Configuration Example
PostgreSQL 9.2.20 Documentation | ||||
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A text search configuration specifies all options necessary to transform a
document into a
tsvector
: the parser to use to break text
into tokens, and the dictionaries to use to transform each token into a
lexeme. Every call of
to_tsvector
or
to_tsquery
needs a text search configuration to perform its processing.
The configuration parameter
default_text_search_config
specifies the name of the default configuration, which is the
one used by text search functions if an explicit configuration
parameter is omitted.
It can be set in
postgresql.conf
, or set for an
individual session using the
SET
command.
Several predefined text search configurations are available, and you can create custom configurations easily. To facilitate management of text search objects, a set of SQL commands is available, and there are several psql commands that display information about text search objects ( Section 12.10 ).
As an example we will create a configuration pg , starting by duplicating the built-in english configuration:
CREATE TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION public.pg ( COPY = pg_catalog.english );
We will use a PostgreSQL-specific synonym list and store it in $SHAREDIR/tsearch_data/pg_dict.syn . The file contents look like:
postgres pg pgsql pg postgresql pg
We define the synonym dictionary like this:
CREATE TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY pg_dict ( TEMPLATE = synonym, SYNONYMS = pg_dict );
Next we register the Ispell dictionary english_ispell , which has its own configuration files:
CREATE TEXT SEARCH DICTIONARY english_ispell ( TEMPLATE = ispell, DictFile = english, AffFile = english, StopWords = english );
Now we can set up the mappings for words in configuration pg :
ALTER TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION pg ALTER MAPPING FOR asciiword, asciihword, hword_asciipart, word, hword, hword_part WITH pg_dict, english_ispell, english_stem;
We choose not to index or search some token types that the built-in configuration does handle:
ALTER TEXT SEARCH CONFIGURATION pg DROP MAPPING FOR email, url, url_path, sfloat, float;
Now we can test our configuration:
SELECT * FROM ts_debug('public.pg', ' PostgreSQL, the highly scalable, SQL compliant, open source object-relational database management system, is now undergoing beta testing of the next version of our software. ');
The next step is to set the session to use the new configuration, which was created in the public schema:
=> \dF List of text search configurations Schema | Name | Description ---------+------+------------- public | pg | SET default_text_search_config = 'public.pg'; SET SHOW default_text_search_config; default_text_search_config ---------------------------- public.pg