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Fusion 5.9
    Fusion 5.9

    Domain Specific Language (DSL)

    Fusion Domain Specific Language (DSL) provides expected search results as a JSON response in a way that reduces search query complexity for the user.

    Previously, users needed to understand complex syntax to express certain search queries in Fusion (for example, the best way to express a facet filter). DSL gives Fusion control over how to execute a query by transforming a structured query input into a Solr request, where we can add intelligence around the index and the user’s intent.

    DSL is deprecated in Fusion 5.9.4 and will be removed in a future release. Be aware that using Search DSL can cause performance degradation during queries. You can use the DSL to Legacy Parameters query pipeline stage to convert your DSL requests to the legacy (Solr) format.

    Why Search DSL

    Fusion Search Domain Specific Language (DSL) reduces search query complexity for the user. Fusion Search DSL supports expressive search queries and responses via a structured, modern JSON format.

    Search DSL is an alternative to the current (now referred to as) “Legacy” format for performing search queries. Previously, users needed to understand complex syntax to express certain search queries in Fusion (for example, the best way to express a facet filter).

    Compared to the legacy Solr parameter format, Search DSL is structured to more closely align with the central concepts of Fusion and provide a more usable alternative for expressing complex Fusion queries.

    Search DSL gives Fusion control over how to execute a query by transforming a structured query input into a Solr request, at which time Fusion can add intelligence around the index and the user’s intent.

    Limitations

    Despite the advantages, there are still some important limitations to be aware of when deciding whether to use the Fusion Search DSL.

    These limitations only apply to DSL queries. Legacy queries can still be issued separately from DSL queries without being subject to these limitations.
    1. Head / Tail Rewrite. Support is currently limited when using DSL queries:

      1. In order to work on DSL queries, the Improved Query must be entered in as a JSON string representing the desired main query that should be issued (this replaces the queryDefinition.main field in the rewritten DSL query)

      2. The query rewrites produced by the built-in head/tail rewrite job will NOT work on DSL queries, as the job only outputs legacy-style rewrites

    2. Query Stage Support. All query stages are fully supported

    3. Rules Support. All kinds of rules are fully supported with the exceptions noted below

      1. Set Params. Not supported

      2. Custom Rule. Not supported

    Request Format

    This section describes each top-level field of a Search DSL request.

    Overview

    The Search DSL format is supported in the following endpoints:

    query pipelines

    query-pipelines/QUERY_PIPELINE/collections/COLLECTION_ID

    query profiles

    query/QUERY_PROFILE

    templating render

    templating/renderDSL/APP_NAME

    In all cases, it should be a POST with a Content-Type: application/json header.

    The below table briefly summarizes the function of each of the top-level fields.

    Field Description

    queryDefinition

    Defines the logic of what to query for. The userQuery holds the raw user query (if there is one) which is used by various Fusion components such as Rules to determine which rewrites / rules trigger. The main and filter fields accept a variety of different possible query types (terms and singleTerm are shown here) and together define the matching criteria. Additional fields are also possible here for boosting and grouping - boostsByValues, boostsByQuery, groupedQuery, groupedFilters.

    results

    Defines how the results should be displayed and organized. A variety of fields are available here, such as cursorMark, start, and size for pagination, sort for sorting, fields for the list of fields to display for each document, highlight for highlighting features, and group for grouping.

    facets

    The faceting configuration for the query. Defines the fields to perform faceting on as well as the desired behavior of the returned facet values. Supports range facets in the ranges field and field facets in the fields field.

    context

    Accepts parameters used by some query stages as well as DSL hints. Should not be necessary for typical use cases. For example, tags can be provided here to adjust which rules should trigger based on their tags, and lw.rules.debug can be specified with a value of “1” to include rule triggering debug info in the response.

    params

    Allows arbitrary query parameters to be added to the underlying Solr query. Should not be necessary for most use cases - the other DSL fields should be used when possible, but this field can be used when those fields do not suffice. If the Security Trimming Stage is in use, this field can be used to supply the various parameters for that stage (username, user identity key, collection, shards, etc…).

    The following sections provide an example of each field in use.

