indextool is a utility tool that helps to dump various information about a physical table (excluding template or distributedtables). The general syntax for using indextool is:
indextool <command> [options]
Options effective for all commands:
--config <file>(-c <file>for short) overrides the built-in config file names.--quiet(-qfor short) keep indextool quiet - it will not output banner, etc.--help(-hfor short) lists all of the parameters that can be called in your particular build ofindextool.-vshow version information of your particular build ofindextool.
The commands are as follows:
--checkconfigjust loads and verifies the config file to check if it's valid, without syntax errors.--buildidf DICTFILE1 [DICTFILE2 ...] --out IDFILEbuild IDF file from one or several dictionary dumps. Additional parameter--skip-uniqwill skip unique (df=1) words.--build-infixes TABLENAMEbuild infixes for an existing dict=keywords table (upgrades .sph, .spi in place). You can use this option for legacy table files that already use dict=keywords, but now need to support infix searching too; updating the table files with indextool may prove easier or faster than regenerating them from scratch with indexer.--dumpheader FILENAME.sphquickly dumps the provided table header file without touching any other table files or even the configuration file. The report provides a breakdown of all the table settings, in particular the entire attribute and field list.--dumpconfig FILENAME.sphdumps the table definition from the given table header file in (almost) compliantsphinx.conffile format.--dumpheader TABLENAMEdumps table header by table name with looking up the header path in the configuration file.--dumpdict TABLENAMEdumps dictionary. Additional-statsswitch will dump to dictionary the total number of documents. It is required for dictionary files that are used for creation of IDF files.--dumpdocids TABLENAMEdumps document IDs by table name.--dumphitlist TABLENAME KEYWORDdumps all the hits (occurrences) of a given keyword in a given table, with keyword specified as text.--dumphitlist TABLENAME --wordid IDdumps all the hits (occurrences) of a given keyword in a given table, with keyword specified as internal numeric ID.--docextract TBL DOCIDruns usual table check pass of whole dictionary/docs/hits, and collects all the words and hits belonging to requested document. Then all of the words are placed in the order according to their fields and positions, and result is printed, grouping by field.--fold TABLENAME OPTFILEThis options is useful too see how actually tokenizer proceeds input. You can feed indextool with text from file if specified or from stdin otherwise. The output will contain spaces instead of separators (accordingly to yourcharset_tablesettings) and lowercased letters in words.--htmlstrip TABLENAMEfilters stdin using HTML stripper settings for a given table, and prints the filtering results to stdout. Note that the settings will be taken from sphinx.conf, and not the table header.--mergeidf NODE1.idf [NODE2.idf ...] --out GLOBAL.idfmerge several .idf files into a single one. Additional parameter--skip-uniqwill skip unique (df=1) words.--morph TABLENAMEapplies morphology to the given stdin and prints the result to stdout.--check TABLENAMEchecks the table data files for consistency errors that might be introduced either by bugs inindexerand/or hardware faults.--checkalso works on RT tables, RAM and disk chunks. Additional options:--check-id-dupschecks if there are duplicate ids--check-disk-chunk CHUNK_NAMEchecks only specific disk chunk of an RT table. The argument is a disk chunk numeric extension of the RT table to check.
--strip-pathstrips the path names from all the file names referenced from the table (stopwords, wordforms, exceptions, etc). This is useful for checking tables built on another machine with possibly different path layouts.--rotateworks only with--checkand defines whether to check table waiting for rotation, i.e. with .new extension. This is useful when you want to check your table before actually using it.--apply-killlistsloads and applies kill-lists for all tables listed in the config file. Changes are saved in .SPM files. Kill-list files (.SPK) are deleted. This can be useful if you want to move applying tables from server startup to indexing stage.
spelldump is used to extract the contents of a dictionary file that uses the ispell or MySpell format, which can be useful in building word lists for wordforms - all of the possible forms are pre-built for you.
The general syntax is:
spelldump [options] <dictionary> <affix> [result] [locale-name]
The two main parameters are the dictionary's main file and its affix file; these are usually named [language-prefix].dict and [language-prefix].aff and can be found in most common Linux distributions and various online sources.
[result] is where the extracted dictionary data will be output, and [locale-name] specifies the locale details you wish to use.
There is also an optional -c [file] option, which specifies a file for case conversion details.
Examples of usage are:
spelldump en.dict en.aff
spelldump ru.dict ru.aff ru.txt ru_RU.CP1251
spelldump ru.dict ru.aff ru.txt .1251
The result file will contain a list of all the words in the dictionary, sorted alphabetically, in the format of a wordforms file. This can be used to tailor it to your specific needs. An example of what the result file could look like:
zone > zone
zoned > zoned
zoning > zoning
wordbreaker is used to split compound words, such as those commonly found in URLs, into their component words. For example, this tool can split "lordoftherings" into its four component words, or http://manofsteel.warnerbros.com into "man of steel warner bros". This helps in searching, as it eliminates the need for prefixes or infixes. For example, searching for "sphinx" would not match "sphinxsearch", but if you break the compound word and index the separate components, you would get a match without the increased file sizes that come with using prefixes and infixes in full-text indexing.
Examples of usage include:
echo manofsteel | bin/wordbreaker -dict dict.txt split
man of steel
The input stream will be separated into words using the -dict dictionary file. If no dictionary is specified, wordbreaker looks in the working folder for a wordbreaker-dict.txt file. (The dictionary should match the language of the compound word.) The split command breaks words from the standard input and outputs the result to the standard output. There are also test and bench commands that allow you to test the splitting quality and benchmark the splitting functionality.
Wordbreaker requires a dictionary to recognize individual substrings within a string. To differentiate between different guesses, it uses the relative frequency of each word in the dictionary, with higher frequency meaning a higher split probability. You can generate such a file using the indexer tool:
indexer --buildstops dict.txt 100000 --buildfreqs myindex -c /path/to/sphinx.conf
which will write the 100,000 most frequent words along with their counts from myindex into dict.txt. The output file is a text file, so it can be edited by hand if necessary to add or remove words.