrserver.com'

# send a request to /select
response = rsolr.select :q=>'*:*'

# send a request to a custom request handler; /catalog
response = rsolr.request '/catalog', :q=>'*:*'

# alternative to above:
response = rsolr.catalog :q=>'*:*'

To use a DirectSolrConnection (no http) in JRuby:

solr = RSolr.connect(:direct,
  :home_dir=>'/path/to/solr/home',
  :dist_dir=>'/path/to/solr/distribution'
)

For more information about DirecSolrConnection, see the API.

Querying

Use the #select method to send requests to the /select handler:

response = solr.select({
  :q=>'washington',
  :start=>0,
  :rows=>10
})

The params sent into the method are sent to Solr as-is. The one exception is if a value is an array. When an array is used, multiple parameters are generated for the Solr query. Example:

solr.select :q=>'roses', :fq=>['red', 'violet']

The above statement generates this Solr query:

?q=roses&fq=red&fq=violet

Use the #request method for a custom request handler path:

response = solr.request '/documents', :q=>'test'

A shortcut for the above example:

response = solr.documents :q=>'test'

Updating Solr

Updating can be done using native Ruby structures. Hashes are used for single documents and arrays are used for a collection of documents (hashes). These structures get turned into simple XML “messages”. Raw XML strings can also be used.

Raw XML via #update

solr.update '</commit>'
solr.update '</optimize>'

Single document via #add

solr.add :id=>1, :price=>1.00

Multiple documents via #add

documents = [{:id=>1, :price=>1.00}, {:id=>2, :price=>10.50}]
solr.add documents

When adding, you can also supply “add” xml element attributes and/or a block for manipulating other “add” related elements (docs and fields) when using the #add method:

doc = {:id=>1, :price=>1.00}
add_attributes = {:allowDups=>false, :commitWithin=>10.0}
solr.add(doc, add_attributes) do |doc|
  # boost each document
  doc.attrs[:boost] = 1.5
  # boost the price field:
  doc.field_by_name(:price).attrs[:boost] = 2.0
end

Delete by id

solr.delete_by_id 1

or an array of ids

solr.delete_by_id [1, 2, 3, 4]

Delete by query:

solr.delete_by_query 'price:1.00'

Delete by array of queries

solr.delete_by_query ['price:1.00', 'price:10.00']

Commit & optimize shortcuts

solr.commit
solr.optimize

Response Formats

The default response format is Ruby. When the :wt param is set to :ruby, the response is eval’d resulting in a Hash. You can get a raw response by setting the :wt to “ruby” - notice, the string – not a symbol. RSolr will eval the Ruby string ONLY if the :wt value is :ruby. All other response formats are available as expected, :wt=>‘xml’ etc..

Evaluated Ruby (default)

solr.select(:wt=>:ruby) # notice :ruby is a Symbol

Raw Ruby

solr.select(:wt=>'ruby') # notice 'ruby' is a String

XML:

solr.select(:wt=>:xml)

JSON:

solr.select(:wt=>:json)

You can access the original request context (path, params, url etc.) by calling the #raw method:

response = solr.select :q=>'*:*'
response.raw[:status_code]
response.raw[:body]
response.raw[:url]

The raw is a hash that contains the generated params, url, path, post data, headers etc., very useful for debugging and testing.