2021-08-23 17:27:16 +00:00
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# Configuring search
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{! backend/administration/CLI_tasks/general_cli_task_info.include !}
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## Built-in search
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To use built-in search that has no external dependencies, set the search module to `Pleroma.Activity`:
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2021-11-17 19:29:49 +00:00
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> config :pleroma, Pleroma.Search, module: Pleroma.Search.DatabaseSearch
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2021-08-23 17:27:16 +00:00
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While it has no external dependencies, it has problems with performance and relevancy.
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## Meilisearch
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2021-10-12 16:14:39 +00:00
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Note that it's quite a bit more memory hungry than PostgreSQL (around 4-5G for ~1.2 million
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posts while idle and up to 7G while indexing initially). The disk usage for this additional index is also
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around 4 gigabytes. Like [RUM](./cheatsheet.md#rum-indexing-for-full-text-search) indexes, it offers considerably
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higher performance and ordering by timestamp in a reasonable amount of time.
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Additionally, the search results seem to be more accurate.
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Due to high memory usage, it may be best to set it up on a different machine, if running pleroma on a low-resource
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computer, and use private key authentication to secure the remote search instance.
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2021-08-23 17:27:16 +00:00
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To use [meilisearch](https://www.meilisearch.com/), set the search module to `Pleroma.Search.Meilisearch`:
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> config :pleroma, Pleroma.Search, module: Pleroma.Search.Meilisearch
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2021-12-20 16:27:22 +00:00
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You then need to set the address of the meilisearch instance, and optionally the private key for authentication. You might
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also want to change the `initial_indexing_chunk_size` to be smaller if you're server is not very powerful, but not higher than `100_000`,
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because meilisearch will refuse to process it if it's too big. However, in general you want this to be as big as possible, because meilisearch
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indexes faster when it can process many posts in a single batch.
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2021-08-23 17:27:16 +00:00
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> config :pleroma, Pleroma.Search.Meilisearch,
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> url: "http://127.0.0.1:7700/",
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2021-12-20 16:27:22 +00:00
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> private_key: "private key",
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> initial_indexing_chunk_size: 100_000
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2021-08-23 17:27:16 +00:00
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Information about setting up meilisearch can be found in the
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[official documentation](https://docs.meilisearch.com/learn/getting_started/installation.html).
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2022-03-23 08:36:01 +00:00
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You probably want to start it with `MEILI_NO_ANALYTICS=true` environment variable to disable analytics.
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At least version 0.25.0 is required, but you are strongly adviced to use at least 0.26.0, as it introduces
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the `--enable-auto-batching` option which drastically improves performance. Without this option, the search
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is hardly usable on a somewhat big instance.
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2021-08-23 17:27:16 +00:00
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### Private key authentication (optional)
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To set the private key, use the `MEILI_MASTER_KEY` environment variable when starting. After setting the _master key_,
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you have to get the _private key_, which is actually used for authentication.
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=== "OTP"
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```sh
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2022-03-22 17:29:17 +00:00
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./bin/pleroma_ctl search.meilisearch show-keys <your master key here>
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2021-08-23 17:27:16 +00:00
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```
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=== "From Source"
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```sh
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mix pleroma.search.meilisearch show-keys <your master key here>
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2021-08-23 17:27:16 +00:00
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```
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2022-03-22 17:29:17 +00:00
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You will see a "Default Admin API Key", this is the key you actually put into your configuration file.
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2021-08-23 17:27:16 +00:00
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### Initial indexing
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After setting up the configuration, you'll want to index all of your already existsing posts. Only public posts are indexed. You'll only
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have to do it one time, but it might take a while, depending on the amount of posts your instance has seen. This is also a fairly RAM
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consuming process for `meilisearch`, and it will take a lot of RAM when running if you have a lot of posts (seems to be around 5G for ~1.2
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million posts while idle and up to 7G while indexing initially, but your experience may be different).
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2021-12-20 15:16:33 +00:00
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The sequence of actions is as follows:
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1. First, change the configuration to use `Pleroma.Search.Meilisearch` as the search backend
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2. Restart your instance, at this point it can be used while the search indexing is running, though search won't return anything
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3. Start the initial indexing process (as described below with `index`),
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and wait until the task says it sent everything from the database to index
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4. Wait until everything is actually indexed (by checking with `stats` as described below),
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at this point you don't have to do anything, just wait a while.
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2021-11-14 17:15:12 +00:00
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To start the initial indexing, run the `index` command:
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2021-08-23 17:27:16 +00:00
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=== "OTP"
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```sh
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./bin/pleroma_ctl search.meilisearch index
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```
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=== "From Source"
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```sh
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mix pleroma.search.meilisearch index
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```
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This will show you the total amount of posts to index, and then show you the amount of posts indexed currently, until the numbers eventually
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become the same. The posts are indexed in big batches and meilisearch will take some time to actually index them, even after you have
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inserted all the posts into it. Depending on the amount of posts, this may be as long as several hours. To get information about the status
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of indexing and how many posts have actually been indexed, use the `stats` command:
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=== "OTP"
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```sh
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./bin/pleroma_ctl search.meilisearch stats
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```
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=== "From Source"
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```sh
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mix pleroma.search.meilisearch stats
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```
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### Clearing the index
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In case you need to clear the index (for example, to re-index from scratch, if that needs to happen for some reason), you can
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use the `clear` command:
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=== "OTP"
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```sh
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./bin/pleroma_ctl search.meilisearch clear
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```
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=== "From Source"
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```sh
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mix pleroma.search.meilisearch clear
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```
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This will clear **all** the posts from the search index. Note, that deleted posts are also removed from index by the instance itself, so
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there is no need to actually clear the whole index, unless you want **all** of it gone. That said, the index does not hold any information
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that cannot be re-created from the database, it should also generally be a lot smaller than the size of your database. Still, the size
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depends on the amount of text in posts.
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2022-06-30 16:36:57 +00:00
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## Elasticsearch
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As with meilisearch, this can be rather memory-hungry, but it is very good at what it does.
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To use [elasticsearch](https://www.elastic.co/), set the search module to `Pleroma.Search.Elasticsearch`:
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> config :pleroma, Pleroma.Search, module: Pleroma.Search.Elasticsearch
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You then need to set the URL and authentication credentials if relevant.
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> config :pleroma, Pleroma.Search.Elasticsearch.Cluster,
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> url: "http://127.0.0.1:9200/",
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> username: "elastic",
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> password: "changeme",
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### Initial indexing
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After setting up the configuration, you'll want to index all of your already existsing posts. Only public posts are indexed. You'll only
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have to do it one time, but it might take a while, depending on the amount of posts your instance has seen.
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The sequence of actions is as follows:
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1. First, change the configuration to use `Pleroma.Search.Elasticsearch` as the search backend
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2. Restart your instance, at this point it can be used while the search indexing is running, though search won't return anything
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3. Start the initial indexing process (as described below with `index`),
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and wait until the task says it sent everything from the database to index
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4. Wait until the index tasks exits
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To start the initial indexing, run the `build` command:
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=== "OTP"
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```sh
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2022-06-30 18:44:31 +00:00
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./bin/pleroma_ctl search import activities
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2022-06-30 16:36:57 +00:00
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```
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=== "From Source"
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```sh
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2022-06-30 18:44:31 +00:00
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mix pleroma.search import activities
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```
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