8 CTX_DDL Package
The CTX_DDL
PL/SQL package provides procedures to create and manage the preferences, section groups, and stoplists required for Text indexes.
CTX_DDL
contains the following stored procedures and functions:
Name | Description |
---|---|
Adds an attribute section to an XML section group. |
|
Adds an index or partition to the list of indexes subject to auto optimization. |
|
Creates a field section and assigns it to the specified section group. |
|
Adds an index to a catalog index preference. |
|
Changes the |
|
Maps a |
|
Adds an |
|
Adds an |
|
Maps a |
|
Adds an |
|
Adds a section group attribute value to the list of values of an already existing section group attribute. |
|
Adds a special section to a section group. |
|
Adds a stopclass to a stoplist. |
|
Adds a stop section to an automatic section group. |
|
Adds a stoptheme to a stoplist. |
|
Adds a stopword to a stoplist. |
|
Adds a sub-lexer to a multi-lexer preference. |
|
Creates a zone section and adds it to the specified section group. |
|
Creates a copy of a policy. |
|
Creates an index set for |
|
Creates a policy to use with |
|
Creates a preference in the Text data dictionary. |
|
Creates a section group in the Text data dictionary. |
|
Creates a policy for the passed-in index. For nonpartitioned index, also creates an index table. |
|
Creates a stoplist. |
|
Drops an index set. |
|
Drops a policy. |
|
Deletes a preference from the Text data dictionary. |
|
Deletes a section group from the Text data dictionary. |
|
Drops a shadow index. |
|
Drops a stoplist. |
|
Swaps the shadow index metadata and data. |
|
Optimizes the index. |
|
Populates the pending queue with every rowid in the base table or table partition. |
|
Specifies whether procedures related to CTX_DDL preferences issue an implicit commit. |
|
Recreates the passed-in index. |
|
Removes a specific section group attribute value from the list of values of an existing section group attribute. |
|
Removes an index or partition from the list of indexes subject to auto optimization |
|
Removes an index from a |
|
Removes |
|
Deletes a section from a section group. |
|
Deletes a stopclass from a stoplist. |
|
Deletes a stoptheme from a stoplist. |
|
Deletes a stopword from a stoplist. |
|
Deletes a sub-lexer from a multi-lexer preference. |
|
Replaces metadata for local domain indexes. |
|
Sets a preference attribute. |
|
Adds a section group-specific attribute to a section group identified by name. |
|
Sets a section attribute. |
|
Synchronizes the index. |
|
Removes a set attribute from a preference. |
|
Updates a sub-lexer. |
|
Removes a section group specific attribute. |
|
Updates a policy. |
|
Updates an SDATA section. |
Note:
Except CREATE_PREFERENCE
and CREATE_SECTION_GROUP
, the APIs in the CTX_DDL
package do not support identifiers that are prefixed with the schema or owner name.
8.1 ADD_ATTR_SECTION
Adds an attribute section to an XML section group. This procedure is useful for defining attributes in XML documents as sections. This enables you to search XML attribute text with the WITHIN
operator.
Note:
When you use AUTO_SECTION_GROUP
, attribute sections are created automatically. Attribute sections created automatically are named in the form tag@attribute
.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.ADD_ATTR_SECTION( group_name IN VARCHAR2, section_name IN VARCHAR2, tag IN VARCHAR2);
- group_name
-
Specify the name of the XML section group. You can add attribute sections only to XML section groups.
- section_name
-
Specify the name of the attribute section. This is the name used for
WITHIN
queries on the attribute text.The section name you specify cannot contain the colon (:), comma (,), or dot (.) characters. The section name must also be unique within
group_name
. Section names are case-insensitive.Attribute section names can be no more than 64 bytes long.
- tag
-
Specify the name of the attribute in tag@attr form. This parameter is case-sensitive.
