org.open.crs.service.lucene.IndexFiles.java Source code

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Here is the source code for org.open.crs.service.lucene.IndexFiles.java

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package org.open.crs.service.lucene;

/*
 * Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
 * contributor license agreements.  See the NOTICE file distributed with
 * this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership.
 * The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0
 * (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with
 * the License.  You may obtain a copy of the License at
 *
 *     http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
 *
 * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
 * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
 * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
 * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
 * limitations under the License.
 */

import org.apache.lucene.analysis.Analyzer;
import org.apache.lucene.analysis.cn.smart.SmartChineseAnalyzer;
import org.apache.lucene.document.*;
import org.apache.lucene.index.IndexWriter;
import org.apache.lucene.index.IndexWriterConfig;
import org.apache.lucene.index.IndexWriterConfig.OpenMode;
import org.apache.lucene.index.Term;
import org.apache.lucene.store.Directory;
import org.apache.lucene.store.FSDirectory;

import java.io.BufferedReader;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.InputStream;
import java.io.InputStreamReader;
import java.nio.charset.Charset;
import java.nio.file.*;
import java.nio.file.attribute.BasicFileAttributes;

/**
 * Index all text files under a directory.
 * <p/>
 * This is a command-line application demonstrating simple Lucene indexing.
 * Run it with no command-line arguments for usage information.
 */
public class IndexFiles {

    private IndexWriter writer;
    private boolean create = true;

    public IndexFiles(String indexPath) throws IOException {
        Directory dir = FSDirectory.open(Paths.get(indexPath));

        //        Analyzer analyzer = new StandardAnalyzer();
        //        Analyzer analyzer = new CJKAnalyzer();
        Analyzer analyzer = new SmartChineseAnalyzer();
        IndexWriterConfig iwc = new IndexWriterConfig(analyzer);

        if (create) {
            // Create a new index in the directory, removing any
            // previously indexed documents:
            iwc.setOpenMode(IndexWriterConfig.OpenMode.CREATE);
        } else {
            // Add new documents to an existing index:
            iwc.setOpenMode(IndexWriterConfig.OpenMode.CREATE_OR_APPEND);
        }

        // Optional: for better indexing performance, if you
        // are indexing many documents, increase the RAM
        // buffer.  But if you do this, increase the max heap
        // size to the JVM (eg add -Xmx512m or -Xmx1g):
        //
        // iwc.setRAMBufferSizeMB(256.0);

        writer = new IndexWriter(dir, iwc);
    }

    /**
     * Indexes the given file using the given writer, or if a directory is given,
     * recurses over files and directories found under the given directory.
     * <p/>
     * NOTE: This method indexes one document per input file.  This is slow.  For good
     * throughput, put multiple documents into your input file(s).  An example of this is
     * in the benchmark module, which can create "line doc" files, one document per line,
     * using the
     * <a href="../../../../../contrib-benchmark/org/apache/lucene/benchmark/byTask/tasks/WriteLineDocTask.html"
     * >WriteLineDocTask</a>.
     *
     * @param path The file to index, or the directory to recurse into to find files to index
     * @throws IOException If there is a low-level I/O error
     */
    public void indexDocs(Path path) throws IOException {
        if (Files.isDirectory(path)) {
            Files.walkFileTree(path, new SimpleFileVisitor<Path>() {
                @Override
                public FileVisitResult visitFile(Path file, BasicFileAttributes attrs) throws IOException {
                    try {
                        indexDoc(file, attrs.lastModifiedTime().toMillis());
                    } catch (IOException ignore) {
                        // don't index files that can't be read.
                    }
                    return FileVisitResult.CONTINUE;
                }
            });
        } else {
            indexDoc(path, Files.getLastModifiedTime(path).toMillis());
        }
    }

    /**
     * Indexes a single document
     */
    public void indexDoc(Path file, long lastModified) throws IOException {
        try (InputStream stream = Files.newInputStream(file)) {
            // make a new, empty document
            Document doc = new Document();

            // Add the path of the file as a field named "path".  Use a
            // field that is indexed (i.e. searchable), but don't tokenize
            // the field into separate words and don't index term frequency
            // or positional information:
            Field pathField = new StringField("path", file.toString(), Field.Store.YES);
            doc.add(pathField);

            // Add the last modified date of the file a field named "modified".
            // Use a LongField that is indexed (i.e. efficiently filterable with
            // NumericRangeFilter).  This indexes to milli-second resolution, which
            // is often too fine.  You could instead create a number based on
            // year/month/day/hour/minutes/seconds, down the resolution you require.
            // For example the long value 2011021714 would mean
            // February 17, 2011, 2-3 PM.
            doc.add(new LongField("modified", lastModified, Field.Store.NO));

            // Add the contents of the file to a field named "contents".  Specify a Reader,
            // so that the text of the file is tokenized and indexed, but not stored.
            // Note that FileReader expects the file to be in UTF-8 encoding.
            // If that's not the case searching for special characters will fail.
            //            doc.add(new TextField("contents", new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(stream, StandardCharsets.UTF_8))));
            //            doc.add(new TextField("contents", new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(stream, Charset.forName("GB2312")))));
            //            doc.add(new TextField("contents", new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(stream, StandardCharsets.UTF_8)).readLine(),Field.Store.YES));
            //            doc.add(new TextField("contents", new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(stream, Charset.forName("GB2312"))).readLine(),Field.Store.YES));

            BufferedReader bufferedReader = new BufferedReader(
                    new InputStreamReader(stream, Charset.forName("GB2312")));
            String line = null;
            while ((line = bufferedReader.readLine()) != null) {
                System.out.println(line);
                doc.add(new TextField("contents", line, Field.Store.YES));
            }

            //            StringBuilder content = new StringBuilder();
            //            while ((line = bufferedReader.readLine()) != null) {
            //                content.append(line);
            //                doc.add(new TextField("contents", content.toString(), Field.Store.YES));
            //            }

            if (writer.getConfig().getOpenMode() == OpenMode.CREATE) {
                // New index, so we just add the document (no old document can be there):
                System.out.println("adding " + file);
                writer.addDocument(doc);
            } else {
                // Existing index (an old copy of this document may have been indexed) so
                // we use updateDocument instead to replace the old one matching the exact
                // path, if present:
                System.out.println("updating " + file);
                writer.updateDocument(new Term("path", file.toString()), doc);
            }
        }
    }

    public void close() throws IOException {
        // NOTE: if you want to maximize search performance,
        // you can optionally call forceMerge here.  This can be
        // a terribly costly operation, so generally it's only
        // worth it when your index is relatively static (ie
        // you're done adding documents to it):
        //
        // writer.forceMerge(1);

        writer.close();
    }
}