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I am planning on setting up a filter system (refine your search) in my ecommerce stores. You can see an example here: http://www.bettymills.com/shop/product/find/Air+and+HVAC+Filters

Platforms such as PrestaShop, OpenCart and Magento have what's called a Layered Navigation.

My question is what is the difference between the Layered Navigation in platforms such as Magento or PrestaShop in comparison to using something like Solr or Lucene for faceted navigation.

Can a similar result be accomplished via just php and mysql?

A detailed explanation is much appreciated.

4 Answers 4

52

Layered Navigation == Faceted Search.

They are the same thing, but Magento and al uses different wording, probably to be catchy. As far as I know, Magento supports both the Solr faceted search or the MySQL one. The main difference is the performance.

Performance is the main trade-off.

To do faceted search in MySQL requires you to join tables, while Solr indexes the document facets automatically for filtering. You can generally achieve fast response times using Solr (<100ms for a multi-facet search query) on average hardware. While MySQL will take longer for the same search, it can be optimized with indexes to achieve similar response times.

The downside to Solr is that it requires you to configure, secure and run yet another service on your server. It can also be pretty CPU and memory intensive depending on your configuration (Tomcat, jetty, etc.).

Faceted search in PHP/MySQL is possible, and not as hard as you'd think.

You need a specific database schema, but it's feasible. Here's a simple example:

product

+----+------------+
| id | name       |
+----+------------+
|  1 | blue paint |
|  2 | red paint  |
+----+------------+

classification

+----+----------+
| id | name     |
+----+----------+
|  1 | color    |
|  2 | material |
|  3 | dept     |
+----+----------+

product_classification

+------------+-------------------+-------+
| product_id | classification_id | value |
+------------+-------------------+-------+
|          1 |                 1 | blue  |
|          1 |                 2 | latex |
|          1 |                 3 | paint |
|          1 |                 3 | home  |
|          2 |                 1 | red   |
|          2 |                 2 | latex |
|          2 |                 3 | paint |
|          2 |                 3 | home  |
+------------+-------------------+-------+

So, say someones search for paint, you'd do something like:

SELECT p.* FROM product p WHERE name LIKE '%paint%';

This would return both entries from the product table.

Once your search has executed, you can fetch the associated facets (filters) of your result using a query like this one:

SELECT c.id, c.name, pc.value FROM product p
   LEFT JOIN product_classification pc ON pc.product_id = p.id
   LEFT JOIN classification c ON c.id = pc.classification_id
WHERE p.name LIKE '%paint%'
GROUP BY c.id, pc.value
ORDER BY c.id;

This'll give you something like:

+------+----------+-------+
| id   | name     | value |
+------+----------+-------+
|    1 | color    | blue  |
|    1 | color    | red   |
|    2 | material | latex |
|    3 | dept     | home  |
|    3 | dept     | paint |
+------+----------+-------+

So, in your result set, you know that there are products whose color are blue and red, that the only material it's made from is latex, and that it can be found in departments home and paint.

Once a user select a facet, just modify the original search query:

SELECT p.* FROM product p
   LEFT JOIN product_classification pc ON pc.product_id = p.id
WHERE 
   p.name LIKE '%paint%' AND (
      (pc.classification_id = 1 AND pc.value = 'blue') OR
      (pc.classification_id = 3 AND pc.value = 'home')
   )
GROUP BY p.id
HAVING COUNT(p.id) = 2;

So, here the user is searching for keyword paint, and includes two facets: facet blue for color, and home for department. This'll give you:

+----+------------+
| id | name       |
+----+------------+
|  1 | blue paint |
+----+------------+

So, in conclusion. Although it's available out-of-the-box in Solr, it's possible to implement it in SQL fairly easily.

10
  • What would be optimal way to structure this in the nested and statement with multiple facets? Should every facet be followed by an OR?
    – Ryan
    Jun 29, 2012 at 13:25
  • 5
    @RPM: Yes. Because you want MySQL to match one facet or the other, then check if all facets were matched using the HAVING clause (you can't tell MySQL to match two facets using AND because it's impossible for it because of its relational nature, e.g.: value can't be blue AND red at the same time). So, if you have 4 facets, you need three conditions with OR clauses, and an HAVING COUNT() of 4.
    – netcoder
    Jun 29, 2012 at 13:49
  • 2
    @RPM: Yes, all facets go in the nested AND. The pattern is the following. When using OR clauses, MySQL will return one or multiple rows, with identical p.id (item), for each facet that matched. So, if you an item (p.id = 1) that matches blue and paint you will have two rows: p.id=1, value=blue and p.id=1, value=paint. The HAVING clause makes sure that you indeed have two rows, one for each facet selected. Remove the GROUP BY clause and you'll see what I mean.
    – netcoder
    Jun 29, 2012 at 13:57
  • 1
    @RPM: Not entirely sure what you mean. You may want to open a question and link to this one, it'll be easier to explain for you and easier to answer for me and other users. It's a little hard to explain complicated SQL queries in comments. ;-)
    – netcoder
    Jun 29, 2012 at 14:46
  • 1
    The last query can be also SELECT p.* FROM product p LEFT JOIN product_classification pc1 ON pc1.product_id = p.id LEFT JOIN product_classification pc2 ON pc2.product_id = p.id WHERE p.name LIKE '%paint%' AND pc1.classification_id = 1 AND pc1.value = 'blue' pc2.classification_id = 3 AND pc2.value = 'home'
    – Eduardo
    Aug 25, 2013 at 2:08
1

Magento Enterprise Edition has an implementation of Solr with faceted search. Still you need to configure Solr to index the correct data; i.e. Solr runs on Java on a host with a specific port. Magento connects to it through a given url. When Magento sets up the faceted search, it does a request to Solr and processes the received xml into a form on the frontend. The difference would be one of speed. Requesting to Solr is very fast. If you have about 100,000+ products in your shop and want quick responses on search requests, you can use Solr. But still, if you have a separate server for the Magento database with a lot of memory, you can also just use Magento's built in Mysql based faceted search. If you don't have money to spend on Magento EE, you can use this solr implementation. But I do not have any experience with this one.

1

out of the solr box, you can use calculated facet, range, choose a facet or exclude one, declare if a facet is mono valued, or multi valued with a very low cpu/ram cost

On the other hand, it takes some time to parameter and secure the solr installation, it also takes some time to crawl your data.

0

You can created faceted search with just PHP and MySQL, Drupal Faceted Search is a good example. But if you already use Solr, you get faceted search included for free.

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