| /* | |
| ** 2014 May 31 | |
| ** | |
| ** The author disclaims copyright to this source code. In place of | |
| ** a legal notice, here is a blessing: | |
| ** | |
| ** May you do good and not evil. | |
| ** May you find forgiveness for yourself and forgive others. | |
| ** May you share freely, never taking more than you give. | |
| ** | |
| ****************************************************************************** | |
| ** | |
| ** Interfaces to extend FTS5. Using the interfaces defined in this file, | |
| ** FTS5 may be extended with: | |
| ** | |
| ** * custom tokenizers, and | |
| ** * custom auxiliary functions. | |
| */ | |
| extern "C" { | |
| /************************************************************************* | |
| ** CUSTOM AUXILIARY FUNCTIONS | |
| ** | |
| ** Virtual table implementations may overload SQL functions by implementing | |
| ** the sqlite3_module.xFindFunction() method. | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct Fts5ExtensionApi Fts5ExtensionApi; | |
| typedef struct Fts5Context Fts5Context; | |
| typedef struct Fts5PhraseIter Fts5PhraseIter; | |
| typedef void (*fts5_extension_function)( | |
| const Fts5ExtensionApi *pApi, /* API offered by current FTS version */ | |
| Fts5Context *pFts, /* First arg to pass to pApi functions */ | |
| sqlite3_context *pCtx, /* Context for returning result/error */ | |
| int nVal, /* Number of values in apVal[] array */ | |
| sqlite3_value **apVal /* Array of trailing arguments */ | |
| ); | |
| struct Fts5PhraseIter { | |
| const unsigned char *a; | |
| const unsigned char *b; | |
| }; | |
| /* | |
| ** EXTENSION API FUNCTIONS | |
| ** | |
| ** xUserData(pFts): | |
| ** Return a copy of the pUserData pointer passed to the xCreateFunction() | |
| ** API when the extension function was registered. | |
| ** | |
| ** xColumnTotalSize(pFts, iCol, pnToken): | |
| ** If parameter iCol is less than zero, set output variable *pnToken | |
| ** to the total number of tokens in the FTS5 table. Or, if iCol is | |
| ** non-negative but less than the number of columns in the table, return | |
| ** the total number of tokens in column iCol, considering all rows in | |
| ** the FTS5 table. | |
| ** | |
| ** If parameter iCol is greater than or equal to the number of columns | |
| ** in the table, SQLITE_RANGE is returned. Or, if an error occurs (e.g. | |
| ** an OOM condition or IO error), an appropriate SQLite error code is | |
| ** returned. | |
| ** | |
| ** xColumnCount(pFts): | |
| ** Return the number of columns in the table. | |
| ** | |
| ** xColumnSize(pFts, iCol, pnToken): | |
| ** If parameter iCol is less than zero, set output variable *pnToken | |
| ** to the total number of tokens in the current row. Or, if iCol is | |
| ** non-negative but less than the number of columns in the table, set | |
| ** *pnToken to the number of tokens in column iCol of the current row. | |
| ** | |
| ** If parameter iCol is greater than or equal to the number of columns | |
| ** in the table, SQLITE_RANGE is returned. Or, if an error occurs (e.g. | |
| ** an OOM condition or IO error), an appropriate SQLite error code is | |
| ** returned. | |
| ** | |
| ** This function may be quite inefficient if used with an FTS5 table | |
| ** created with the "columnsize=0" option. | |
| ** | |
| ** xColumnText: | |
| ** If parameter iCol is less than zero, or greater than or equal to the | |
| ** number of columns in the table, SQLITE_RANGE is returned. | |
| ** | |
| ** Otherwise, this function attempts to retrieve the text of column iCol of | |
| ** the current document. If successful, (*pz) is set to point to a buffer | |
| ** containing the text in utf-8 encoding, (*pn) is set to the size in bytes | |
| ** (not characters) of the buffer and SQLITE_OK is returned. Otherwise, | |
| ** if an error occurs, an SQLite error code is returned and the final values | |
| ** of (*pz) and (*pn) are undefined. | |
| ** | |
| ** xPhraseCount: | |
| ** Returns the number of phrases in the current query expression. | |
| ** | |
| ** xPhraseSize: | |
| ** If parameter iCol is less than zero, or greater than or equal to the | |
| ** number of phrases in the current query, as returned by xPhraseCount, | |
| ** 0 is returned. Otherwise, this function returns the number of tokens in | |
