Template fetch functions
New in eZ Find 2.0 are dedicated template fetch functions:
For example:
fetch(ezfind, search, hash(<parameters>))
Returns eZ Find search results exposing the powerful features of the backend Solr.
fetch(ezfind, moreLikeThis, hash(<parameters>))
Finds related content with heuristic techniques.
fetch(ezfind, rawSolrRequest, hash(<parameters>))
Allows for “raw” Solr requests (not for normal use, but for example to search “foreign” Solr or Lucene indexes).
Fetch parameters
Review the table for the available fetch parameters. You can click on the parameters for a more elaborate explanation and some examples, or you can scroll down this page and find the explanations and examples of all parameters.
Name | Type | Description | Required |
---|---|---|---|
String |
Search query string |
No |
|
Integer |
Result offset |
No |
|
Integer |
Result count limit |
No |
|
Array |
Sort definition |
No |
|
Array |
Facet query definition |
No |
|
Mixed |
Search filter, independent from ranking |
No |
|
Mixed |
Class ID limitation |
No |
|
Array |
List of subtree limitations |
No |
|
Integer |
Section filter |
No |
|
Boolean |
Visibility filter |
No |
|
Array |
Override of the current user's access array to the 'read' function of the 'content' module. |
No |
|
as_objects |
Boolean |
Not implemented yet |
No |
Array |
Configure the spell checking behaviour |
No |
|
String |
Which search handler to use |
No |
Query
The query parameter can contain one or multiple search terms. The query is used to rank and limit the search results.
For information about standard Solr query syntax, visit http://wiki.apache.org/solr/SolrQuerySyntax and http://lucene.apache.org/java/docs/queryparsersyntax.html
Example:
fetch( ezfind, search, hash( query, 'eZ Systems' ) )
Returns:
Returns all documents containing the words “ez” and “systems”.
Example:
fetch( ezfind, search, hash( query, '”eZ Systems”' ) )
Returns:
Returns all documents containing the term “ez systems”.
Offset
Search result offset. The default value is “0”.
Example:
fetch( ezfind, search, hash( query, 'eZ Systems', offset, 20 ) )
Returns:
Returns documents containing the words “ez” and “systems”, starting from the 20th result.
Limit
Search result count limitation. The default value is “10”.
Example:
fetch( ezfind, search, hash( query, 'eZ Systems', offset, 0, limit, 25 ) )
Returns:
Returns the first 25 documents that contain the words “ez” and “systems”.
Sort_by
The sort_by parameter is used to define the sort order of the search result. It supports the following options:
Key | Description |
---|---|
relevance |
Default option. Sorts the result by Solr internal relevancy calculations. |
score |
Alias to “relevance” |
Content class attribute, following the syntax “<class_identifier>/<class_attribute>[/<sub_structure]” |
|
modified |
Modified time |
published |
Published time |
author |
Author name |
class_name |
Content class name |
class_id |
Content class identifier or content class ID |
name |
Content object name |
path |
Node location path |
section_id |
Section ID |
All sort keys can be used to sort in ascending (“asc”) or descending (“desc”) order. It is also possible to specify multiple sort options in the same fetch function.
Example:
fetch( ezfind, search, hash( query, 'eZ Systems', sort_by, hash( class_name, asc, published, desc ) ) )
Returns:
Returns all documents containing the words “ez” and “systems”. The results are sorted by the content class name in ascending order and then by the published time in descending order.
<class_attribute>
Sorting can be done based on a content class attribute field, specified by its ID number or identifier. If the content class attribute datatype extends ezfSolrDocumentFieldBase, the sub-structure can be used as well.
Example:
fetch( ezfind, search, hash( query, 'eZ Systems', sort_by, hash( 'article/title', 'asc' ) ) )
Returns:
Returns all documents containing the words “ez” and “systems”, sorted by the article title in ascending order.
Example:
fetch( ezfind, search, hash( query, 'eZ Systems', sort_by, hash( 'article/options/opt1', 'asc' )))
Returns:
Returns all documents containing the words “ez” and “systems”, sorted by the “opt1” part of the article options.
Example:
fetch( ezfind, search, hash( query, 'eZ Systems', sort_by, hash( 234, 'asc' ) ) )
Returns:
Returns all documents containing the words “ez” and “systems”, sorted by the content class attribute with an ID of “234”, in ascending order.
Facet
The facet parameter is used to define the facet query that should be performed. The results include information about the facets and facet groups relevant to the current search and are returned in addition to the normal query results. It is possible to perform multiple facet queries in one fetch request.