Examples
Consider an XML file that defines the BOOK
tag with a TITLE
attribute as follows:
<BOOK TITLE="Tale of Two Cities"> It was the best of times. </BOOK>
To define the title attribute as an attribute section, create an XML_SECTION_GROUP
and define the attribute section as follows:
begin ctx_ddl.create_section_group('myxmlgroup', 'XML_SECTION_GROUP'); ctx_ddl.add_attr_section('myxmlgroup', 'booktitle', 'BOOK@TITLE'); end;
When you define the TITLE
attribute section as such and index the document set, you can query the XML attribute text as follows:
'Cities within booktitle'
Related Topic
8.2 ADD_AUTO_OPTIMIZE
Adds an index or partition to the list of indexes subject to auto optimization. For partitioned indexes, the name of the partition must be specified, or else an error occurs. For global indexes, STAGE_ITAB
must be enabled, or else an error occurs.
The AUTO_OPTIMIZE
feature improves the manageability of indexes that use the STAGE_ITAB
feature. The STAGE_ITAB
feature introduces a staging $G table to collect postings from newly synced documents.
The AUTO_OPTIMIZE
feature has the following goals:
-
Enables you to register indexes and partitions to a background
AUTO_OPTIMIZE
process. -
Automatically moves rows from the $G table to $I at appropriate times.
-
Movement of rows from $G to $I is done in a way to maximize query performance.
This procedure starts the background process if it has not already been started. The progress of the auto optimization is tracked by CTX logging.
The changes made by this procedure take effect immediately.
Note:
The init.ora parameter JOB_QUEUE_PROCESSES
must be set to one or higher. See Oracle Database Reference for more information about JOB_QUEUE_PROCESSES
.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.ADD_AUTO_OPTIMIZE(
idx_name IN VARCHAR2, part_name IN VARCHAR2 default NULL, optlevel IN VARCHAR2 default CTX_DDL.OPTLEVEL_MERGE );
- idx_name
-
Specify the name of the index to add.
- part_name
-
Specify the name of the partition to add.
- optlevel
-
Specifies the
optlevel
of theCTX_DDL.OPTIMIZE_INDEX
procedure. The only valid value for this parameter ismerge
.
Notes
The recommended sequence of steps for using auto optimization is:
-
Create the required indexes.
-
Add these indexes to the auto optimization list by using the
CTX_DDL.ADD_AUTO_OPTIMIZE
procedure.
The synchronize index operation automatically begins executing an auto optimization job (unless it is already running). This job continues until it runs out of work. Future synchronize index operations will automatically start executing the auto optimization job, if it is not already running.
Related Topics
Oracle Text Application Developer's Guide for information about using STAGE_ITAB
with CONTEXT indexes
8.3 ADD_FIELD_SECTION
Creates a field section and adds the section to an existing section group. This enables field section searching with the WITHIN operator. You can add an unlimited number of field sections.
Field sections are delimited by start and end tags. By default, the text within field sections are indexed as a sub-document separate from the rest of the document.
Unlike zone sections, field sections cannot nest or overlap. As such, field sections are best suited for non-repeating, non-overlapping sections such as TITLE
and AUTHOR
markup in e-mail- or news-type documents.
Because of how field sections are indexed, WITHIN queries on field sections are usually faster than WITHIN
queries on zone sections.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.ADD_FIELD_SECTION( group_name IN VARCHAR2, section_name IN VARCHAR2, tag IN VARCHAR2, visible IN BOOLEAN default FALSE );
- group_name
-
Specify the name of the section group to which
section_name
is added. You can add an unlimited number of field sections to a single section group. Within the same group, section zone names and section field names cannot be the same. - section_name
-
Specify the name of the section to add to the
group_name
. Use this name to identify the section in queries. Avoid using names that contain non-alphanumeric characters such as _, because these characters must be escaped in queries. Section names are case-insensitive.Note:
The
section_name
may not be prefixed by the schema or the owner name as this syntax is not supported.Within the same group, zone section names and field section names cannot be the same. The terms Paragraph and Sentence are reserved for special sections.
Section names need not be unique across tags. You can assign the same section name to more than one tag, which makes details transparent to searches.
- tag
-
Specify the tag that marks the start of a section. For example, if the tag is <H1>, then specify H1. The start tag you specify must be unique within a section group.
Note:
The tag may not be prefixed by the schema or the owner name as this syntax is not supported.