| ** phrase iPhrase of the query. Phrases are numbered starting from zero. | |
| ** | |
| ** xInstCount: | |
| ** Set *pnInst to the total number of occurrences of all phrases within | |
| ** the query within the current row. Return SQLITE_OK if successful, or | |
| ** an error code (i.e. SQLITE_NOMEM) if an error occurs. | |
| ** | |
| ** This API can be quite slow if used with an FTS5 table created with the | |
| ** "detail=none" or "detail=column" option. If the FTS5 table is created | |
| ** with either "detail=none" or "detail=column" and "content=" option | |
| ** (i.e. if it is a contentless table), then this API always returns 0. | |
| ** | |
| ** xInst: | |
| ** Query for the details of phrase match iIdx within the current row. | |
| ** Phrase matches are numbered starting from zero, so the iIdx argument | |
| ** should be greater than or equal to zero and smaller than the value | |
| ** output by xInstCount(). If iIdx is less than zero or greater than | |
| ** or equal to the value returned by xInstCount(), SQLITE_RANGE is returned. | |
| ** | |
| ** Otherwise, output parameter *piPhrase is set to the phrase number, *piCol | |
| ** to the column in which it occurs and *piOff the token offset of the | |
| ** first token of the phrase. SQLITE_OK is returned if successful, or an | |
| ** error code (i.e. SQLITE_NOMEM) if an error occurs. | |
| ** | |
| ** This API can be quite slow if used with an FTS5 table created with the | |
| ** "detail=none" or "detail=column" option. | |
| ** | |
| ** xRowid: | |
| ** Returns the rowid of the current row. | |
| ** | |
| ** xTokenize: | |
| ** Tokenize text using the tokenizer belonging to the FTS5 table. | |
| ** | |
| ** xQueryPhrase(pFts5, iPhrase, pUserData, xCallback): | |
| ** This API function is used to query the FTS table for phrase iPhrase | |
| ** of the current query. Specifically, a query equivalent to: | |
| ** | |
| ** ... FROM ftstable WHERE ftstable MATCH $p ORDER BY rowid | |
| ** | |
| ** with $p set to a phrase equivalent to the phrase iPhrase of the | |
| ** current query is executed. Any column filter that applies to | |
| ** phrase iPhrase of the current query is included in $p. For each | |
| ** row visited, the callback function passed as the fourth argument | |
| ** is invoked. The context and API objects passed to the callback | |
| ** function may be used to access the properties of each matched row. | |
| ** Invoking Api.xUserData() returns a copy of the pointer passed as | |
| ** the third argument to pUserData. | |
| ** | |
| ** If parameter iPhrase is less than zero, or greater than or equal to | |
| ** the number of phrases in the query, as returned by xPhraseCount(), | |
| ** this function returns SQLITE_RANGE. | |
| ** | |
| ** If the callback function returns any value other than SQLITE_OK, the | |
| ** query is abandoned and the xQueryPhrase function returns immediately. | |
| ** If the returned value is SQLITE_DONE, xQueryPhrase returns SQLITE_OK. | |
| ** Otherwise, the error code is propagated upwards. | |
| ** | |
| ** If the query runs to completion without incident, SQLITE_OK is returned. | |
| ** Or, if some error occurs before the query completes or is aborted by | |
| ** the callback, an SQLite error code is returned. | |
| ** | |
| ** | |
| ** xSetAuxdata(pFts5, pAux, xDelete) | |
| ** | |
| ** Save the pointer passed as the second argument as the extension function's | |
| ** "auxiliary data". The pointer may then be retrieved by the current or any | |
| ** future invocation of the same fts5 extension function made as part of | |
| ** the same MATCH query using the xGetAuxdata() API. | |
| ** | |
| ** Each extension function is allocated a single auxiliary data slot for | |
| ** each FTS query (MATCH expression). If the extension function is invoked | |
| ** more than once for a single FTS query, then all invocations share a | |
| ** single auxiliary data context. | |
| ** | |
| ** If there is already an auxiliary data pointer when this function is | |
| ** invoked, then it is replaced by the new pointer. If an xDelete callback | |
| ** was specified along with the original pointer, it is invoked at this | |
| ** point. | |
| ** | |
| ** The xDelete callback, if one is specified, is also invoked on the | |
