MySQL's full-text search capability has few user-tunable parameters. You can exert more control over full-text searching behavior if you have a MySQL source distribution because some changes require source code modifications. See Section 2.10, “MySQL Installation Using a Source Distribution”.
Note that full-text search is carefully tuned for the most effectiveness. Modifying the default behavior in most cases can actually decrease effectiveness. Do not alter the MySQL sources unless you know what you are doing.
Most full-text variables described in this section must be set at server startup time. A server restart is required to change them; they cannot be modified while the server is running.
Some variable changes require that you rebuild the
FULLTEXT
indexes in your tables. Instructions
for doing this are given at the end of this section.
The minimum and maximum lengths of words to be indexed are
defined by the
ft_min_word_len
and
ft_max_word_len
system
variables. (See Section 5.1.4, “Server System Variables”.)
The default minimum value is four characters; the default
maximum is version dependent. If you change either value,
you must rebuild your FULLTEXT
indexes.
For example, if you want three-character words to be
searchable, you can set the
ft_min_word_len
variable by
putting the following lines in an option file:
[mysqld] ft_min_word_len=3
Then you must restart the server and rebuild your
FULLTEXT
indexes. Note particularly the
remarks regarding myisamchk in the
instructions following this list.
To override the default stopword list, set the
ft_stopword_file
system
variable. (See Section 5.1.4, “Server System Variables”.)
The variable value should be the path name of the file
containing the stopword list, or the empty string to disable
stopword filtering. After changing the value of this
variable or the contents of the stopword file, restart the
server and rebuild your FULLTEXT
indexes.
The stopword list is free-form. That is, you may use any
nonalphanumeric character such as newline, space, or comma
to separate stopwords. Exceptions are the underscore
character (“_
”) and a single
apostrophe (“'
”) which are
treated as part of a word. The character set of the stopword
list is the server's default character set; see
Section 9.1.3.1, “Server Character Set and Collation”.
The 50% threshold for natural language searches is
determined by the particular weighting scheme chosen. To
disable it, look for the following line in
storage/myisam/ftdefs.h
:
#define GWS_IN_USE GWS_PROB
Change that line to this:
#define GWS_IN_USE GWS_FREQ
Then recompile MySQL. There is no need to rebuild the indexes in this case.
By making this change, you severely
decrease MySQL's ability to provide adequate relevance
values for the MATCH()
function. If you really need to search for such common
words, it would be better to search using IN
BOOLEAN MODE
instead, which does not observe the
50% threshold.
To change the operators used for boolean full-text searches,
set the ft_boolean_syntax
system variable. This variable can be changed while the
server is running, but you must have the
SUPER
privilege to do so. No
rebuilding of indexes is necessary in this case. See
Section 5.1.4, “Server System Variables”, which describes
the rules governing how to set this variable.
If you want to change the set of characters that are considered word characters, you can do so in two ways. Suppose that you want to treat the hyphen character ('-') as a word character. Use either of these methods:
Modify the MySQL source: In
storage/myisam/ftdefs.h
, see the
true_word_char()
and
misc_word_char()
macros. Add
'-'
to one of those macros and
recompile MySQL.
Modify a character set file: This requires no
recompilation. The true_word_char()
macro uses a “character type” table to
distinguish letters and numbers from other characters. .
You can edit the
<ctype><map>
contents in
one of the character set XML files to specify that
'-'
is a “letter.” Then
use the given character set for your
FULLTEXT
indexes.
After making the modification, you must rebuild the indexes
for each table that contains any FULLTEXT
indexes.
If you modify full-text variables that affect indexing
(ft_min_word_len
,
ft_max_word_len
, or
ft_stopword_file
), or if you
change the stopword file itself, you must rebuild your
FULLTEXT
indexes after making the changes and
restarting the server. To rebuild the indexes in this case, it
is sufficient to do a QUICK
repair operation:
mysql> REPAIR TABLE tbl_name
QUICK;
Each table that contains any FULLTEXT
index
must be repaired as just shown. Otherwise, queries for the table
may yield incorrect results, and modifications to the table will
cause the server to see the table as corrupt and in need of
repair.
