view roundup/backends/indexer_dbm.py @ 3854:f4e8dc583256

Restored subject parser regexp to the string it was before the... ...implementation of customization of it, i.e., the version from CVS revision 1.184 of mailgw.py. This makes 'testFollowupTitleMatchMultiRe' work again.
author Erik Forsberg <forsberg@users.sourceforge.net>
date Sat, 12 May 2007 16:14:54 +0000
parents 5f4db2650da3
children 2ff6f39aa391
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#
# This module is derived from the module described at:
#   http://gnosis.cx/publish/programming/charming_python_15.txt
# 
# Author: David Mertz (mertz@gnosis.cx)
# Thanks to: Pat Knight (p.knight@ktgroup.co.uk)
#            Gregory Popovitch (greg@gpy.com)
# 
# The original module was released under this license, and remains under
# it:
#
#     This file is released to the public domain.  I (dqm) would
#     appreciate it if you choose to keep derived works under terms
#     that promote freedom, but obviously am giving up any rights
#     to compel such.
# 
#$Id: indexer_dbm.py,v 1.9 2006-04-27 05:48:26 richard Exp $
'''This module provides an indexer class, RoundupIndexer, that stores text
indices in a roundup instance.  This class makes searching the content of
messages, string properties and text files possible.
'''
__docformat__ = 'restructuredtext'

import os, shutil, re, mimetypes, marshal, zlib, errno
from roundup.hyperdb import Link, Multilink
from roundup.backends.indexer_common import Indexer as IndexerBase

class Indexer(IndexerBase):
    '''Indexes information from roundup's hyperdb to allow efficient
    searching.

    Three structures are created by the indexer::

          files   {identifier: (fileid, wordcount)}
          words   {word: {fileid: count}}
          fileids {fileid: identifier}

    where identifier is (classname, nodeid, propertyname)
    '''
    def __init__(self, db):
        IndexerBase.__init__(self, db)
        self.indexdb_path = os.path.join(db.config.DATABASE, 'indexes')
        self.indexdb = os.path.join(self.indexdb_path, 'index.db')
        self.reindex = 0
        self.quiet = 9
        self.changed = 0

        # see if we need to reindex because of a change in code
        version = os.path.join(self.indexdb_path, 'version')
        if (not os.path.exists(self.indexdb_path) or
                not os.path.exists(version)):
            # for now the file itself is a flag
            self.force_reindex()
        elif os.path.exists(version):
            version = open(version).read()
            # check the value and reindex if it's not the latest
            if version.strip() != '1':
                self.force_reindex()

    def force_reindex(self):
        '''Force a reindex condition
        '''
        if os.path.exists(self.indexdb_path):
            shutil.rmtree(self.indexdb_path)
        os.makedirs(self.indexdb_path)
        os.chmod(self.indexdb_path, 0775)
        open(os.path.join(self.indexdb_path, 'version'), 'w').write('1\n')
        self.reindex = 1
        self.changed = 1

    def should_reindex(self):
        '''Should we reindex?
        '''
        return self.reindex

    def add_text(self, identifier, text, mime_type='text/plain'):
        '''Add some text associated with the (classname, nodeid, property)
        identifier.
        '''
        # make sure the index is loaded
        self.load_index()

        # remove old entries for this identifier
        if self.files.has_key(identifier):
            self.purge_entry(identifier)

        # split into words
        words = self.splitter(text, mime_type)

        # Find new file index, and assign it to identifier
        # (_TOP uses trick of negative to avoid conflict with file index)
        self.files['_TOP'] = (self.files['_TOP'][0]-1, None)
        file_index = abs(self.files['_TOP'][0])
        self.files[identifier] = (file_index, len(words))
        self.fileids[file_index] = identifier

        # find the unique words
        filedict = {}
        for word in words:
            if self.is_stopword(word):
                continue
            if filedict.has_key(word):
                filedict[word] = filedict[word]+1
            else:
                filedict[word] = 1

        # now add to the totals
        for word in filedict.keys():
            # each word has a dict of {identifier: count}
            if self.words.has_key(word):
                entry = self.words[word]
            else:
                # new word
                entry = {}
                self.words[word] = entry

            # make a reference to the file for this word
            entry[file_index] = filedict[word]

        # save needed
        self.changed = 1

    def splitter(self, text, ftype):
        '''Split the contents of a text string into a list of 'words'
        '''
        if ftype == 'text/plain':
            words = self.text_splitter(text)
        else:
            return []
        return words

    def text_splitter(self, text):
        """Split text/plain string into a list of words
        """
        # case insensitive
        text = str(text).upper()

