NAME

Elastic::Manual::Intro - An introduction to Elastic::Model

VERSION

version 0.29_2

INSTALLING REQUIREMENTS

Install Elasticsearch

You need a recent version of Java installed, then download the current stable release of Elasticsearch from http://www.Elasticsearch.org/download/. For instance:

curl -L -O https://github.com/downloads/elasticsearch/elasticsearch/elasticsearch-0.20.5.tar.gz
tar -xzf elasticsearch-0.20.5.tar.gz

Note: The minimum required version of Elasticsearch is 0.19.11.

Install Elastic::Model

Use your favourite CPAN installer:

cpanm Elastic::Model

See "TEST SUITE" in Elastic::Manual for how to run the full test suite against a local Elasticsearch cluster.

Start Elasticsearch

cd elasticsearch-0.20.5/
./bin/Elasticsearch -f      # -f starts the server in the foreground

You now have a running Elasticsearch cluster with one node. You can test that it is running with:

curl http://localhost:9200/?pretty=true

See http://www.elasticsearch.org/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/setup.html for more information about installing and configuring Elasticsearch.

SETUP YOUR APPLICATION

Create a Model

First set up a simple model. The model handles the relationship between your classes and Elasticsearch.

package MyApp;

use Elastic::Model;

has_namespace 'myapp' => {
    user    => 'MyApp::User'
};

no Elastic::Model;

1;

Your model must define at least one namespace, which tells Elastic::Model which type (like a table in a DB) should be handled by which of your classes. So the above declaration says:

"For all indices which belong to namespace myapp, objects of class MyApp::User will be stored under the type user in Elasticsearch."

Create your User class

package MyApp::User;

use Elastic::Doc;

use DateTime();

has 'name' => (
    is  => 'rw',
    isa => 'Str',
);

has 'email' => (
    is  => 'rw',
    isa => 'Str',
);

has 'created' => (
    is      => 'ro',
    isa     => 'DateTime',
    default => sub { DateTime->now }
);

no Elastic::Doc;

1;

This simple Moose class only changes "use Moose;" to "use Elastic::Doc;". At the moment we're not configuring anything else. Thanks to Moose's introspection, we have enough information to setup everything we need.

PREPARING TO USE YOUR APPLICATION

Connect your Model to an Elasticsearch cluster

#!/bin/env perl

use strict;
use warnings;
use MyApp();

my $model  = MyApp->new();

This creates an instance of your model, with a connection to a local Elasticsearch cluster. The last line is the equivalent of:

use Search::Elasticsearch::Compat();
my $es     = Search::Elasticsearch::Compat->new( servers => 'localhost:9200' );
my $model  = MyApp->new( es => $es );

Create an index

Before we get started, we need to create an index (like a database in a relational DB) in Elasticsearch.

$model->namespace('myapp')->index->create();

This has created index myapp, which contains type user (where a type is like a table in a database). It has also configured the type's mapping (which is like the schema or column definition).

Our index is now ready to use.

STORING AND RETRIEVING OBJECTS

Preparation for object access

Before we can save or retrieve objects/documents from Elasticsearch, we need a domain:

Get a domain

A domain is like a database handle. It allows us to talk to a particular index or alias. (An alias is like a shortcut which points at one or more indices.)

$domain = $model->domain('myapp');

See Elastic::Manual::Scaling for more about how to use aliases.

Create an object

Normally, you would create an object with:

my $user = MyApp::User->new(...)

but to use all of the magic of Elastic::Model, you must create your object via the $domain object:

my $user    = $domain->new_doc(
    user => {                           # $type => \%args_to_new
        id    => 1,                     # auto-generated if not provided
        name  => 'Clinton',
        email => 'clint@domain.com',
    }
);

$user->save;                            # save to Elasticsearch

Retrieve an object by ID

Now, we can retrieve the user object from Elasticsearch, using the type and id:

$user = $domain->get( user => 1 );

say $user->name;
# Clinton

Update your object

$user->email( 'clinton@domain.com' );

Elastic::Model keeps track of what attributes have been changed, plus their original value:

say $user->has_changed;
# 1

say $user->has_changed('email');
# 1

dump $user->old_values;
# { email => 'clint@domain.com' };

The UID (unique ID) of the object tracks (amongst other things) the current version number. Elasticsearch uses this version number to avoid overwriting changes that have been made by another process (see Optimistic Currency Control).

say $user->uid->version;
# 1

The version number is incremented each time a changed object is saved.

$user->save;

say $user->uid->version;
# 2

say $user->has_changed;
# 0

QUERYING Elasticsearch

By default, everything in Elasticsearch is indexed and searchable. You can search across one index or many indices, one type or many types.

In order to query the objects stored in Elasticsearch, you need a view. Views are reusable, so you might create views like $recent_users, $approved_comments etc.

Creating a view

You can create a view from your $domain object, in which case the view will be limited to just that domain:

$view = $domain->view;              # limited to index 'myapp';

To create a view which queries multiple domains, you could do:

$view = $model->view->domain(['index_1', 'alias_2']);

Or to query all domains known to your model:

$view = $model->view;

Configuring a view

When setting an attribute on a view, a cloned instance of the old view is returned, meaning that you can use one view to derive another:

$all   = $domain->view;                         # all types in $domain
$users = $all->type('user');                    # type 'user' in index $domain
$clint = $users->queryb({name => 'clinton'});   # users whose name is 'clinton'

Query syntax

Queries can be specified using the standard Elasticsearch query DSL or with the more Perlish more compact ElasticSearch::SearchBuilder syntax.

Standard query DSL:

$search = $view->query( { text =>  { name    => 'clinton' }})
               ->filter({ range => { created => { gt => '2012-01-01' }}});

SearchBuilder syntax:

$search = $view->queryb(  { name    => 'clinton'             })
               ->filterb( { created => { gt => '2012-01-01' }});

Getting search results

Once you have defined your view, you call a search method (eg search()) which performs the search and returns a Results object.

my $results = $search->search;
say "Total results found: ".$results->total;

while (my $doc = $results->next_doc) {
    say $doc->name
}

Views can also be used to return highlighted results, and facets, which provide aggregated results, much like GROUP-BY functions in SQL, for instance, the most popular terms, or the number of posting per day.

SEE ALSO

AUTHOR

Clinton Gormley <drtech@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

This software is copyright (c) 2014 by Clinton Gormley.

This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.