| ** auxiliary data pointer after the FTS5 query has finished. | |
| ** | |
| ** If an error (e.g. an OOM condition) occurs within this function, | |
| ** the auxiliary data is set to NULL and an error code returned. If the | |
| ** xDelete parameter was not NULL, it is invoked on the auxiliary data | |
| ** pointer before returning. | |
| ** | |
| ** | |
| ** xGetAuxdata(pFts5, bClear) | |
| ** | |
| ** Returns the current auxiliary data pointer for the fts5 extension | |
| ** function. See the xSetAuxdata() method for details. | |
| ** | |
| ** If the bClear argument is non-zero, then the auxiliary data is cleared | |
| ** (set to NULL) before this function returns. In this case the xDelete, | |
| ** if any, is not invoked. | |
| ** | |
| ** | |
| ** xRowCount(pFts5, pnRow) | |
| ** | |
| ** This function is used to retrieve the total number of rows in the table. | |
| ** In other words, the same value that would be returned by: | |
| ** | |
| ** SELECT count(*) FROM ftstable; | |
| ** | |
| ** xPhraseFirst() | |
| ** This function is used, along with type Fts5PhraseIter and the xPhraseNext | |
| ** method, to iterate through all instances of a single query phrase within | |
| ** the current row. This is the same information as is accessible via the | |
| ** xInstCount/xInst APIs. While the xInstCount/xInst APIs are more convenient | |
| ** to use, this API may be faster under some circumstances. To iterate | |
| ** through instances of phrase iPhrase, use the following code: | |
| ** | |
| ** Fts5PhraseIter iter; | |
| ** int iCol, iOff; | |
| ** for(pApi->xPhraseFirst(pFts, iPhrase, &iter, &iCol, &iOff); | |
| ** iCol>=0; | |
| ** pApi->xPhraseNext(pFts, &iter, &iCol, &iOff) | |
| ** ){ | |
| ** // An instance of phrase iPhrase at offset iOff of column iCol | |
| ** } | |
| ** | |
| ** The Fts5PhraseIter structure is defined above. Applications should not | |
| ** modify this structure directly - it should only be used as shown above | |
| ** with the xPhraseFirst() and xPhraseNext() API methods (and by | |
| ** xPhraseFirstColumn() and xPhraseNextColumn() as illustrated below). | |
| ** | |
| ** This API can be quite slow if used with an FTS5 table created with the | |
| ** "detail=none" or "detail=column" option. If the FTS5 table is created | |
| ** with either "detail=none" or "detail=column" and "content=" option | |
| ** (i.e. if it is a contentless table), then this API always iterates | |
| ** through an empty set (all calls to xPhraseFirst() set iCol to -1). | |
| ** | |
| ** In all cases, matches are visited in (column ASC, offset ASC) order. | |
| ** i.e. all those in column 0, sorted by offset, followed by those in | |
| ** column 1, etc. | |
| ** | |
| ** xPhraseNext() | |
| ** See xPhraseFirst above. | |
| ** | |
| ** xPhraseFirstColumn() | |
| ** This function and xPhraseNextColumn() are similar to the xPhraseFirst() | |
| ** and xPhraseNext() APIs described above. The difference is that instead | |
| ** of iterating through all instances of a phrase in the current row, these | |
| ** APIs are used to iterate through the set of columns in the current row | |
| ** that contain one or more instances of a specified phrase. For example: | |
| ** | |
| ** Fts5PhraseIter iter; | |
| ** int iCol; | |
| ** for(pApi->xPhraseFirstColumn(pFts, iPhrase, &iter, &iCol); | |
| ** iCol>=0; | |
| ** pApi->xPhraseNextColumn(pFts, &iter, &iCol) | |
| ** ){ | |
| ** // Column iCol contains at least one instance of phrase iPhrase | |
| ** } | |
| ** | |
| ** This API can be quite slow if used with an FTS5 table created with the | |
| ** "detail=none" option. If the FTS5 table is created with either | |
| ** "detail=none" "content=" option (i.e. if it is a contentless table), | |
| ** then this API always iterates through an empty set (all calls to | |
| ** xPhraseFirstColumn() set iCol to -1). | |
| ** | |
| ** The information accessed using this API and its companion | |
| ** xPhraseFirstColumn() may also be obtained using xPhraseFirst/xPhraseNext | |
| ** (or xInst/xInstCount). The chief advantage of this API is that it is | |
| ** significantly more efficient than those alternatives when used with | |
| ** "detail=column" tables. | |
| ** | |
| ** xPhraseNextColumn() | |
| ** See xPhraseFirstColumn above. | |
