I've been looking into searching plugins/gems for Rails. Most of the articles compare Ferret (Lucene) to Ultrasphinx or possibly Thinking Sphinx, but none that talk about SearchLogic. Does anyone have any clues as to how that one compares? What do you use, and how does it perform?
http://codemonkey.ravelry.com/2008/01/09/sphinx-for-search/ http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/opensource/library/os-php-apachesolr/
http://www.lucidimagination.com/
just saw this post and responses http://www.jroller.com/otis/entry/open_source_search_engine_benchmark |
||||
|
|
|
First off, my obvious bias: I created and maintain Thinking Sphinx. As it so happens, I actually saw Ben Johnson (creator of SearchLogic) present at the NYC ruby meet about it last night. SearchLogic is SQL-only - so if you're not dealing with massive tables, and relevance rankings aren't needed, then it could be exactly what you're looking for. The syntax is pretty clean, too. However, if you want all the query intelligence handled by code that is not your own, then Sphinx or Solr (which is Lucene under the hood, I think) is probably going to work out better. |
|||
|
|
|
SearchLogic is a good plugin, but is really meant to make your search code more readable, it doesn't provide the automatic indexing that Sphinx does. I haven't used Ferret, but Sphinx is incredibly powerful. http://railscasts.com/episodes/120-thinking-sphinx Great introduction to see how flexible it is. |
|||
|
|
|
I have not used SearchLogic but I can tell you that Lucene is a very mature project, that has implementation in many languages. It is fast and flexible and the API is fun to work with. It's a good bet. |
|||
|
|
|
Given this question is still highly ranked at google for full text search, I'd really like to say that Sunspot is even stronger today if you're interested in adding full text search capabilities to your Rails application (and would like to have Solr behind you for that). You can check a full tutorial on this here. And while we're at it, another contender that has arrived in the field is ElasticSearch, that aims to be a real time full text search engine built on top of Lucene (but doing things differently when compared to Solr). ElasticSearch includes out-of-the-box sharding and replication to multiple nodes, faster real time search, "percolators" to allow you to receive notifications when something that matches your criteria becomes available and it's moving really fast with many more other features. It's easy to build something on top of it, since the API is dead simple and completely based on REST using JSON as a format. One could say you don't even need a plugin to use it. |
|||
|
|
|
Personally, I don't bother with database agnostics for web applications and am quite happy using the full text search in pg83. The benefit is, if and when you change your framework/language, that you will still have full text search. |
|||
|
|