NAME

KinoSearch::Index::BackgroundMerger - Consolidate index segments in the background.

DEPRECATED

The KinoSearch code base has been assimilated by the Apache Lucy project. The "KinoSearch" namespace has been deprecated, but development continues under our new name at our new home: http://lucy.apache.org/

SYNOPSIS

my $bg_merger = KinoSearch::Index::BackgroundMerger->new(
    index  => '/path/to/index',
);
$bg_merger->commit;

DESCRIPTION

Adding documents to an index is usually fast, but every once in a while the index must be compacted and an update takes substantially longer to complete. See KinoSearch::Docs::Cookbook::FastUpdates for how to use this class to control worst-case index update performance.

As with Indexer, see KinoSearch::Docs::FileLocking if your index is on a shared volume.

CONSTRUCTORS

new( [labeled params] )

my $bg_merger = KinoSearch::Index::BackgroundMerger->new(
    index   => '/path/to/index',    # required
    manager => $manager             # default: created internally
);

Open a new BackgroundMerger.

  • index - Either a string filepath or a Folder.

  • manager - An IndexManager. If not supplied, an IndexManager with a 10-second write lock timeout will be created.

METHODS

commit()

Commit any changes made to the index. Until this is called, none of the changes made during an indexing session are permanent.

Calls prepare_commit() implicitly if it has not already been called.

prepare_commit()

Perform the expensive setup for commit() in advance, so that commit() completes quickly.

Towards the end of prepare_commit(), the BackgroundMerger attempts to re-acquire the write lock, which is then held until commit() finishes and releases it.

optimize()

Optimize the index for search-time performance. This may take a while, as it can involve rewriting large amounts of data.

INHERITANCE

KinoSearch::Index::BackgroundMerger isa KinoSearch::Object::Obj.

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

Copyright 2005-2011 Marvin Humphrey

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.