| ** | |
| ** xQueryToken(pFts5, iPhrase, iToken, ppToken, pnToken) | |
| ** This is used to access token iToken of phrase iPhrase of the current | |
| ** query. Before returning, output parameter *ppToken is set to point | |
| ** to a buffer containing the requested token, and *pnToken to the | |
| ** size of this buffer in bytes. | |
| ** | |
| ** If iPhrase or iToken are less than zero, or if iPhrase is greater than | |
| ** or equal to the number of phrases in the query as reported by | |
| ** xPhraseCount(), or if iToken is equal to or greater than the number of | |
| ** tokens in the phrase, SQLITE_RANGE is returned and *ppToken and *pnToken | |
| are both zeroed. | |
| ** | |
| ** The output text is not a copy of the query text that specified the | |
| ** token. It is the output of the tokenizer module. For tokendata=1 | |
| ** tables, this includes any embedded 0x00 and trailing data. | |
| ** | |
| ** xInstToken(pFts5, iIdx, iToken, ppToken, pnToken) | |
| ** This is used to access token iToken of phrase hit iIdx within the | |
| ** current row. If iIdx is less than zero or greater than or equal to the | |
| ** value returned by xInstCount(), SQLITE_RANGE is returned. Otherwise, | |
| ** output variable (*ppToken) is set to point to a buffer containing the | |
| ** matching document token, and (*pnToken) to the size of that buffer in | |
| ** bytes. This API is not available if the specified token matches a | |
| ** prefix query term. In that case both output variables are always set | |
| ** to 0. | |
| ** | |
| ** The output text is not a copy of the document text that was tokenized. | |
| ** It is the output of the tokenizer module. For tokendata=1 tables, this | |
| ** includes any embedded 0x00 and trailing data. | |
| ** | |
| ** This API can be quite slow if used with an FTS5 table created with the | |
| ** "detail=none" or "detail=column" option. | |
| ** | |
| ** xColumnLocale(pFts5, iIdx, pzLocale, pnLocale) | |
| ** If parameter iCol is less than zero, or greater than or equal to the | |
| ** number of columns in the table, SQLITE_RANGE is returned. | |
| ** | |
| ** Otherwise, this function attempts to retrieve the locale associated | |
| ** with column iCol of the current row. Usually, there is no associated | |
| ** locale, and output parameters (*pzLocale) and (*pnLocale) are set | |
| ** to NULL and 0, respectively. However, if the fts5_locale() function | |
| ** was used to associate a locale with the value when it was inserted | |
| ** into the fts5 table, then (*pzLocale) is set to point to a nul-terminated | |
| ** buffer containing the name of the locale in utf-8 encoding. (*pnLocale) | |
| ** is set to the size in bytes of the buffer, not including the | |
| ** nul-terminator. | |
| ** | |
| ** If successful, SQLITE_OK is returned. Or, if an error occurs, an | |
| ** SQLite error code is returned. The final value of the output parameters | |
| ** is undefined in this case. | |
| ** | |
| ** xTokenize_v2: | |
| ** Tokenize text using the tokenizer belonging to the FTS5 table. This | |
| ** API is the same as the xTokenize() API, except that it allows a tokenizer | |
| ** locale to be specified. | |
| */ | |
| struct Fts5ExtensionApi { | |
| int iVersion; /* Currently always set to 4 */ | |
| void *(*xUserData)(Fts5Context*); | |
| int (*xColumnCount)(Fts5Context*); | |
| int (*xRowCount)(Fts5Context*, sqlite3_int64 *pnRow); | |
| int (*xColumnTotalSize)(Fts5Context*, int iCol, sqlite3_int64 *pnToken); | |
| int (*xTokenize)(Fts5Context*, | |
| const char *pText, int nText, /* Text to tokenize */ | |
| void *pCtx, /* Context passed to xToken() */ | |
| int (*xToken)(void*, int, const char*, int, int, int) /* Callback */ | |
| ); | |
| int (*xPhraseCount)(Fts5Context*); | |
| int (*xPhraseSize)(Fts5Context*, int iPhrase); | |
| int (*xInstCount)(Fts5Context*, int *pnInst); | |
| int (*xInst)(Fts5Context*, int iIdx, int *piPhrase, int *piCol, int *piOff); | |
| sqlite3_int64 (*xRowid)(Fts5Context*); | |
| int (*xColumnText)(Fts5Context*, int iCol, const char **pz, int *pn); | |
| int (*xColumnSize)(Fts5Context*, int iCol, int *pnToken); | |
| int (*xQueryPhrase)(Fts5Context*, int iPhrase, void *pUserData, | |
| int(*)(const Fts5ExtensionApi*,Fts5Context*,void*) | |