    More detailed information on each field can be found in the Fusion API Javadocs.

    queryDefinition

    {
        "queryDefinition": {
            "userQuery": "cyberpunk novels",
            "main": {
                "type": "terms",
                "field": "body_t",
                "values": ["cyberpunk", "novels"],
                "method": "booleanQuery"
            },
            "filters": [
              {
                "type": "singleTerm",
                "field": "category_t",
                "value": ["books"]
              }
            ]
        }
    }

    The queryDefinition defines the logic of what to query for. The above example queries for “cyberpunk novels” against the body_t field, additionally filtering to only show matches that have “books” in the category_t field.

    results

    {
      "results": {
          "start": 20,
          "size": 20,
          "group": {
            "field": "author",
            "size": 5
          }
      }
    }

    The results defines how the results should be displayed and organized. The above example is set to show the next 20 results starting from the 21st matched document (as with Solr, start is 0-based). Additionally, results will be grouped by author, showing 5 results per group. In the DSL response, the head document of each group will show up in the results list with the other documents in the group in the head doc’s groupedDocs field.

    facets

    {
      "facets": {
        "fields": [
            {
                "field": "category",
                "limit": 5
            },
            {
                "field": "brand",
                "offset": "10"
            }
        ],
        "ranges": [
            {
                "field": "published_dt",
                "gap": "+1YEAR",
                "start": "2006-01-01T00:00:00Z",
                "end": "2020-01-01T00:00:00Z"
            }
        ]
      }
    }

    The facets field controls faceting for the query. In the above example, faceting is enabled on the category field (limiting to show only 5 values), brand field (showing all values starting from the 11th value), and published_dt field (showing 1 year increments between 2006 and 2020).

    context

    {
      "context": {
        "tags": "sometag",
        "lw.rules.debug": "1"
      }
    }

    The context field accepts parameters used by various query stages as well as DSL hints. In the above example, the tags parameter has been specified for the Apply Rules stage which will cause only rules with the “sometag” tag to be triggered. The lw.rules.debug parameter has also been specified to return extra rule triggering information in the response.

    params

    {
      "params": {
        "uid": "je985"
      }
    }

    The params field allows arbitrary query parameters to be added to the underlying Solr query and is also used to supply Security Trimming Stage parameters. In the above query, the user’s id has been supplied for the Security Trimming Stage.

    Response Format

    This section describes each top-level field of a Search DSL response.

    Overview

    The below table briefly summarizes the function of each of the top-level fields. The following sections provide an example of each field in a real response (some parts omitted for brevity).

    Field Description

    results

    Holds the results list with pagination info, scoring, and hit count. When grouping is performed via the results.group setting in the DSL request, the groups show up here with the head doc at the top level and the other docs in the group in the groupedDocs field.

    facets

    Holds the returned facets and facet values. Each facet has an associated label which can serve as the user-friendly display name and can be defined using the Set Facets rule. As this is a map, the order of facets should not be relied upon. Facet ordering can be determined instead using the Set Facets rule and the responseValues.facet_labels field. The groupFacets flag controls controls the level on which facets are calculated: before grouping (groupFacets=false) or after grouping (groupFacets=true). Default value is true.

    rules

    Holds data returned by any rules that triggered. There are array fields for data from particular rule types: redirects for Redirect, banners for Banner, and jsonBlobs for JSON Blob (organized into separate arrays based on blob type). The responseValues field holds values set by the Response Value rules or any rules that provide a response values setting, as well as the facet_labels from the Set Facets rule. When multiple rules of a given kind trigger, the one with the higher precedence appears first in the corresponding list (breaking ties on creation date, newer rule comes first).

    spellcheck

    Holds all the spelling suggestions. Suggestions are provided for any misspelled words via the wordSuggestions field, and for the entire query via the querySuggestions field.

    meta

    Assorted metadata about the query, such as timing and debug information. The debug.solrParams field provides a list of the query parameters that were sent in the underlying Solr query. The timing.mainQuery provides the QTime of the underlying Solr query, while the timing.total field measures the entire DSL query (both in milliseconds). The timings of individual pipeline stages are broken down in the timing.pipeline field.

