Hello, I have attached the original thread from where I got my information at the very bottom in case it is of any help. In regards to whether I want just a boolean retrieval model, in the usage we are currently discussing, the answer is yes (I don't care about the score). However, we also do other queries in other use cases where we do care about the score.
In regards to the type of query, we are using a prefix query. We have a problem with performance when the prefix entered by the user is short because it yields a large number of hits. I was hoping that taking the approach I mentioned, search engine would call the HitCollector incrementally and give me a chance to end the search earlier but it seems like it is not happening. Do you think the problem is with term expansion? Regards, Len ----- original message ----- From: simon.willnauer [at] googlemail Re: Using HitCollector to Collect First N Hits Hi Len, what kind of query do you execute when you collect the hits. HitCollector should be called for each document by the time it is scored. Is it possible that you run a query that could be expensive in terms of term expansion like WildcardQuery? simon ----- original message ----- >From : ltakeuchi [at] jostleme Stop search process when a given number of hits is reached Hello, Im using Lucene 2.4.1 and Im trying to use a custom HitCollector to collect only the first N hits (not the best hits) for performance. I saw another e-mail in this group where they mentioned writing a HitCollector which throws an exception after N hits to do this. So I tried this approach and it seems as if my HitCollector isnt called until the hits have been determined, i.e. the time until my HitCollector is called is dependent on the number of hits and my performance is no better than when I was not using a custom HitCollector. Does anyone have insight into my problem? The person who tried approach mentioned performance improved significantly for him. Regards, Len ORIGINAL THREAD BELOW ===================== ----- original message ----- >From : yodapoubelle [at] yahoo Re : Stop search process when a given number of hits is reached Thanks a lot for your responses... I have tried the HitCollector and throw an exception when the limit of hits is reached... It works fine and the search time is really reduce when there is a lot of docs which are matching the query... I did that : public class CountCollector extends HitCollector{ public int cpt; private int _maxHit; public CountCollector(int maxHit) { cpt = 0; _maxHit = maxHit } public void collect(int arg0, float arg1) { cpt++; if (cpt > _max_Hit) { throw new LimitIsReachedException(); } } } With a simple try catch, I catch the exception, and display "cpt" (the counter)... Best regards ----- Message d'origine ---- De : Andrzej Bialecki <ab[at]getopt.org> à : java-user[at]lucene.apache.org Envoyé le : Jeudi, 7 Août 2008, 14h29mn 31s Objet : Re: Stop search process when a given number of hits is reached Doron Cohen wrote: > Nothing built in that I'm aware of will do this, but it can be done by > searching with your own HitCollector. > There is a related feature - stop search after a specified time - using > TimeLimitedCollector. > It is not released yet, see issue LUCENE-997. > In short, the collector's collect() method is invoked in the search process > for each matching document. > Once 500 docs were collected, your collector can cause the search to stop by > throwing an exception. > Upon catching the exception you know that 500 docs were collected. Two additional comments: * the topN results from such incomplete search may be way off, if there were some high scoring documents somewhere beyond the limit. * if you know that there are more important and less important documents in your corpus, and their relative weight is independent of the query (e.g. PageRank-type score), then you can restructure your index so that postings belonging to highly-scoring documents come first on the posting lists - this way you have a better chance to collect highly relevant documents first, even though the search is incomplete. You can find an implementation of this concept in Nutch (org.apache.nutch.indexer.IndexSorter). -- Best regards, Andrzej Bialecki <>< ___. ___ ___ ___ _ _ __________________________________ [__ || __|__/|__||\/| Information Retrieval, Semantic Web ___|||__|| \| || | Embedded Unix, System Integration http://www.sigram.com Contact: info at sigram dot com ----- original message ----- >From : yodapoubelle [at] yahoo Stop search process when a given number of hits is reached Remove Highlighting Hello Is there a way to stop the search process when a given number of hits is reached? I have a counter feature which displays how many docs match a query. This counter is blocked; I mean that if there are more than 500 docs, it will just display "more than 500". I don't care about the exact amount of docs matched by the query, the order of the hits or whatever... What I want is to stop the search process when it reaches at least 500 hits in order to improve performance... (I want an average search time in about 50 - 100 ms) I experimented with the following methods : For the same query: with search(Query query, Filter filter, Sort sort) hits=157691 docs in searchingTime=2514 ms with search(Query query, Filter filter, int n) (with n = 50) TopDocs totalHits 157691 in searchingTime= 2360 ms For another query: With search(Query query, Filter filter, Sort sort) hits=1208 docs in searchingTime=750 ms With search(Query query, Filter filter, int n) (with n = 50) TopDocs totalHits 1208 in searchingTime= 718 ms For another query: With search(Query query, Filter filter, Sort sort) hits=16174 cv(s) searchingTime=1297 ms With search(Query query, Filter filter, int n) (with n = 50) TopDocs totalHits 16174 in searchingTime= 1219 ms According to this results, replacing the first method by the other has no effect on either the search time or total number of hits returned Also the lucene version used now is 1.9.1 (but i work on the evolution to 2.3.2) Thanks a lot (Sorry for my bad English ... you will easily guess, Iâm French ;) --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: java-user-unsubscr...@lucene.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: java-user-h...@lucene.apache.org