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Kirill Smelkov
mariadb
Commits
9349bf7e
Commit
9349bf7e
authored
Aug 24, 2000
by
serg@infomag.ape.relarn.ru
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Docs/manual.texi
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9349bf7e
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@@ -11670,6 +11670,7 @@ to restart @code{mysqld} with @code{--skip-grant-tables} to be able to run
* GRANT:: @code{GRANT} and @code{REVOKE} syntax
* CREATE INDEX:: @code{CREATE INDEX} syntax
* DROP INDEX:: @code{DROP INDEX} syntax
* CREATE COLLECTION:: @code{CREATE COLLECTION} syntax
* Comments:: Comment syntax
* CREATE FUNCTION:: @code{CREATE FUNCTION} syntax
* Reserved words:: Is @strong{MySQL} picky about reserved words?
...
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@@ -13435,6 +13436,13 @@ mysql> CREATE TABLE test (
For @code{BLOB} and @code{TEXT} columns, you must index a prefix of the
column, you cannot index the entire thing.
In @strong{MySQL} 3.23.23 or later, you can also create special indexes
called @strong{collections}. They are used for full-text search. Only
@code{MyISAM} table type supports collections. Collection can be created
only from @code{VARCHAR}, @code{BLOB}, and @code{TEXT} columns.
Indexing always happens over the entire column, partial indexing is not
supported. See @ref{MySQL full-text search} for details of operation.
@node Multiple-column indexes, Other-vendor column types, Indexes, Column types
@subsection Multiple-column indexes
...
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@@ -14150,6 +14158,17 @@ mysql> select STRCMP('text2', 'text');
mysql> select STRCMP('text', 'text');
-> 0
@end example
@findex MATCH ... AGAINST()
@item MATCH (col1,col2,...) AGAINST (expr)
@code{MATCH ... AGAINST()} is used for full-text search and returns
relevance - similarity measure between the text in columns
@code{(col1,col2,...)} and the query @code{expr}. Relevance is a
positive floating point number. Zero relevance means no similarity.
For @code{MATCH ... AGAINST()} to work, a @code{COLLECTION}
must be created first. @xref{CREATE TABLE, , @code{CREATE TABLE}}.
@code{MATCH ... AGAINST()} is available in @code{MySQL} 3.23.23 or later.
For details and usage examples see @xref{MySQL full-text search}.
@end table
@findex Casts
...
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@@ -16159,6 +16178,7 @@ create_definition:
or KEY [index_name] (index_col_name,...)
or INDEX [index_name] (index_col_name,...)
or UNIQUE [INDEX] [index_name] (index_col_name,...)
or COLLECTION [collection_name] (collection_col_name,...)
or [CONSTRAINT symbol] FOREIGN KEY index_name (index_col_name,...)
[reference_definition]
or CHECK (expr)
...
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@@ -16401,6 +16421,14 @@ When you use @code{ORDER BY} or @code{GROUP BY} with a @code{TEXT} or
@code{BLOB} column, only the first @code{max_sort_length} bytes are used.
@xref{BLOB, , @code{BLOB}}.
@item
In @strong{MySQL} 3.23.23 or later, you can also create special indexes
called @strong{collections}. They are used for full-text search. Only
@code{MyISAM} table type supports collections. Collection can be created
from any mix of @code{VARCHAR}, @code{BLOB}, and @code{TEXT} columns.
Indexing always happens over the entire column, partial indexing is not
supported. See @ref{MySQL full-text search} for details of operation.
@item
The @code{FOREIGN KEY}, @code{CHECK} and @code{REFERENCES} clauses don't
actually do anything. The syntax for them is provided only for compatibility,
...
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@@ -16570,6 +16598,7 @@ alter_specification:
or ADD INDEX [index_name] (index_col_name,...)
or ADD PRIMARY KEY (index_col_name,...)
or ADD UNIQUE [index_name] (index_col_name,...)
or ADD COLLECTION [collection_name] (collection_col_name,...)
or ALTER [COLUMN] col_name @{SET DEFAULT literal | DROP DEFAULT@}
or CHANGE [COLUMN] old_col_name create_definition
or MODIFY [COLUMN] create_definition
...
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@@ -19782,7 +19811,7 @@ For more information about how @strong{MySQL} uses indexes, see
@ref{MySQL indexes, , @strong{MySQL} indexes}.
@findex DROP INDEX
@node DROP INDEX, C
omments
, CREATE INDEX, Reference
@node DROP INDEX, C
REATE COLLECTION
, CREATE INDEX, Reference
@section @code{DROP INDEX} syntax
@example
...
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@@ -19795,8 +19824,30 @@ prior to version 3.22. In 3.22 or later, @code{DROP INDEX} is mapped to an
@code{ALTER TABLE} statement to drop the index.
@xref{ALTER TABLE, , @code{ALTER TABLE}}.