    results

    {
      "results": {
        "list": {
          "hits": 1024,
          "maxScore": 1.0,
          "pagination": {
            "start": 10
          }
          "docs": [
            {
              "collection": "books",
              "type": "generic",
              "id": "281",
              "score": 1.0,
              "fields": {
                "author": "Iain Banks"
                "title": "Player of Games"
              },
              "groupedDocs": {
                "hits": 228,
                "docs": [
                  {
                    "collection": "books",
                    "type": "generic",
                    "id": "283",
                    "score": 1.0,
                    "fields": {
                      "author": "Iain Banks"
                      "title": "Consider Phlebas"
                    }
                  }
                ]
              }
            },
            ...additional docs...
          ]
        }
      }
    }

    The results field holds the results list with pagination info, scoring, and hit count. In the above, grouping has been performed on the author field.

    facets

    {
      "facets": {
        "field": {
          "category": {
            "label": "Category",
            "counts": [
              {
                  "name": "Sci-Fi",
                  "count": 7
              },
              {
                  "name": "Fantasy",
                  "count": 3
              }
              ...additional values...
            ]
          },
         ... additional field facets...
        }
      },
      "range": {
        "published_dt": {
          "label": "Publication Date",
          "gap": "+1YEAR",
          "start": "2006-01-01T00:00:00Z",
          "end": "2020-01-01T00:00:00Z",
          "counts": [
            ...range values...
          ]
        }
      }
    }

    The facets field holds the returned facets and facet values. In the above, we see facet results for the category field and a range facet on the published_dt field, each of which has a corresponding label configured via a Set Facets rule for a user-friendly display name for the facet.

    rules

    {
      "rules": {
        "responseValues": {
            "facet_labels": [
                "category:Category,published_dt:Publication Date"
            ]
        },
        "jsonBlobs": {
            "default": [
                {
                  "someField": "someValue"
                },
                {
                  "someField": "someValue2"
                }
            ]
        }
      }
    }

    The rules field holds data returned by any rules that triggered. In the above, 3 rules have triggered. A Set Facets rule created a facet_labels entry defining the desired ordering and labels for the facets (the labels are also present in the facets section of the response). Two JSON Blob rules of type default have triggered, the first blob in the list having a higher precedence value than the second (and thus appearing first).

    spellcheck

    {
      "spellcheck" : {
        "correctlySpelled" : false,
        "wordSuggestions" : {
          "whiskeys" : {
            "startOffset" : 6,
            "endOffset" : 14,
            "origFreq" : 0,
            "wordFreqList" : [ {
              "word" : "whiskey",
              "freq" : 4764
            }, {
              "word" : "whiskies",
              "freq" : 15963
            }, {
              "word" : "whisky",
              "freq" : 2206
            } ]
          },
          "scoch" : {
            "startOffset" : 0,
            "endOffset" : 5,
            "origFreq" : 0,
            "wordFreqList" : [ {
              "word" : "scotch",
              "freq" : 1556
            }, {
              "word" : "scott",
              "freq" : 3340
            }, {
              "word" : "stock",
              "freq" : 78
            }, {
              "word" : "shock",
              "freq" : 9
            } ]
          }
        },
        "querySuggestions" : [ {
          "query" : "scotch whiskey",
          "hits" : 6320,
          "corrections" : {
            "whiskeys" : "whiskey",
            "scoch" : "scotch"
          }
        } ]
      }
    }

    The spellcheck field holds all the spelling suggestions. Above, the query has misspelled “scotch whiskey” as “scoch whiskeys” and a number of suggestions are provided for each word as well as a collation with the fully corrected query.

    meta

    {
      "meta": {
        "timing": {
          "total": 105,
          "mainQuery": 14,
          "pipeline": [
            ... pipeline stage timing info..
          ]
        },
        "debug": {
          "solrParams": {
            "fl": "*,score",
            "facet": "true"
            ...additional solr params...
          }
        }
      }
    }

    The meta field holds assorted metadata about the query, such as timing and debug information. Above, in the timing.mainQuery field we see that the underlying Solr query took 14 ms (taken from Solr’s QTime) while the total field shows that the entire DSL query took 105 ms. The timings of individual pipeline stages are broken down in the pipeline field. The debug field here shows the various parameters that were sent in the underlying Solr query.