If
group_name
is anHTML_SECTION_GROUP
, then you can create field sections for the META tag'sNAME/CONTENT
attribute pairs. To do so, specifytag
asmeta@namevalue
wherenamevalue
is the value of theNAME
attribute whoseCONTENT
attribute is to be indexed as a section. Refer to the example "Creating Sections for <META> Tags".Oracle Text knows what the end tags look like from the
group_type
parameter you specify when you create the section group. - visible
-
Specify
TRUE
to make the text visible within the rest of the document.By default the
visible
flag isFALSE
. This means that Oracle Text indexes the text within field sections as a sub-document separate from the rest of the document. However, you can set the visible flag toTRUE
if you want text within the field section to be indexed as part of the enclosing document.
Examples
Visible and Invisible Field Sections
The following example defines a section group basicgroup
of the BASIC_SECTION_GROUP
type. (See "Section Group Types" for information about the BASIC_SECTION_GROUP
type.) The example then creates a field section in basicgroup
called Author
for the <A>
tag.
The example also sets the visible flag to FALSE
:
begin
ctx_ddl.create_section_group('basicgroup', 'BASIC_SECTION_GROUP'); ctx_ddl.add_field_section('basicgroup', 'Author', 'A', FALSE);
end;
Because the Author
field section is not visible, to find text within the Author
section, you must use the WITHIN operator as follows:
'(Martin Luther King) WITHIN Author'
A query of Martin Luther King without the WITHIN
operator does not return instances of this term in field sections. To query text within field sections without specifying WITHIN
, you must set the visible flag to TRUE
when you create the section as follows:
begin ctx_ddl.add_field_section('basicgroup', 'Author', 'A', TRUE); end;
Creating Sections for <META>
Tags
When you use the HTML_SECTION_GROUP
, you can create sections for META
tags.
Consider an HTML document that has a META
tag as follows:
<META NAME="author" CONTENT="ken">
To create a field section that indexes the CONTENT
attribute for the <META NAME="author">
tag:
begin ctx_ddl.create_section_group('myhtmlgroup', 'HTML_SECTION_GROUP'); ctx_ddl.add_field_section('myhtmlgroup', 'author', 'META@AUTHOR'); end
After indexing with section group mygroup
, query the document as follows:
'ken WITHIN author'
Limitations
Nested Sections
Field sections cannot be nested. For example, if you define a field section to start with <TITLE>
and define another field section to start with <FOO>
, the two sections cannot be nested as follows:
<TITLE> dog <FOO> cat </FOO> </TITLE>
To work with nested section define them as zone sections.
Repeated field sections are allowed, but WITHIN
queries treat them as a single section. The following is an example of repeated field section in a document:
<TITLE> cat </TITLE> <TITLE> dog </TITLE>
The query (dog and cat) within title returns the document, even though these words occur in different sections.
To have WITHIN
queries distinguish repeated sections, define them as zone sections.
Related Topics
"WITHIN"
8.4 ADD_INDEX
Use this procedure to add a subindex to a catalog index preference. Create this preference by naming one or more columns in the base table.
Because you create subindexes to improve the response time of structured queries, the column you add should be used in the structured_query
clause of the CATSEARCH
operator at query time.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.ADD_INDEX( set_name IN VARCHAR2, column_list IN VARCHAR2, storage_clause IN VARCHAR2 );
- set_name
-
Specify the name of the index set.
- column_list
-
Specify a comma-delimited list of columns to index. At index time, any column listed here cannot have a NULL value in any row in the base table. If any row is NULL during indexing, then an error is raised.
Always ensure that your columns have non-NULL values before and after indexing.
Note:
A column name in
column_list
must not be prefixed by the owner, schema or table name. - storage_clause
-
Specify a storage clause.
Example
Consider a table called AUCTION
with the following schema:
create table auction(
item_id number, title varchar2(100), category_id number, price number, bid_close date);
Assume that queries on the table involve a mandatory text query clause and optional structured conditions on category_id
. Results must be sorted based on bid_close
.
You can create a catalog index to support the different types of structured queries a user might enter.