        # Split the raw text, losing anything longer than 25 characters
        # since that'll be gibberish (encoded text or somesuch) or shorter
        # than 3 characters since those short words appear all over the
        # place
        return re.findall(r'\b\w{2,25}\b', text)

    # we override this to ignore not 2 < word < 25 and also to fix a bug -
    # the (fail) case.
    def find(self, wordlist):
        '''Locate files that match ALL the words in wordlist
        '''
        if not hasattr(self, 'words'):
            self.load_index()
        self.load_index(wordlist=wordlist)
        entries = {}
        hits = None
        for word in wordlist:
            if not 2 < len(word) < 25:
                # word outside the bounds of what we index - ignore
                continue
            word = word.upper()
            entry = self.words.get(word)    # For each word, get index
            entries[word] = entry           #   of matching files
            if not entry:                   # Nothing for this one word (fail)
                return {}
            if hits is None:
                hits = {}
                for k in entry.keys():
                    if not self.fileids.has_key(k):
                        raise ValueError, 'Index is corrupted: re-generate it'
                    hits[k] = self.fileids[k]
            else:
                # Eliminate hits for every non-match
                for fileid in hits.keys():
                    if not entry.has_key(fileid):
                        del hits[fileid]
        if hits is None:
            return {}
        return hits.values()

    segments = "0123456789ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ#_-!"
    def load_index(self, reload=0, wordlist=None):
        # Unless reload is indicated, do not load twice
        if self.index_loaded() and not reload:
            return 0

        # Ok, now let's actually load it
        db = {'WORDS': {}, 'FILES': {'_TOP':(0,None)}, 'FILEIDS': {}}

        # Identify the relevant word-dictionary segments
        if not wordlist:
            segments = self.segments
        else:
            segments = ['-','#']
            for word in wordlist:
                segments.append(word[0].upper())

        # Load the segments
        for segment in segments:
            try:
                f = open(self.indexdb + segment, 'rb')
            except IOError, error:
                # probably just nonexistent segment index file
                if error.errno != errno.ENOENT: raise
            else:
                pickle_str = zlib.decompress(f.read())
                f.close()
                dbslice = marshal.loads(pickle_str)
                if dbslice.get('WORDS'):
                    # if it has some words, add them
                    for word, entry in dbslice['WORDS'].items():
                        db['WORDS'][word] = entry
                if dbslice.get('FILES'):
                    # if it has some files, add them
                    db['FILES'] = dbslice['FILES']
                if dbslice.get('FILEIDS'):
                    # if it has fileids, add them
                    db['FILEIDS'] = dbslice['FILEIDS']

        self.words = db['WORDS']
        self.files = db['FILES']
        self.fileids = db['FILEIDS']
        self.changed = 0

    def save_index(self):
        # only save if the index is loaded and changed
        if not self.index_loaded() or not self.changed:
            return

        # brutal space saver... delete all the small segments
        for segment in self.segments:
            try:
                os.remove(self.indexdb + segment)
            except OSError, error:
                # probably just nonexistent segment index file
                if error.errno != errno.ENOENT: raise

        # First write the much simpler filename/fileid dictionaries
        dbfil = {'WORDS':None, 'FILES':self.files, 'FILEIDS':self.fileids}
        open(self.indexdb+'-','wb').write(zlib.compress(marshal.dumps(dbfil)))

        # The hard part is splitting the word dictionary up, of course
        letters = "0123456789ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ#_"
        segdicts = {}                           # Need batch of empty dicts
        for segment in letters:
            segdicts[segment] = {}
        for word, entry in self.words.items():  # Split into segment dicts
            initchar = word[0].upper()
            segdicts[initchar][word] = entry

        # save
        for initchar in letters:
            db = {'WORDS':segdicts[initchar], 'FILES':None, 'FILEIDS':None}
            pickle_str = marshal.dumps(db)
            filename = self.indexdb + initchar
            pickle_fh = open(filename, 'wb')
            pickle_fh.write(zlib.compress(pickle_str))
            os.chmod(filename, 0664)

        # save done
        self.changed = 0

    def purge_entry(self, identifier):
        '''Remove a file from file index and word index
        '''
        self.load_index()

        if not self.files.has_key(identifier):
            return

        file_index = self.files[identifier][0]
        del self.files[identifier]
        del self.fileids[file_index]

        # The much harder part, cleanup the word index
        for key, occurs in self.words.items():
            if occurs.has_key(file_index):
                del occurs[file_index]

        # save needed
        self.changed = 1

    def index_loaded(self):
        return (hasattr(self,'fileids') and hasattr(self,'files') and
            hasattr(self,'words'))

    def rollback(self):
        ''' load last saved index info. '''
        self.load_index(reload=1)

    def close(self):
        pass


# vim: set filetype=python ts=4 sw=4 et si

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