The following facet options are available:
Option | Description |
---|---|
field |
The object characteristic that will serve as the facet. This can be a field, specified using the syntax “<class_identifier>/<class_attribute>[/<sub_structure]”.
|
query |
Facet query. The facet queries are used to specify facets for the sub-selection of content object attributes. |
prefix |
Limits the facet fields to only list facet groups where the field value starts with the prefix. |
sort |
Sort by “count” or “alpha”. “alpha” will sort the facet results alpha-numerically by field value. |
limit |
Maximum number of facet groups to return. The default value is “20”. |
offset |
Offset. The default value is “0”. |
mincount |
Returns only facet groups with more results than the specified minimum count. The default value “0”. |
missing |
If set to “true”, the results will also include facet groups with no results. The default value is “false”. |
date.start |
Start date for facet. This must be specified using a strict dateTime syntax. |
date.end |
End date for facet. This must be specified using a strict dateTime syntax. |
date.gap |
Size of date range. |
Below are examples and more detailed descriptions of the different facet options.
Example:
fetch( ezfind, search, hash( 'query', 'Cabriolet', facet', array( hash( 'field','car/model', 'limit', 20 ) ) ) )
Returns:
Returns a list of 10 documents containing the word “cabriolet” and a facet list with 20 groups of car models (this is specific to “model” attributes of objects of the “car” class) also containing the word “cabriolet”.
Example:
fetch( ezfind, search, hash( 'query', 'Cabriolet', 'facet', array( hash( 'field', 'car/make', 'limit', 25 ),hash( 'field', 'car/size', 'missing', true(),'limit', 25 ))))
Returns:
Returns a list of 10 documents containing the word “cabriolet” and one facet list with 25 groups of car makes (this is specific to “make” attributes of objects of the “car” class) and another facet list with 25 groups of car sizes (this is specific to “size” attributes of objects of the “car” class), both containing the word “cabriolet”. The “car/size” results will also list elements with 0 matching elements.
Example:
fetch( ezfind, search, hash( query, 'eZ Systems', facet, array( hash( query, 'path:2' ), hash( query, 'path:5' ) ) ) )
Returns:
Returns a list of 10 documents containing the word “cabriolet” and a facet list with groups in the sub-tree with a parent node with an ID of “2”, and another facet list with groups in the sub-tree with a parent node with an ID of “5”. For more information about facets, see: http://wiki.apache.org/solr/SimpleFacetParameters
Filter
The filter is used when creating faceted search templates for drill-down navigation. Filters are used to limit the search result set without altering the relevancy sort order. Facet results contain filter definitions that can be used directly. Custom filter definitions can also be created. A filter is specified by <class_identifier>/<class_attribute>[/<sub_structure]:<value>. The filter option may be a string or list of strings.
Example:
fetch( ezfind, search, hash( query, 'eZ Systems', filter, 'car/in_stock:1' ) )
Returns:
Returns all documents containing the words “ez” and “systems”, having the content object attribute “car/in_stock” with a value of “1”.
Example:
fetch( ezfind, search, hash( query, 'eZ Systems', filter, array( 'car/in_stock:1', 'car/make:Alfa Romeo', 'car/model:8C' ) ) )
Returns:
Returns all documents containing the words “ez” and “systems”, having the content object attribute “car/in_stock” with a value of “1”, the “car/make” attribute with the value “alfa romeo” and the “car/model” attribute with the value “8c”.
Example:
fetch( ezfind, search, hash( query, 'eZ Systems', filter, 'car/make:( Audi OR Volvo )' ) )
Returns:
Returns all documents containing the words “ez” and “systems”, having the content object attribute “car/make” with the value “audi” or “volvo”.
Example:
fetch( ezfind, search, hash( query, 'eZ Systems', filter, array( 'path:2', 'contentclass_id:1' ) )
Returns:
Returns all documents containing the words “ez” and “systems”, in the sub-tree below the node with an ID of “2”, for objects of the content class with an ID of “1”.
Example:
fetch( ezfind, search, hash( query, 'eZ Systems', filter, array( 'or', array( 'and', 'article/body:hello', 'article/rating:[1 TO 10]' ), array( 'and', 'article/body:goodbye', 'article/rating:[10 TO 20]' )))
Returns:
Returns all articles containing the words “ez” and “systems”, either having both 'hello' present in the body and a rating comprised between 1 and 10, or having both 'goodbye' in the body and a rating comprised between 10 and 20.
Class_id
This parameter is used to limit the search result to specific content classes, using either their identifiers or ID numbers. This can also be achieved by using the filter functionality. class_id may be either a single value or a list of values.
Example:
fetch( ezfind, search, hash( query, 'eZ Systems', class_id, 1 ) )
Returns:
Returns all documents containing the words “ez” and “systems”, for objects of the content class with an ID of “1”.
Example:
fetch( ezfind, search, hash( query, 'eZ Systems', class_id, array( 'folder', 'article' ) ) )
Returns:
Returns all documents containing the words “ez” and “systems”, for objects of the Folder and Article content classes.