To create the indexes, first create the index set preference then add the required indexes to it:
begin ctx_ddl.create_index_set('auction_iset'); ctx_ddl.add_index('auction_iset','bid_close'); ctx_ddl.add_index('auction_iset','category_id, bid_close'); end;
Create the combined catalog index with CREATE
INDEX
as follows:
create index auction_titlex on AUCTION(title) indextype is CTXCAT parameters ('index set auction_iset');
Querying
To query the title column for the word pokemon, enter regular and mixed queries as follows:
select * from AUCTION where CATSEARCH(title, 'pokemon',NULL)> 0; select * from AUCTION where CATSEARCH(title, 'pokemon', 'category_id=99 order by bid_close desc')> 0;
Notes
VARCHAR2
columns in the column list of a CTXCAT
index of an index set cannot exceed 30 bytes.
Related Topic
8.5 ADD_MDATA
Use this procedure to change the metadata of a document that has been specified as an MDATA
section. After this call, MDATA
queries involving the named MDATA
value will find documents with the given MDATA
value.
There are two versions of CTX_DDL.ADD_MDATA
: one for adding a single metadata value to a single rowid, and one for handing multiple values, multiple rowids, or both.
CTX_DDL.ADD_MDATA
is transactional; it takes effect immediately in the calling session, can be seen only in the calling session, can be reversed with a ROLLBACK
command, and must be committed to take permanent effect.
Use CTX_DDL.REMOVE_MDATA to remove metadata values from already-indexed documents. Only the owner of the index is allowed to call ADD_MDATA
and REMOVE_MDATA
.
Syntax
This is the syntax for adding a single value to a single rowid:
CTX_DDL.ADD_MDATA( idx_name IN VARCHAR2, section_name IN VARCHAR2, mdata_value IN VARCHAR2, mdata_rowid IN VARCHAR2, [part_name] IN VARCHAR2] );
- idx_name
-
Name of the text index that contains the named rowid.
- section_name
-
Name of the
MDATA
section. - mdata_value
-
The metadata value to add to the document.
- mdata_rowid
-
The rowid to which to add the metadata value.
- [part_name]
-
Name of the index partition, if any. Must be provided for local partitioned indexes and must be NULL for global, nonpartitioned indexes.
This is the syntax for handling multiple values, multiple rowids, or both. This version is more efficient for large numbers of new values or rowids.
CTX_DDL.ADD_MDATA( idx_name IN VARCHAR2, section_name IN VARCHAR2, mdata_values SYS.ODCIVARCHAR2LIST, mdata_rowids SYS.ODCIRIDLIST, [part_name] IN VARCHAR2] );
- idx_name
-
Name of the text index that contains the named rowids.
- section_name
-
Name of the
MDATA
section. - mdata_values
-
List of metadata values. If a metadata value contains a comma, the comma must be escaped with a backslash.
- mdata_rowids
-
The rowids to which to add the metadata values.
- [part_name]
-
Name of the index partition, if any. Must be provided for local partitioned indexes and must be NULL for global, nonpartitioned indexes.
Example
This example updates a single value:
select rowid from mytab where contains(text, 'MDATA(sec, value')>0; No rows returned exec ctx_ddl.add_mdata('my_index', 'sec', 'value', 'ABC'); select rowid from mytab where contains(text, 'MDATA(sec, value')>0; ROWID ----- ABC
This example updates multiple values:
begin ctx_ddl.add_mdata('my_index', 'sec', sys.odcivarchar2list('value1','value2','value3'), sys.odciridlist('ABC','DEF')); end;
This is equivalent to:
begin ctx_ddl.add_mdata('my_index', 'sec', 'value1', 'ABC'); ctx_ddl.add_mdata('my_index', 'sec', 'value1', 'DEF'); ctx_ddl.add_mdata('my_index', 'sec', 'value2', 'ABC'); ctx_ddl.add_mdata('my_index', 'sec', 'value2', 'DEF'); ctx_ddl.add_mdata('my_index', 'sec', 'value3', 'ABC'); ctx_ddl.add_mdata('my_index', 'sec', 'value3', 'DEF'); end;
Notes
If a rowid is not yet indexed, CTX_DDL.ADD.MDATA
completes without error, but an error is logged in CTX_USER_INDEX_ERRORS
.