Note that if you use myisamchk to perform an
operation that modifies table indexes (such as repair or
analyze), the FULLTEXT
indexes are rebuilt
using the default full-text parameter
values for minimum word length, maximum word length, and
stopword file unless you specify otherwise. This can result in
queries failing.
The problem occurs because these parameters are known only by
the server. They are not stored in MyISAM
index files. To avoid the problem if you have modified the
minimum or maximum word length or stopword file values used by
the server, specify the same
ft_min_word_len
,
ft_max_word_len
, and
ft_stopword_file
values to
myisamchk that you use for
mysqld. For example, if you have set the
minimum word length to 3, you can repair a table with
myisamchk like this:
shell> myisamchk --recover --ft_min_word_len=3 tbl_name
.MYI
To ensure that myisamchk and the server use
the same values for full-text parameters, place each one in both
the [mysqld]
and
[myisamchk]
sections of an option file:
[mysqld] ft_min_word_len=3 [myisamchk] ft_min_word_len=3
An alternative to using myisamchk is to use
the REPAIR TABLE
,
ANALYZE TABLE
,
OPTIMIZE TABLE
, or
ALTER TABLE
statements. These
statements are performed by the server, which knows the proper
full-text parameter values to use.
User Comments
How I added '-' to the list of word characters:
The documentation is weak in two regards: (1) it doesn't explain how to modify the map and (2) it doesn't touch on the implications of doing so. I'll try to solve (1), but cannot begin to speak to (2)
The charsets files exist at the location specified by the "character_sets_dir" system variable (use SHOW VARIABLES to see this) and is typically compiled in as "/usr/share/mysql/charsets". The name of the file is given by the "character_set_...' variables. Typically the default is "latin1". Thus the file I needed to change was /usr/share/mysql/charsets/latin1.xml
The <ctype><map> is the one we are after (other maps are "upper", "lower", "unicode" and the various collation maps).
The "ctype" map differs from the others in that is has a leading 0x00 before the character map, the meaning of which is unclear to me. Each entry of the map appears to classify the corresponding character according to the following bitmask:
0x01 Upper-case word character
0x02 Lower-case word character
0x04 Decimal digit
0x08 Printer control (Space/TAB/VT/FF/CR)
0x10 Not-white, not a word
0x20 Control-char (0x00 - 0x1F)
0x40 Space
0x80 Hex digit (0-9, a-f, A-F)
In my case, I needed the dash '-', but nothing else, so I altered the corresponding character position (0x2D - third row, third from the right) from 0x10 (Not-white, not a word) to 0x01 (Upper-case word).
There is little on the web to address this, but some commentary in the forums suggested that this was NOT the way to do this, but rather to write ones own full-text engine as the changing of the <ctype> map has implications for the SQL parser. This may be true, but I suspect SQL parsing would require a stricter classification of characters. The SQL statement "SELECT a-b FROM test" worked for me after this change.
Altering latin1.xml and restarting the server had the desired result.
Finally, there does not appear to be a way to create a new character set or collation without recompiling. If this is true, it might be desirable for the standard distribution to include a "custom" character set for just this sort of thing.
Based on your example with the dash `-`, I had a look to make the single quote `'` (which is a word character by default), a non word character.
Thus,
I had a look on a ascii table, the single quote is corresponding to the hexadecimal value 27.
I opened the file share/mysql/charsets/latin1.xml, I went to the upper map (0x27 is actually on the 3rd rows, 8th col from the left).
I went to this position in the ctype map, and surprised !!! This character is already set to 0x10 Not-white, not a word whereas it is a word character during tests !
From there, I'm pretty lost. Why the single quote is not detected as a non word as it should be ?
Modifying the mysql source in myisam/ftdefs.h works.
I modified the line #define misc_word_char(X) ((X)=='\'')
Is it the only way ?
Sebastien Salou
John Navratil very nearly has it, but to get fulltext to treat characters as words, you also have to add a new collation. I've written it up at http://www.thenoyes.com/littlenoise/?p=91
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