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The boosting dismax query parser (bmax)

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A synonym aware edismax query parser for Apache Solr. The bmax query parser relies on field types and tokenizer chains to parse the user query, discovers synonyms, subtopics, boost and penalize terms at query time. Hence it is highly configurable. It is the ideal query parser for e-commerce searches as it eliminates the usage of term and document frequency.

It does not accept any lucene query syntax (~-+()). The query composed is a dismax query with a minimum must match of 100%.

This document covers Version 1.5.x and onwards. For the old 0.9.9 version, take a look at the release branch.

Fundamentals

Terminology

Synonym - a (bidirectional) syntactic or semantic equivalent to a origin term. It will expand recall and in ranking, matches on these synonyms will be scored almost as high as the origin term (default 0.9). Example: tv -> television.

Subtopic - a unidirectional specification of a origin term that will expand recall and score lower than the origin term. Example: bicycle -> mountainbike or laptop -> macbook.

Penalize term - a term that semantically describes what should rank lower in a search result matching the origin term. These terms will not increase recall, documents matching penalize terms will rank lower. Example: mountainbike -> isbn

Boost term - a term that semantically describes what should rank higher in a search result matching the origin term. These terms will not increase recall, documents matching penalize terms will rank higher. Example: television -> hdmi

document and term frequency handling

The bmax query parser eliminates the usage of term and document frequency for document ranking. With subtopics, synonyms, boost and penalize terms disabled and query fields set to a single field, all returned documents are s cored 1.0.

synonym and subtopic handling

Query epxansions that increase recall (synonyms and subtopics) are bound to the origin term. Given the synonym example violet to blue, the query blue bike would be rewriten by the bmax parser to (violet OR blue) AND bike. If you add the subtopic mountainbike, ebike to bike, the query would be rewritten to (violet OR blue) AND (bike OR mountainbike OR ebike).

Out of the box synonym handling in Solr (dismax, edisxmax) loses these relationships during query analysis. As an example, given the synonym violet to blue a regular Solr synonym handling would rewrite the query blue bike to blue violet bike. Depending on your query parser (and mm setting in dismax) this could lead to higher recall with way less precision.

Using the Bmax query parser

To take andvantage of the bmax query parser, have it properly installed and configured as described in the next chapter. The query parser utilizes 2 components, the booster and the queryparser. The booster enriches the query with boost and penalize terms, the query parser transforms a given user query into a Lucene search query.

Use the following url parameters to fine tune your installation.

Boost component parameters

The Bmax boost component enriches the query with boost and penalize terms.

  • bmax.booster (boolean) - enable/disable boost term component. Default is false.
  • bmax.booster.boost (boolean) - enable/disable boost term resolution. Default is true.
  • bmax.booster.boost.factor (float) - boost factor that is multiplied to the boosts given in the qf parameter for each query field respectivly, default is 1.0.
  • bmax.booster.boost.extra (String) - comma separated extra boost terms. Great to check new boost term ideas.
  • bmax.booster.penalize (boolean) - enable/disable penalize term resolution. Default is true.
  • bmax.booster.penalize.factor (float) - Penalize factor that is used as negative weight in the penalize query. Default is 100.0.
  • bmax.booster.penalize.strategy (String) - strategy for combining penalize terms with the main query: rq - rerank query, bq- boost query. Default is rq.
  • bmax.booster.penalize.docs (int) - The number of documents to penalize from the begin of the result set (rerank query strategy only). Default is 400.
  • bmax.booster.penalize.extra (String) - comma separated extra penalize terms. Great to check new ideas.

Query parser params

The Bmax query parser utilizes a Solr edismax query parser and the following standard url parameters can be used:

To fine tune or debug your query, use the following extra arguments:

  • bmax.synonym (boolean) - Enable / disable synoynm lookup, default is true
  • bmax.synonym.boost (float) – The term boost to be multiplicated for synonym terms with the boost defined in the qf parameter for each query field respectively, default is 0.1.
  • bmax.subtopic (boolean) - Enable / disable subtopic lookup, default is true
  • bmax.subtopic.boost (float) – The term boost to be multiplicated for subtopic terms with the boost defined in the qf parameter for each query field respectively, default is 0.01.
  • bmax.subtopic.qf (string) - The query fields in which to search for subtopics, defaults to the ones given in the qf parameter.