These updates are updates directly on the index itself, not on the actual contents stored in the base table. Therefore, they will not survive when the Text index is rebuilt.
Related Topics
"MDATA"
See Also:
Chapter 8, "Searching Document Sections in Oracle Text" in Oracle Text Application Developer's Guide
8.6 ADD_MDATA_COLUMN
Use this procedure to map the FILTER
BY
column named in column_name to the MDATA
section named in section_name.
Syntax
The syntax is as follows:
CTX_DDL.ADD_MDATA_COLUMN( group_name IN VARCHAR2, section_name IN VARCHAR2, column_name IN VARCHAR2, );
Restrictions
MDATA
sections that are created with CTX_DDL.ADD_MDATA_COLUMN
cannot have their values changed using CTX_DDL.ADD_MDATA
or CTX_DDL.REMOVE_MDATA
. Doing so will result in errors being returned. The section values must be updated using SQL.
Notes
-
The stored datatype for
MDATA
sections istext
. Therefore, the value of theFILTER
BY
column is converted totext
during indexing. For non-text datatypes, theFILTER
BY
columns are normalized to an internal format during indexing. If the section is queried with anMDATA
operator, then theMDATA
query string will also be normalized to the internal format before processing. -
When a
FILTER
BY
column is mapped asMDATA
, the cost-based optimizer in Oracle Text tries to avoid using the Oracle Text composite domain index to process range predicate(s) on thatFILTER
BY
column. This is because range predicates onMDATA
FILTER
BY
columns are processed less efficiently than if they were declared asSDATA
. For this reason, you should not add aFILTER
BY
column asMDATA
if you plan to do range searches on the column.
Related Topics
"MDATA"
See Also:
Chapter 8, "Searching Document Sections in Oracle Text" in Oracle Text Application Developer's Guide
8.7 ADD_MDATA_SECTION
Use this procedure to add an MDATA
section, with an accompanying value, to an existing section group. MDATA
sections cannot be added to Null Section groups, Path Section groups, or Auto Section groups.
Section values undergo a simplified normalization:
-
Leading and trailing whitespace on the value is removed.
-
The value is truncated to 255 bytes.
-
The value is indexed as a single value; if the value consists of multiple words, it is not broken up.
-
Case is preserved. If the document is dynamically generated, then implement case-insensitivity by uppercasing
MDATA
values and making sure to search only in uppercase.
Use CTX_DDL.REMOVE_SECTION to remove sections.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.ADD_MDATA_SECTION( group_name IN VARCHAR2, section_name IN VARCHAR2, tag IN VARCHAR2, read_only IN BOOLEAN default FALSE);
- group_name
-
Name of the section group that will contain the
MDATA
section. - section_name
-
Name of the
MDATA
section. - tag
-
The value of the
MDATA
section. For example, if the section is<AUTHOR>
, the value could be Cynthia Kadohata (author of the novel The Floating World). More than one tag can be assigned to a givenMDATA
section. - read_only
-
FALSE
(default) if you want to allow callingCTX_DDL.ADD_MDATA()
andCTX_DDL.REMOVE_MDATA()
for this MDATA section, andTRUE
otherwise. When set toFALSE
, the queries on theMDATA
section run less efficiently because a cursor needs to be opened on the index table to track the deleted values for thatMDATA
section.
Example
This example creates an MDATA
section called auth
.
ctx_ddl.create_section_group('htmgroup', 'HTML_SECTION_GROUP'); ctx_ddl.add_mdata_section('htmgroup', 'auth', 'author', READ_ONLY);
Related Topics
"MDATA"
See Also:
Chapter 8, "Searching Document Sections in Oracle Text" in Oracle Text Application Developer's Guide
8.8 ADD_NDATA_SECTION
Use this procedure to find matches that are spelled in a similar way. The value of an NDATA
section is extracted from the document text like other sections, but is indexed as name data. NDATA
sections are stored in the CTX_USER_SECTIONS
view.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.ADD_NDATA_SECTION( group_name IN VARCHAR2, section_name IN VARCHAR2, tag IN VARCHAR2 );
Notes
NDATA
sections support both single and multi-byte data, however, there are character- and term-based limitations. NDATA
section data that is indexed is constrained as follows:
-
number of characters in a single, white space delimited term
511
-
number of white space delimited terms
255
-
total number of characters, including white spaces
511
NDATA
section data that exceeds these constraints are truncated.
