The JavaScript Query stage allows you to write custom processing logic using JavaScript to manipulate search requests and responses. The first time that the pipeline is run, Fusion compiles the JavaScript program into Java bytecode using the JDK’s JavaScript engine. The JavaScript Query stage allows you to run JavaScript functions over search requests and responses by manipulating variables called “request” and “response” which are Request objects and Response objects, respectively.

JavaScript Stages Variables and Parameters

JavaScript is a lightweight scripting language. The JavaScript in a JavaScript stage is standard ECMAScript. What a JavaScript program can do depends on the container in which it runs. For a JavaScript Query stage, the container is a Fusion query pipeline. The following global pipeline variables are available:
NameTypeDescription
requestRequestThe Solr query information.
responseResponseThe Solr response information.
ctxContextA reference to the container which holds a map over the pipeline properties. Used to update or modify this information for downstream pipeline stages.
collectionStringThe name of the Fusion collection being indexed or queried.
solrServerBufferingSolrServerThe Solr server instance that manages the pipeline’s default Fusion collection. All indexing and query requests are done by calls to methods on this object. See SolrClient for details.
solrServerFactorySolrClientFactoryThe SolrCluster server used for lookups by collection name which returns a Solr server instance for a that collection. For example: var productsSolr = solrServerFactory.getSolrServer("products");.
QueryRequestAndResponseQueryRequestAndResponseReturns list of info as a string.

Syntax Variants

JavaScript stages are written using function syntax, which passes variables as function parameters.

Function Syntax

function(request,response) {
   request.addParam("foo", "bar");
}
ImportantFunction syntax is used for the examples in this document.

Global variable logger

The global variable named logger writes messages to the log file of the server running the pipeline. This variable is truly global and does not need to be declared as part of the function parameter list. There are 5 methods available, which each take either a single argument (the string message to log) or two arguments (the string message and an exception to log). The five methods are, “debug”, “info”, “warn”, and “error”.

See also