| ); | |
| int (*xSetAuxdata)(Fts5Context*, void *pAux, void(*xDelete)(void*)); | |
| void *(*xGetAuxdata)(Fts5Context*, int bClear); | |
| int (*xPhraseFirst)(Fts5Context*, int iPhrase, Fts5PhraseIter*, int*, int*); | |
| void (*xPhraseNext)(Fts5Context*, Fts5PhraseIter*, int *piCol, int *piOff); | |
| int (*xPhraseFirstColumn)(Fts5Context*, int iPhrase, Fts5PhraseIter*, int*); | |
| void (*xPhraseNextColumn)(Fts5Context*, Fts5PhraseIter*, int *piCol); | |
| /* Below this point are iVersion>=3 only */ | |
| int (*xQueryToken)(Fts5Context*, | |
| int iPhrase, int iToken, | |
| const char **ppToken, int *pnToken | |
| ); | |
| int (*xInstToken)(Fts5Context*, int iIdx, int iToken, const char**, int*); | |
| /* Below this point are iVersion>=4 only */ | |
| int (*xColumnLocale)(Fts5Context*, int iCol, const char **pz, int *pn); | |
| int (*xTokenize_v2)(Fts5Context*, | |
| const char *pText, int nText, /* Text to tokenize */ | |
| const char *pLocale, int nLocale, /* Locale to pass to tokenizer */ | |
| void *pCtx, /* Context passed to xToken() */ | |
| int (*xToken)(void*, int, const char*, int, int, int) /* Callback */ | |
| ); | |
| }; | |
| /* | |
| ** CUSTOM AUXILIARY FUNCTIONS | |
| *************************************************************************/ | |
| /************************************************************************* | |
| ** CUSTOM TOKENIZERS | |
| ** | |
| ** Applications may also register custom tokenizer types. A tokenizer | |
| ** is registered by providing fts5 with a populated instance of the | |
| ** following structure. All structure methods must be defined, setting | |
| ** any member of the fts5_tokenizer struct to NULL leads to undefined | |
| ** behaviour. The structure methods are expected to function as follows: | |
| ** | |
| ** xCreate: | |
| ** This function is used to allocate and initialize a tokenizer instance. | |
| ** A tokenizer instance is required to actually tokenize text. | |
| ** | |
| ** The first argument passed to this function is a copy of the (void*) | |
| ** pointer provided by the application when the fts5_tokenizer_v2 object | |
| ** was registered with FTS5 (the third argument to xCreateTokenizer()). | |
| ** The second and third arguments are an array of nul-terminated strings | |
| ** containing the tokenizer arguments, if any, specified following the | |
| ** tokenizer name as part of the CREATE VIRTUAL TABLE statement used | |
| ** to create the FTS5 table. | |
| ** | |
| ** The final argument is an output variable. If successful, (*ppOut) | |
| ** should be set to point to the new tokenizer handle and SQLITE_OK | |
| ** returned. If an error occurs, some value other than SQLITE_OK should | |
| ** be returned. In this case, fts5 assumes that the final value of *ppOut | |
| ** is undefined. | |
| ** | |
| ** xDelete: | |
| ** This function is invoked to delete a tokenizer handle previously | |
| ** allocated using xCreate(). Fts5 guarantees that this function will | |
| ** be invoked exactly once for each successful call to xCreate(). | |
| ** | |
| ** xTokenize: | |
| ** This function is expected to tokenize the nText byte string indicated | |
| ** by argument pText. pText may or may not be nul-terminated. The first | |
| ** argument passed to this function is a pointer to an Fts5Tokenizer object | |
| ** returned by an earlier call to xCreate(). | |
| ** | |
| ** The third argument indicates the reason that FTS5 is requesting | |
| ** tokenization of the supplied text. This is always one of the following | |
| ** four values: | |
| ** | |
| ** <ul><li> <b>FTS5_TOKENIZE_DOCUMENT</b> - A document is being inserted into | |
| ** or removed from the FTS table. The tokenizer is being invoked to | |
| ** determine the set of tokens to add to (or delete from) the | |
| ** FTS index. | |
| ** | |
| ** <li> <b>FTS5_TOKENIZE_QUERY</b> - A MATCH query is being executed | |
| ** against the FTS index. The tokenizer is being called to tokenize | |
| ** a bareword or quoted string specified as part of the query. | |
| ** | |
| ** <li> <b>(FTS5_TOKENIZE_QUERY | FTS5_TOKENIZE_PREFIX)</b> - Same as | |
| ** FTS5_TOKENIZE_QUERY, except that the bareword or quoted string is | |
| ** followed by a "*" character, indicating that the last token | |