@findex CREATE COLLECTION
@node CREATE COLLECTION, Comments, DROP INDEX, Reference
@section @code{CREATE COLLECTION} syntax
@example
CREATE COLLECTION collection_name ON tbl_name (col_name,... )
@end example
@code{CREATE COLLECTION} statement is mapped to an
@code{ALTER TABLE} statement to create collections.
@xref{ALTER TABLE, , @code{ALTER TABLE}}.
A column list of the form @code{(col1,col2,...)} creates a
multiple-column collection. Search in such a collection means a search
over the concatenated columns that comprise the collection.
There is no special @code{DROP COLLECTION} statement.
@code{DROP INDEX} should be used to drop collections instead.
Only @code{VARCHAR}, @code{BLOB}, and @code{TEXT} columns can be part
of the collection. See @ref{MySQL full-text search} for details of operation.
@findex Comment syntax
@node Comments, CREATE FUNCTION,
DROP INDEX
, Reference
@node Comments, CREATE FUNCTION,
CREATE COLLECTION
, Reference
@section Comment syntax
The @strong{MySQL} server supports the @code{# to end of line}, @code{--
...
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@@ -34009,9 +34060,10 @@ working on the @strong{MySQL} code.
@menu
* MySQL threads:: MySQL threads
* MySQL full-text search:: MySQL full-text search
@end menu
@node MySQL threads,
, MySQL internals, MySQL internals
@node MySQL threads,
MySQL full-text search
, MySQL internals, MySQL internals
@section MySQL threads
The @strong{MySQL} server creates the the following threads:
...
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@@ -34050,6 +34102,76 @@ started to read and apply updates from the master.
@code{mysqladmin processlist} only shows the connection and @code{INSERT
DELAYED} threads.
@node MySQL full-text search, , MySQL threads, MySQL internals
@section MySQL full-text search
Since version 3.23.23, @strong{MySQL} has support for full-text indexing
and searching. Full-text index in @strong{MySQL} is a special type of index
called @strong{collection}. Collections can be created from @code{VARCHAR},
@code{TEXT}, and @code{BLOB} columns at @code{CREATE TABLE}
time or added later with @code{ALTER TABLE} or @code{CREATE COLLECTION}.
Collection is queried with @code{MATCH} function.
@example
mysql> CREATE TABLE t (a VARCHAR(200), b TEXT, COLLECTION (a,b));
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)
mysql> INSERT INTO t VALUES
-> ('MySQL has now support', 'for full-text search'),
-> ('Full-text indexes', 'are called collections'),
-> ('Only MyISAM tables','support collections'),
-> ('Function MATCH ... AGAINST()','is used to do a search'),
-> ('Full-text search in MySQL', 'implements vector space model');
Query OK, 5 rows affected (0.00 sec)
Records: 5 Duplicates: 0 Warnings: 0
mysql> SELECT * FROM t WHERE MATCH (a,b) AGAINST ('MySQL');
+---------------------------+-------------------------------+
| a | b |
+---------------------------+-------------------------------+
| MySQL has now support | for full-text search |
| Full-text search in MySQL | implements vector-space-model |
+---------------------------+-------------------------------+
2 rows in set (0.00 sec)
mysql> SELECT *,MATCH a,b AGAINST ('collections support') as x FROM t;
+------------------------------+-------------------------------+--------+
| a | b | x |
+------------------------------+-------------------------------+--------+
| MySQL has now support | for full-text search | 0.3834 |
| Full-text indexes | are called collections | 0.3834 |
| Only MyISAM tables | support collections | 0.7668 |
| Function MATCH ... AGAINST() | is used to do a search | 0 |
| Full-text search in MySQL | implements vector space model | 0 |
+------------------------------+-------------------------------+--------+
5 rows in set (0.00 sec)
@end example
Function @code{MATCH} matches a natural language query @code{AGAINST} a
text collection. For every row in a table it returns relevance -
similarity measure between the text in that row (in the columns, that
are part of the collection) and the query. When it used in a @code{WHERE}
clause (see example above) the rows returned are automatically sorted
with relevance decreasing. Relevance is a non-negative floating point
number. Zero relevance means no similarity. Relevance is computed based
on number of words in the row and number of unique words in that row,
total number of words in the collection, number of documents (rows),
that contain a particular word, etc.
MySQL uses very simple parser to split text into words. "Word" is
any sequence of letters, numbers, @code{'}, and @code{_}. Any "word"
that is present in stopword list or just too short (3 characters or less)
is ignored.
Every correct word in the collection and in the query is weighted,
according to their significance in the query or collection. This way, a
word that is present in many documents will have lower weight (and may
even have a zero weight), because it has lower semantic value in this
particular collection. Otherwise, if the word is rare, it will receive a
higher weight. Weights of the words are then combined to compute the
relevance.
Such a technique works best with big collections (in fact, it was
carefully tuned up this way). For very small tables word distribution
does not reflect adequately their semantical value, and this model
may sometimes produce bizarre results.
@page
@node Environment variables, Users, MySQL internals, Top
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