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My company is looking at advanced search and reporting solutions, and are considering (among other options) creating something akin to JIRA's JQL for maximum flexibility.

My googling leads me to believe Atlassian built JQL from scratch, at least as a language with syntax and a parser, but I thought I'd try SO before concluding. Anyone know, at a high level, how they did it? Was there one or more Open Source project they based it on?

(Kudos to Atlassian either way - JQL is gorgeous!)

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    for late comers to this topic; JQL may not be open source but IntelliJ implemented the JQL parser. There's formal JQL syntax in the comment. Nov 10, 2015 at 19:38

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I think they did it from scratch. The underlying architecture is crisp but quite complex. It took me a good few hours to get it, just reading the source and minimal user docs.

~Matt

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  • Also, with Atlassian appearing to be so open with their business - blogging about development, for instance - you'd think they'd give some credit to any underlying technologies they used to pull it off if they had. We use hosted JIRA, so all I see is the UI - thanks for the info. Nov 18, 2010 at 19:38
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    Atlassian did develop JQL from scratch. The parser for the language was developed using ANTLR. Once parsed, it is turned into the appropriate set of Lucene and database queries, and executed. The ANTLR documentation has a good, simple example of how to parse an expression and then "execute" it. (I'm a JIRA developer, so you are getting the inside story :) )
    – Matt Quail
    Mar 31, 2011 at 11:20
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Atlassian built JQL on top of Apache Lucene. You might want to take a look at Elasticsearch or Solr, which are open source alternatives, also built on Lucene.

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I have been using Jira for a year and I notice "Apache Lucene" on the the directory, and before this I got a job wherein I was force to learn apache solr. So in conclusion, Jira is using Apache Lucene as a searching library which is also used was being used in Solr.

for more info read this: http://www.lucenetutorial.com/lucene-vs-solr.html

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