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Algoliax

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This package let you easily integrate Algolia to your Elixir application. It can be used with built in Elixir struct or with Ecto schemas.

Installation

The package can be installed by adding :algoliax to your list of dependencies in mix.exs:

def deps do
  [
    {:algoliax, "~> 0.9.1"}
  ]
end

If using with Ecto schemas, Algoliax requires :ecto.

Configuration

Algoliax needs only :api_key and :application_id config. These configs can either be on config files or using environment variables ALGOLIA_API_KEY and ALGOLIA_APPLICATION_ID.

config :algoliax,
  api_key: "<API_KEY>",
  application_id: "<APPLICATION_ID>",
  batch_size: 500,
  recv_timeout: 5000

Usage

defmodule People do
  use Algoliax.Indexer,
    index_name: :algoliax_people,
    object_id: :reference,
    algolia: [
      attributes_for_faceting: ["age"],
      searchable_attributes: ["full_name"],
      custom_ranking: ["desc(updated_at)"]
    ]

  defstruct reference: nil, last_name: nil, first_name: nil, age: nil
end

Overridable functions:

defmodule People do
  ...

  @impl Algoliax
  def to_be_indexed?(person) do
    person.age > 20
  end
end

# This object will be indexed
people1 = %People{reference: 10, last_name: "Doe", first_name: "John", age: 13}

# This object will not be indexed
people2 = %People{reference: 87, last_name: "Fred", first_name: "Al", age: 70}
defmodule People do
  ...

  @impl Algoliax
  def build_object(person) do
    %{
      age: person.age,
      now: Date.utc_today()
    }
  end
end
defmodule Article do
  ...

  @impl Algoliax
  def build_object(author, "article_index_" <> locale) do
    %{
      author: article.author,
      content: article.content[locale]
    }
  end
end

Index name at runtime

It's possible to define an index name at runtime, useful if index_name depends on environment or comes from an environment variable.

To do this just define a function with an arity of 0 that will be used as index_name

defmodule People do
  use Algoliax.Indexer,
    index_name: :algoliax_people,
    object_id: :reference,
    algolia: [...]

  def algoliax_people do
    System.get_env("PEOPLE_INDEX_NAME")
  end
end

Multiple indexes

It's possible to define multiple indexes for a same model.

To achieve this, just specify an array of index names, or simply return an array in your index_name/0 runtime function

defmodule Article do
  use Algoliax.Indexer,
    index_name: [:algoliax_article_fr, :algoliax_article_en],
    object_id: :reference,
    algolia: [...]
end

Index functions

# Get people index settings
People.get_settings()

# Delete index
People.delete_index()

# Configure index
People.configure_index()

Object functions

# Save object
People.save_object(people1)

# Save multiple objects
People.save_objects([people1, people2])

# Save multiple objects, and ensure object that they can't be indexed anymore are deleted from the index
People.save_objects([people1, people2], force_delete: true)

# Get object
People.get_object(people1)

# Delete object
People.delete_object(people1)

Search functions

# search in index
People.search("john")

# search facet
People.search_facet("age")

Ecto specific

First you will need to add the Repo to the algoliax config:

use Algoliax.Indexer,
  index_name: :algoliax_people,
  object_id: :reference
  repo: MyApp.Repo,
  algolia: [...]

If using Agoliax with an Ecto schema it is possible to use reindex functions. Reindex will go through all entries in the corresponding table (or part if query is provided). Algoliax will save_objects by batch of 500. batch_size can be configured

config :algoliax,
  batch_size: 250

NOTE: Algoliax use by default the id column to order and go through the table. (cf Custom order column)

import Ecto.Query

# Reindex all
People.reindex()

# Reindex all people with age greater than 20
query = from(p in People, where: p.age > 20)
People.reindex(query)

# Reindex can also `force_delete`
query = from(p in People, where: p.age > 20)
People.reindex(query, force_delete: true)
People.reindex(force_delete: true)

# Reindex atomically (create a temporary index and move it to initial index)
People.reindex_atomic()
Custom cursor column

If you don't have an id column, you can change it by setting the cursor_field option either in the global settings or in schema specific settings.

Make sure this column ensure a consistent order even when new records are created.

config :algoliax,
  batch_size: 250,
  cursor_field: :reference
defmodule People do
  use Algoliax.Indexer,
    index_name: :algoliax_people,
    object_id: :reference,
    repo: MyApp.Repo,
    cursor_field: :inserted_at,
    algolia: [...]
end

Replicas configuration

Replicas can be configured using :replicas options. This option accepts the following :index_name, :algolia and :inherit. Use inherit: true on the replica if you want it to inherit from the primary settings, if custom settings in :algolia they will be merged.

use Algoliax.Indexer,
  index_name: :algoliax_people,
  object_id: :reference,
  repo: MyApp.Repo,
  algolia: [
    attributes_for_faceting: ["age"],
    searchable_attributes: ["full_name"],
  ],
  replicas: [
    [index_name: :algoliax_by_age_asc, inherit: true, algolia: [ranking: ["asc(age)"]]],
    [index_name: :algoliax_by_age_desc, inherit: false, algolia: [ranking: ["desc(age)"]]]
  ]

If the main index holds multiple indexes (e.g for an index per language usecase), replicas need to hold the same amount of names. The order is important to be associated to the correct main index.

use Algoliax.Indexer,
  index_name: [:algoliax_article_en, :algoliax_article_fr],
  object_id: :reference,
  repo: MyApp.Repo,
  algolia: [
    attributes_for_faceting: ["published_at"],
    searchable_attributes: ["content"],
  ],
  replicas: [
    [index_name: [:algoliax_article_by_publication_asc_en, :algoliax_article_by_publication_asc_fr], inherit: true, algolia: [ranking: ["asc(published_at)"]]],
    [index_name: [:algoliax_article_by_publication_desc_en, :algoliax_article_by_publication_desc_fr], inherit: false, algolia: [ranking: ["desc(published_at)"]]]
  ]

Configure index name at runtime

To support code for multiple environments, you can also define the index name at runtime. To achieve this, create a function within your indexer module and reference it using its atom in the Indexer configuration.

defmodule People do
  use Algoliax.Indexer,
    index_name: :runtime_index_name,
    #....

  def runtime_index_name do
    System.get_env("INDEX_NAME")
  end
end

Copyright and License

Copyright (c) 2020 CORUSCANT (welcome to the jungle) - https://www.welcometothejungle.com

This library is licensed under the BSD-2-Clause.