Example
The following example defines a section group namegroup
of the BASIC_SECTION_GROUP
type. It then creates an NDATA
section in namegroup
called firstname
.
begin ctx_ddl.create_section_group('namegroup', 'BASIC_SECTION_GROUP'); ctx_ddl.add_ndata_section('namegroup', 'firstname', 'fname1'); end;
8.9 ADD_SDATA_COLUMN
Use this procedure to map the FILTER
BY
or ORDER
BY
column named in column_name to the SDATA
section named in section_name. By default, all FILTER
BY
columns are mapped as SDATA
.
Syntax
The syntax is as follows:
CTX_DDL.ADD_SDATA_COLUMN( group_name IN VARCHAR2, section_name IN VARCHAR2, column_name IN VARCHAR2, );
Notes
-
Mapping
FILTER
BY
columns to sections is optional. If no section mapping exists for aFILTER
BY
column, then it is mapped to anSDATA
section, and the section name will be the name of theFILTER
BY
column. -
If a section group is not specified during
CREATE
INDEX
of a composite domain index, then system default section group settings will be used, and aSDATA
section will be created for each of theFILTER
BY
andORDER
BY
columns.Note:
Because section name does not allow certain special characters and is case insensitive, if the column name is case sensitive or contains special characters, then an error will be raised. To work around this problem, you need to map the column to an
MDATA
orSDATA
section before creating the index. Refer to CTX_DDL.ADD_MDATA_COLUMN or CTX_DDL.ADD_SDATA_COLUMN in this chapter. -
An error will be raised if a column mapped to
MDATA
also appears in theORDER
BY
column clause. -
Column section names are unique to their section group. That is, you cannot have an
MDATA
column section namedFOO
if you already have anMDATA
column section namedFOO
. Furthermore, you cannot have a field section namedFOO
if you already have anSDATA
column section namedFOO
. This is true whether it is implicitly created (byCREATE
INDEX
forFILTER
BY
orORDER
BY
clauses) or explicitly created (byCTX_DDL.ADD_SDATA_COLUMN
). -
One section name can only be mapped to one
FILTER
BY
column, and vice versa. For example, mapping a section to more than one column or mapping a column to more than one section is not allowed. -
Column sections can be added to any type of section group, including the
NULL
section group. -
99 is the maximum number for
SDATA
sections and columns.
Related Topics
"SDATA"
See Also:
Chapter 8, "Searching Document Sections in Oracle Text" in Oracle Text Application Developer's Guide
8.10 ADD_SDATA_SECTION
This procedure adds an SDATA
section to a section group. By default, all FILTER
BY
columns are mapped as SDATA
.
SDATA
sections are supported. There is no restriction on the number of SDATA sections that can be created for an index. That is, the sum total of SDATA
sections for an index, created implicitly with FILTER
BY
and ORDER
BY
, and explicitly with the CTX_DDL.ADD_SDATA_SECTION()
procedure is not restricted anymore. The total number of CDI, including FILTER BY
and ORDER BY
is 32, but the number of SDATA
sections supported is unlimited. There are two types of SDATA
sections:
-
Searchable: Creates optimized for search SDATA sections which support multiple values per document for the section and efficient range search capability.
-
Sortable: Creates optimized for sort SDATA sections which support a single value per document for the section. If the
optimized_for
attribute is not set, then the default type of section is Sortable. The Composite Domain Index uses Sortable SDATA internally for efficientFILTER BY
orORDER BY
evaluation.
Starting with Oracle Database Release 18c, group counts or facets are supported for SDATA sections that are created with the optimized_for
attribute set to sort
, search
, or sort_and_search
. The optimized_for
attribute can be set by using the CTX_DDL.SET_SECTION_ATTRIBUTE
procedure.