Subtree_array
This parameter is a list of node IDs that specifies which sub-trees should be included in the search. The same functionality can be achieved with the filter functionality.
Example:
fetch( ezfind, search, hash( query, 'eZ Systems', subtree_array, array( 23, 42 ) ) )
Returns:
Returns all documents containing the words “ez” and “systems”, from the sub-trees with parent nodes with IDs of “23” and “42”.
Section_id
This parameter is a integer specifying which section should be searched. The same functionality can be achieved with the filter functionality.
Example:
fetch( ezfind, search, hash( query, 'eZ Systems', section_id, 3 ) )
Returns:
Returns all documents containing the words “ez” and “systems” in the Media section (3).
Ignore_visibility
This parameter is a Boolean which specifies whether or not hidden nodes should be returned in the search results.
Example:
fetch( ezfind, search, hash( query, 'eZ Systems', ignore_visibility, true() ) )
Returns:
Returns all documents containing the words “ez” and “systems”, even if they are hidden.
Limitation
This parameter is an associative array overriding the current user's access rights to the read-function of the content-module. The format must exactly match the return format of the eZUser::hasAccessTo() method:
Array elements :
'accessWord', 'yes' - access allowed
'no' - access denied
'limited' - access array describing access included
'policies', array containing the policy limitations
'accessList', array describing missing access rights
Example:
fetch( ezfind, search, hash( query, 'eZ Systems', limitation, hash( 'accessWord', 'yes' ) ) )
Returns:
Returns all documents containing the words “ez” and “systems”, regardless of the current user's access rights to the read-function of the content-module.
Spell_check
This parameter is an array configuring the spell check behavior of the search. The first parameter is a Boolean value which enables or not the spellchecker. The second one is optional and is only taken into account if the first one is set to true. It contains the identifier of the dictionary to be used. For now only 'default' is supported.
The spell checking behavior can also be controlled from ezfind.ini.
Example:
fetch( ezfind, search, hash( query, 'eZy Sistems', spell_check, array( true(), 'default' ) ) )
Returns:
Result with documents containing the words “ezy” and “sistems” and a spell-check suggestion if Solr considered these two words as incorrectly spelled. The spellcheck feedback is placed under $search_results.SearchExtras.spellcheck and $search_results.SearchExtras.spellcheck_collation, $search_results being the result of the fetch function call.
Query_handler
This parameter is a string defining which Solr search handler should be used. The possible values are listed here:
Handler | Description |
---|---|
standard |
the Solr standard handler is called with all syntax supported, searching is done against all searchable fields |
simplestandard |
the Solr standard handler is called with all syntax supported, searching is done against the aggregated field ezf_df_text |
ezpublish |
the recommended handler (Solr dismax based) for typical user searches using keywords without boolean or other operators except for + (required) and – (excluding) |
heuristic |
depending on the presence of special characters indicating boolean, wildcard or fuzzy expressions, either the standard or dismax handler is called. |
The default behaviour can be controlled from ezfind.ini, but heuristic is the most common default handler.
Example:
fetch( ezfind, search, hash( query, 'eZ AND Publish', query_handler, 'standard' ) )
Returns:
Returns all documents containing both words “ez” and “systems”, using the standard handler.
Boost_functions
This parameter is used to pass query-time boosts and is an associative array, with two keys: 'fields' and 'functions'.
- 'fields' accepts either an associative array or an array, placing a boost factor on given fields. See 'Example 1' and 'Example 1 bis'.
- 'functions' accepts an array, containing one or more expressions. The latter is not be interpreted and must therefore comply with Solr's Function Query syntax (http://wiki.apache.org/solr/FunctionQuery). See Example 2.
Both can be provided simultaneously.
Example 1:
fetch( ezfind, search, hash( 'query', 'eZ Systems', 'boost_functions', hash( 'fields', array( 'article/title:2' ) ) )
Returns:
Returns all documents containing the words “ez” and “systems”. The articles for which the search words were found in the 'title' will be returned first.
Example 1 bis:
fetch( ezfind, search, hash( 'query', 'eZ Systems', 'boost_functions', hash( 'fields', hash( 'article/title', 2 ) ) )
Returns:
Identical to Example 1.
Example 2:
fetch( ezfind, search, hash( 'query', 'eZ Systems', 'boost_functions', hash( 'functions', array( 'ord(meta_modified_dt)^2' ) ))
Returns:
Returns all documents containing the words “ez” and “systems”. The most recent documents will be returned first, the result score being influenced by the formula : 'ord(meta_modified_dt)^2'
Ester Heylen (15/07/2010 9:34 am)
Geir Arne Waaler (06/06/2011 11:38 am)
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