Query clause reduction / term inspection

Before adding a term query clause to the main query or the boost query, a term inspection cache can be checked, whether the term exists in the field term values. If the term does not exist in the field term values, the term query clause is omitted. If you are using a lot of query fields, this can reduce the overall query clause count dramatically and speed up query computation.

  • bmax.inspect (boolean) – Use the local term inspection cache to validate term query clauses. Default is false. Set this to true in your main query configuration to lookup each term in the local term inspection cache.
  • bmax.inspect.build (boolean) – Build a local term inspection cache using the given qf. Default is false. Configure a new/first searcher listener in your solrconfig.xml and query all documents (*:*) once with this parameter set to true. Supply the fields to inspect in the qf parameter.

The term inspection cache is stored in a custom Solr cache named bmax.fieldTermCache. Configure and size a cache in your solrconfig.xml. The cache entries will be saved as Dictomaton FSTs in order to consume as less heap as possible.

Bmax query processing

Query processing in the bmax query parser is split into 2 steps:

  1. First is retrieving and supplying boost and penalize terms. This is done in the BmaxBoostTermComponent
  2. Second is parsing the incoming query and building an appropriate Lucene query. This is done in the BmaxQueryParser.

1. Retrieving boost and penalize terms

The incoming user query (q) is analyzed and boost terms are supplied in the bq parameter. Penalize terms are added in the rq and rqq parameter to form a negative rerank query. Boost and penalize term retrieval is done in 3 steps:

  1. Run the incoming query in q through the configured queryParsingFieldType
  2. Expand synonyms for each query token through synonymFieldType.
  3. Retrieve boost and penalize terms for each token through boostTermFieldType and penalizeTermFieldType respectivly.

image

Given the example above with q=blue bike cheap the query parsing field type would remove noise and leave blue bike. The synonym lookup would retrieve bicycle as synonym for bike and append it: blue bike bicylce. This would be the input for penalize and boost term discovery.

The discovered boost terms crossbike bmx pedelec are appended to the incoming query as a boost query bq={!dismax qf='...' mm=1 bq=''} crossbike bmx pedelec. The discovered penalize terms are appended as rerank query rq={!rerank reRankQuery=$rqq reRankDocs=... reRankWeight=...}&rqq=...book OR toys .... The rerank query formulated is a boolean OR query.

2. Parsing the user query

The bmax query parser utilizes the edismax query parser to build it's query. It recognizes the well known edismax parameters:

  • q – the main query
  • qf – query fields (weighted)
  • bq – the boost query (additive)
  • bf – boost functions (additive)
  • boost – boost functions (multiplicative)
  • pf,ps,pf2,ps2,pf3,ps3 – phrase boosts (additive). Note that the scores from these boosts are added up per type (pf,pf2,pf3) and field but dismax'ed between types and fields. Set phrase.tie=1.0 if you want the standard edismax behaviour and also add up the scores between fields and types.

Rerank queries are realized through the default Solr rerank postfilter. Query parsing is done in 3 steps:

  1. Run the incoming query in q through the configured queryParsingFieldType
  2. Expand synonyms for each query token through synonymFieldType. Synoynms treated as sematically equal to the source token.
  3. Retrieve subtopic terms for each token and synonym through subtopicFieldType. Subtopics are bound to the source token in the main query.

image

Given the example above with q=blue bike cheap the query parsing field type would remove noise and leave the tokens blue,bike. The synonym lookup would retrieve bicycle as synonym for bike: blue,[bike,bicycle]. Subtopic retrieval for each token creates: [blue,lavendel],[bike,bicycle,bmx,crossbike,roadbike].

The query constructed is always a dismax query with a minimum must match of 100%. The example above would create the following query:

BooleanQuery(MUST) of
  DismaxQuery(MUST) of blue,lavendel
  DismaxQuery(MUST) of bike,bicycle,bmx,crossbike,roadbike

The boost query (if given) is appended.

Installing the Bmax query parser

  • Place the solr-bmax-queryparser-<VERSION>-jar-with-dependencies.jar in the /lib directory of your Solr installation.
  • Configure at least one field type in your schema.xml that can be used for query parsing and tokenizing
  • Configure the bmax query parser in your solrconfig.xml (see below)
  • Configure the bmax.booster search component in your solrconfig.xml (see below)
  • Enable the bmax query parser using the defType=bmax parameter in your query.

