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I am looking to perform a query for the purposes of maintaining internal integrity; for example, removing all traces of a particular field/value from the index. Therefore it's important that I find all matching documents (not just the top n docs), but the order they are returned in is irrelevant.

According to the docs, it looks like I need to use the Searcher.Search( Query, Collector ) method, but there's no built in Collector class that does what I need.

Should I derive my own Collector for this purpose? What do I need to keep in mind when doing that?

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Keep this in mind if you want to return ALL results: forums.alfresco.com/en/viewtopic.php?t=13381 – Rodrigo Hahn Mar 25 '11 at 17:30
@Rodrigo Could you be a bit more specific? I read over that thread but it appears to have to do with permission checks. Can you explain how that is relevant to my question? – chaiguy Mar 25 '11 at 20:00

2 Answers

up vote 2 down vote accepted

Turns out this was a lot easier than I expected. I just used the example implementation at http://lucene.apache.org/java/2_9_0/api/core/org/apache/lucene/search/Collector.html and recorded the doc numbers passed to the Collect() method in a List, exposing this as a public Docs property.

I then simply iterate this property, passing the number back to the Searcher to get the proper Document:

var searcher = new IndexSearcher( reader );
var collector = new IntegralCollector(); // my custom Collector
searcher.Search( query, collector );
var result = new Document[ collector.Docs.Count ];
for ( int i = 0; i < collector.Docs.Count; i++ )
    result[ i ] = searcher.Doc( collector.Docs[ i ] );
searcher.Close(); // this is probably not needed
reader.Close();

So far it seems to be working fine in preliminary tests.

Update: Here's the code for IntegralCollector:

internal class IntegralCollector: Lucene.Net.Search.Collector {
    private int _docBase;

    private List<int> _docs = new List<int>();
    public List<int> Docs {
        get { return _docs; }
    }

    public override bool AcceptsDocsOutOfOrder() {
        return true;
    }

    public override void Collect( int doc ) {
        _docs.Add( _docBase + doc );
    }

    public override void SetNextReader( Lucene.Net.Index.IndexReader reader, int docBase ) {
        _docBase = docBase;
    }

    public override void SetScorer( Lucene.Net.Search.Scorer scorer ) {
    }
}
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1  
Just remember to use the docBase value passed to your SetNextReader, since the document id passed to Collect is specific to the current reader (from SetNextReader). You'll need to use (docBase+doc) when calculating ids to use with the topmost reader, the one used when opening your IndexSearcher. – Simon Svensson Mar 30 '11 at 18:56
Also, don't forget about IndexWriter.DeleteDocuments(Query) if you want to remove matching documents. – Simon Svensson Mar 30 '11 at 18:58
@Simon - Thanks I figured that out myself, when I started getting wonky results. Also, deletion was just an example, I actually do need to retrieve the documents in my real application. – chaiguy Mar 31 '11 at 3:21

No need to write a hit collector if you're just looking to get all the Document objects in the index. Just loop from 0 to maxDoc() and call reader.document() on each doc id, making sure to skip documents that are already deleted:

for (int i=0; i<reader.maxDoc(); i++) {
   if (reader.isDeleted(i))
      continue;
   results[i] = reader.document(i);
}
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Thanks, but I am interested in actually performing a query, not just getting all the documents in the index. – chaiguy Mar 26 '11 at 5:31

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