| ** returned by the tokenizer will be treated as a token prefix. | |
| ** | |
| ** <li> <b>FTS5_TOKENIZE_AUX</b> - The tokenizer is being invoked to | |
| ** satisfy an fts5_api.xTokenize() request made by an auxiliary | |
| ** function. Or an fts5_api.xColumnSize() request made by the same | |
| ** on a columnsize=0 database. | |
| ** </ul> | |
| ** | |
| ** The sixth and seventh arguments passed to xTokenize() - pLocale and | |
| ** nLocale - are a pointer to a buffer containing the locale to use for | |
| ** tokenization (e.g. "en_US") and its size in bytes, respectively. The | |
| ** pLocale buffer is not nul-terminated. pLocale may be passed NULL (in | |
| ** which case nLocale is always 0) to indicate that the tokenizer should | |
| ** use its default locale. | |
| ** | |
| ** For each token in the input string, the supplied callback xToken() must | |
| ** be invoked. The first argument to it should be a copy of the pointer | |
| ** passed as the second argument to xTokenize(). The third and fourth | |
| ** arguments are a pointer to a buffer containing the token text, and the | |
| ** size of the token in bytes. The 4th and 5th arguments are the byte offsets | |
| ** of the first byte of and first byte immediately following the text from | |
| ** which the token is derived within the input. | |
| ** | |
| ** The second argument passed to the xToken() callback ("tflags") should | |
| ** normally be set to 0. The exception is if the tokenizer supports | |
| ** synonyms. In this case see the discussion below for details. | |
| ** | |
| ** FTS5 assumes the xToken() callback is invoked for each token in the | |
| ** order that they occur within the input text. | |
| ** | |
| ** If an xToken() callback returns any value other than SQLITE_OK, then | |
| ** the tokenization should be abandoned and the xTokenize() method should | |
| ** immediately return a copy of the xToken() return value. Or, if the | |
| ** input buffer is exhausted, xTokenize() should return SQLITE_OK. Finally, | |
| ** if an error occurs with the xTokenize() implementation itself, it | |
| ** may abandon the tokenization and return any error code other than | |
| ** SQLITE_OK or SQLITE_DONE. | |
| ** | |
| ** If the tokenizer is registered using an fts5_tokenizer_v2 object, | |
| ** then the xTokenize() method has two additional arguments - pLocale | |
| ** and nLocale. These specify the locale that the tokenizer should use | |
| ** for the current request. If pLocale and nLocale are both 0, then the | |
| ** tokenizer should use its default locale. Otherwise, pLocale points to | |
| ** an nLocale byte buffer containing the name of the locale to use as utf-8 | |
| ** text. pLocale is not nul-terminated. | |
| ** | |
| ** FTS5_TOKENIZER | |
| ** | |
| ** There is also an fts5_tokenizer object. This is an older, deprecated, | |
| ** version of fts5_tokenizer_v2. It is similar except that: | |
| ** | |
| ** <ul> | |
| ** <li> There is no "iVersion" field, and | |
| ** <li> The xTokenize() method does not take a locale argument. | |
| ** </ul> | |
| ** | |
| ** Legacy fts5_tokenizer tokenizers must be registered using the | |
| ** legacy xCreateTokenizer() function, instead of xCreateTokenizer_v2(). | |
| ** | |
| ** Tokenizer implementations registered using either API may be retrieved | |
| ** using both xFindTokenizer() and xFindTokenizer_v2(). | |
| ** | |
| ** SYNONYM SUPPORT | |
| ** | |
| ** Custom tokenizers may also support synonyms. Consider a case in which a | |
| ** user wishes to query for a phrase such as "first place". Using the | |
| ** built-in tokenizers, the FTS5 query 'first + place' will match instances | |
| ** of "first place" within the document set, but not alternative forms | |
| ** such as "1st place". In some applications, it would be better to match | |
| ** all instances of "first place" or "1st place" regardless of which form | |
| ** the user specified in the MATCH query text. | |
| ** | |
| ** There are several ways to approach this in FTS5: | |
| ** | |
| ** <ol><li> By mapping all synonyms to a single token. In this case, using | |
| ** the above example, this means that the tokenizer returns the | |
| ** same token for inputs "first" and "1st". Say that token is in | |
| ** fact "first", so that when the user inserts the document "I won | |