This project is also vailable from Maven Central:

<dependency>
    <groupId>com.s24.search.solr</groupId>
    <artifactId>solr-bmax-queryparser</artifactId>
    <version>1.5.0</version>
    <classifier>jar-with-dependencies</classifier>
</dependency>

Configuring the query parser

Add the BmaxQParserPlugin to the list of query parsers configured in your solrconfig.xml. It takes the following configuration parameters:

<queryParser name="bmax" class="com.s24.search.solr.query.bmax.BmaxQParserPlugin">
    <!-- use this field type's query analyzer to tokenize the query -->
    <str name="queryParsingFieldType">bmax_query</str>

    <!-- further field types for synonyms and subtopics -->
    <str name="synonymFieldType">bmax_synonyms</str>
    <str name="subtopicFieldType">bmax_subtopics</str>
</queryParser>

Configure the boost term component as follows:

<searchComponent name="bmax.booster" class="com.s24.search.solr.component.BmaxBoostTermComponent">
    <!-- use the same as in query parser -->
    <str name="queryParsingFieldType">bmax_query</str>
    <str name="synonymFieldType">bmax_synonyms</str>
    
    <!-- boost and penalize term retrieval -->
    <str name="boostTermFieldType">bmax_boostterms</str>
    <str name="penalizeTermFieldType">bmax_penalizeterms</str>
</searchComponent>

and add it to the components of your search handler in front of the query component:

<requestHandler name="/select" class="solr.SearchHandler" default="true">
 <arr name="components">
     ...
     <str>bmax.booster</str>
     ...
  </arr>
</requestHandler>

Configuring the fieldTypes needed

A simple example for a field type in your schema.xml, that tokenizes a incoming query and removes stopwords might be this:

<fieldType name="bmax_query" class="solr.TextField" indexed="false" stored="false">
    <analyzer type="query">
        <tokenizer class="solr.PatternTokenizerFactory" 
                   pattern="[+;:,\s©®℗℠™&amp;()/\p{Punct}&lt;&gt;»«]+" />
                                   
        <!-- lower case -->
        <filter class="solr.LowerCaseFilterFactory" />
        
        <!-- Removes stopwords from the query. -->
        <filter class="solr.StopFilterFactory" 
                words="stopwords.txt" ignoreCase="true"/>
    </analyzer>
</fieldType>

This is a example of a synonym parser. The input is each token of the query analyzer above, one at a time. So, there's no need for any fancy tokenizing, the keyword tokenizer will do it. This analyzer chain utilizes the SynonymFilter and as a last step removes all non-synonyms. With this nifty little trick, no unneeded synonyms get added to your query.

<fieldType name="bmax_synonyms" class="solr.TextField" indexed="false" stored="false">
     <analyzer type="query">
        <tokenizer class="solr.KeywordTokenizerFactory" />
        
        <!-- synonyms -->
        <filter class="solr.SynonymFilterFactory" synonyms="syn.txt" ignoreCase="true" expand="false"/>

        <!-- remove all non-synonyms -->
        <filter class="solr.TypeTokenFilterFactory" types="list_tokentype_synonym.txt" useWhitelist="true"/>
     </analyzer>
  </fieldType>

For the boostterm field type, the SynonymFilter might be handy as well.

Building the project

This should install the current version into your local repository

$ mvn clean install

Releasing the project to maven central

Define new versions

$ export NEXT_VERSION=<version>
$ export NEXT_DEVELOPMENT_VERSION=<version>-SNAPSHOT

Then execute the release chain

$ mvn org.codehaus.mojo:versions-maven-plugin:2.0:set -DgenerateBackupPoms=false -DnewVersion=$NEXT_VERSION
$ git commit -a -m "pushes to release version $NEXT_VERSION"
$ mvn -P release

Then, increment to next development version:

$ git tag -a v$NEXT_VERSION -m "`curl -s http://whatthecommit.com/index.txt`"
$ mvn org.codehaus.mojo:versions-maven-plugin:2.0:set -DgenerateBackupPoms=false -DnewVersion=$NEXT_DEVELOPMENT_VERSION
$ git commit -a -m "pushes to development version $NEXT_DEVELOPMENT_VERSION"
$ git push origin tag v$NEXT_VERSION && git push origin

Contributing

We're looking forward to your comments, issues and pull requests!

License

This project is licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.