| ** 1st place" entries are added to the index for tokens "i", "won", | |
| ** "first" and "place". If the user then queries for '1st + place', | |
| ** the tokenizer substitutes "first" for "1st" and the query works | |
| ** as expected. | |
| ** | |
| ** <li> By querying the index for all synonyms of each query term | |
| ** separately. In this case, when tokenizing query text, the | |
| ** tokenizer may provide multiple synonyms for a single term | |
| ** within the document. FTS5 then queries the index for each | |
| ** synonym individually. For example, faced with the query: | |
| ** | |
| ** <codeblock> | |
| ** ... MATCH 'first place'</codeblock> | |
| ** | |
| ** the tokenizer offers both "1st" and "first" as synonyms for the | |
| ** first token in the MATCH query and FTS5 effectively runs a query | |
| ** similar to: | |
| ** | |
| ** <codeblock> | |
| ** ... MATCH '(first OR 1st) place'</codeblock> | |
| ** | |
| ** except that, for the purposes of auxiliary functions, the query | |
| ** still appears to contain just two phrases - "(first OR 1st)" | |
| ** being treated as a single phrase. | |
| ** | |
| ** <li> By adding multiple synonyms for a single term to the FTS index. | |
| ** Using this method, when tokenizing document text, the tokenizer | |
| ** provides multiple synonyms for each token. So that when a | |
| ** document such as "I won first place" is tokenized, entries are | |
| ** added to the FTS index for "i", "won", "first", "1st" and | |
| ** "place". | |
| ** | |
| ** This way, even if the tokenizer does not provide synonyms | |
| ** when tokenizing query text (it should not - to do so would be | |
| ** inefficient), it doesn't matter if the user queries for | |
| ** 'first + place' or '1st + place', as there are entries in the | |
| ** FTS index corresponding to both forms of the first token. | |
| ** </ol> | |
| ** | |
| ** Whether it is parsing document or query text, any call to xToken that | |
| ** specifies a <i>tflags</i> argument with the FTS5_TOKEN_COLOCATED bit | |
| ** is considered to supply a synonym for the previous token. For example, | |
| ** when parsing the document "I won first place", a tokenizer that supports | |
| ** synonyms would call xToken() 5 times, as follows: | |
| ** | |
| ** <codeblock> | |
| ** xToken(pCtx, 0, "i", 1, 0, 1); | |
| ** xToken(pCtx, 0, "won", 3, 2, 5); | |
| ** xToken(pCtx, 0, "first", 5, 6, 11); | |
| ** xToken(pCtx, FTS5_TOKEN_COLOCATED, "1st", 3, 6, 11); | |
| ** xToken(pCtx, 0, "place", 5, 12, 17); | |
| **</codeblock> | |
| ** | |
| ** It is an error to specify the FTS5_TOKEN_COLOCATED flag the first time | |
| ** xToken() is called. Multiple synonyms may be specified for a single token | |
| ** by making multiple calls to xToken(FTS5_TOKEN_COLOCATED) in sequence. | |
| ** There is no limit to the number of synonyms that may be provided for a | |
| ** single token. | |
| ** | |
| ** In many cases, method (1) above is the best approach. It does not add | |
| ** extra data to the FTS index or require FTS5 to query for multiple terms, | |
| ** so it is efficient in terms of disk space and query speed. However, it | |
| ** does not support prefix queries very well. If, as suggested above, the | |
| ** token "first" is substituted for "1st" by the tokenizer, then the query: | |
| ** | |
| ** <codeblock> | |
| ** ... MATCH '1s*'</codeblock> | |
| ** | |
| ** will not match documents that contain the token "1st" (as the tokenizer | |
| ** will probably not map "1s" to any prefix of "first"). | |
| ** | |
| ** For full prefix support, method (3) may be preferred. In this case, | |
| ** because the index contains entries for both "first" and "1st", prefix | |
| ** queries such as 'fi*' or '1s*' will match correctly. However, because | |
| ** extra entries are added to the FTS index, this method uses more space | |
| ** within the database. | |
| ** | |
| ** Method (2) offers a midpoint between (1) and (3). Using this method, | |
| ** a query such as '1s*' will match documents that contain the literal | |
| ** token "1st", but not "first" (assuming the tokenizer is not able to | |
| ** provide synonyms for prefixes). However, a non-prefix query like '1st' | |
| ** will match against "1st" and "first". This method does not require | |
| ** extra disk space, as no extra entries are added to the FTS index. | |
| ** On the other hand, it may require more CPU cycles to run MATCH queries, | |
| ** as separate queries of the FTS index are required for each synonym. | |
| ** | |
| ** When using methods (2) or (3), it is important that the tokenizer only | |
| ** provide synonyms when tokenizing document text (method (3)) or query | |
| ** text (method (2)), not both. Doing so will not cause any errors, but is | |
| ** inefficient. | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct Fts5Tokenizer Fts5Tokenizer; | |
| typedef struct fts5_tokenizer_v2 fts5_tokenizer_v2; | |
| struct fts5_tokenizer_v2 { | |
| int iVersion; /* Currently always 2 */ | |
| int (*xCreate)(void*, const char **azArg, int nArg, Fts5Tokenizer **ppOut); | |
| void (*xDelete)(Fts5Tokenizer*); | |
| int (*xTokenize)(Fts5Tokenizer*, | |
| void *pCtx, | |
| int flags, /* Mask of FTS5_TOKENIZE_* flags */ | |
| const char *pText, int nText, | |
| const char *pLocale, int nLocale, | |
| int (*xToken)( | |
| void *pCtx, /* Copy of 2nd argument to xTokenize() */ | |
| int tflags, /* Mask of FTS5_TOKEN_* flags */ | |
| const char *pToken, /* Pointer to buffer containing token */ | |
| int nToken, /* Size of token in bytes */ | |
| int iStart, /* Byte offset of token within input text */ | |
| int iEnd /* Byte offset of end of token within input text */ | |
| ) | |
| ); | |
| }; | |
| /* | |
| ** New code should use the fts5_tokenizer_v2 type to define tokenizer | |
| ** implementations. The following type is included for legacy applications | |
| ** that still use it. | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct fts5_tokenizer fts5_tokenizer; | |
| struct fts5_tokenizer { | |
| int (*xCreate)(void*, const char **azArg, int nArg, Fts5Tokenizer **ppOut); | |
| void (*xDelete)(Fts5Tokenizer*); | |
| int (*xTokenize)(Fts5Tokenizer*, | |
| void *pCtx, | |
| int flags, /* Mask of FTS5_TOKENIZE_* flags */ | |
| const char *pText, int nText, | |
| int (*xToken)( | |
| void *pCtx, /* Copy of 2nd argument to xTokenize() */ | |
| int tflags, /* Mask of FTS5_TOKEN_* flags */ | |
| const char *pToken, /* Pointer to buffer containing token */ | |
| int nToken, /* Size of token in bytes */ | |
| int iStart, /* Byte offset of token within input text */ | |
| int iEnd /* Byte offset of end of token within input text */ | |
| ) | |
| ); | |
| }; | |
| /* Flags that may be passed as the third argument to xTokenize() */ | |
| /* Flags that may be passed by the tokenizer implementation back to FTS5 | |
| ** as the third argument to the supplied xToken callback. */ | |
| /* | |
| ** END OF CUSTOM TOKENIZERS | |
| *************************************************************************/ | |
| /************************************************************************* | |
| ** FTS5 EXTENSION REGISTRATION API | |
| */ | |
| typedef struct fts5_api fts5_api; | |
| struct fts5_api { | |
| int iVersion; /* Currently always set to 3 */ | |
| /* Create a new tokenizer */ | |
| int (*xCreateTokenizer)( | |
| fts5_api *pApi, | |
| const char *zName, | |
| void *pUserData, | |
| fts5_tokenizer *pTokenizer, | |
| void (*xDestroy)(void*) | |
| ); | |
| /* Find an existing tokenizer */ | |
| int (*xFindTokenizer)( | |
| fts5_api *pApi, | |
| const char *zName, | |
| void **ppUserData, | |
| fts5_tokenizer *pTokenizer | |
| ); | |
| /* Create a new auxiliary function */ | |
| int (*xCreateFunction)( | |
| fts5_api *pApi, | |
| const char *zName, | |
| void *pUserData, | |
| fts5_extension_function xFunction, | |
| void (*xDestroy)(void*) | |
| ); | |
| /* APIs below this point are only available if iVersion>=3 */ | |
| /* Create a new tokenizer */ | |
| int (*xCreateTokenizer_v2)( | |
| fts5_api *pApi, | |
| const char *zName, | |
| void *pUserData, | |
| fts5_tokenizer_v2 *pTokenizer, | |
| void (*xDestroy)(void*) | |
| ); | |
| /* Find an existing tokenizer */ | |
| int (*xFindTokenizer_v2)( | |
| fts5_api *pApi, | |
| const char *zName, | |
| void **ppUserData, | |
| fts5_tokenizer_v2 **ppTokenizer | |
| ); | |
| }; | |
| /* | |
| ** END OF REGISTRATION API | |
| *************************************************************************/ | |
| } /* end of the 'extern "C"' block */ | |