See Also:
-
Oracle Text Application Developer's Guide for more information about defining sections as facets
Syntax
The syntax is as follows:
CTX_DDL.ADD_SDATA_SECTION( group_name IN VARCHAR2, section_name IN VARCHAR2, tag IN VARCHAR2, datatype IN VARCHAR2 default NULL, );
- group_name
-
Name of the group that contains the section.
- section_name
-
Name of the
SDATA
section. - tag
-
Name of the tag to add to the
SDATA
section. - datatype
-
Specifies the stored format for the data, as well as the semantics of comparison in later use in
SDATA
operators. The SortableSDATA
sections support the following data types:-
VARCHAR2
-
CHAR
-
RAW
-
NUMBER
-
DATE
The
VARCHAR2
datatype stores up to 249 bytes of character data in the database character set. Values larger than this result in a per-document indexing error. Note that leading and trailing whitespace are always trimmed fromSDATA
section values when extracted by the sectioner. This is different thanSDATA
columns. Column values are never trimmed. No lexing is performed on the value from either kind ofSDATA
.The
CHAR
datatype stores up to 249 bytes of character data in the database character set. Values larger than this result in a per-document indexing error. Note that leading and trailing whitespace are always trimmed fromSDATA
section values when extracted by the sectioner. This is different thanSDATA
columns. Column values are never trimmed. No lexing is performed on the value from either kind ofSDATA
. To be consistent with SQL, the comparisons ofCHAR
datatypeSDATA
values are blank-padded comparisons.The
RAW
datatype stores up to 249 bytes of binary data. Values larger than this result in a per-document indexing error. The value is converted from hexadecimal string representation. That is, to store a value of65
, the document should look like<TAG>40</TAG>
, and not<TAG>65</TAG>
or<TAG>A</TAG>
.The
DATE
datatype values must conform to the following format:YYYY-MM-DD
orYYYY-MM-DD HH24:MI:SS
. That is, to store aDATE
value of "Nov. 24, 2006 10:32 pm 36 sec", the document should look like<TAG>2006-11-24 22:32:36</TAG>
.The Searchable
SDATA
sections support the following data types, in addition to the data types supported by the SortableSDATA
sections:-
BINARY_FLOAT
-
BINARY_DOUBLE
-
TIMESTAMP
-
TIMESTAMP_WITH_TIMEZONE
The
BINARY_FLOAT
datatype stores 32-bit floating point number.The
BINARY_DOUBLE
datatype stores 64-bit floating point number.The
TIMESTAMP
datatype is an extension of theDATE
datatype. It stores year, month, and day values of date, as well as hour, minute, and second values of time. It also stores fractional seconds, which are not stored by theDATE
datatype. The fractional seconds precision can be no more than 9. TheTIMESTAMP
values must follow the ISO format. You can specify theTIMESTAMP
literal in the following format:YYYY-MM-DD HH24:MI:SS.FF
. An example of TIMESTAMP value is<TAG>1997-01-31 09:26:50.12</TAG>
.The
TIMESTAMP_WITH_TIMEZONE
datatype is a variant ofTIMESTAMP
datatype that includes a time zone offset or a time zone region name in its value. The fractional seconds prevision can be no more than 9. TheTIMESTAMP_WITH_TIMEZONE
values must follow the ISO format. An example ofTIMESTAMP_WITH_TIMEZONE
value is<TAG>1997-01-31 09:26:56.66 +02:00</TAG>
-
Example
The following example demonstrates how to create a SDATA section:
create table tab(id number, info varchar2(100));
insert into tab values(1,'Hello World<fruit>apple</fruit><price>3</price>');
insert into tab values(2,'Hello World<fruit>orange</fruit><price>5</price>');
The preceding statements create a table named tab with two rows of data.
The following statements create a basic section group named sg
, add SDATA sections to it and mark the SDATA to be searchable:
exec ctx_ddl.create_section_group('sg', 'basic_section_group');
exec ctx_ddl.add_sdata_section('sg','fruit','fruit','varchar2');
exec ctx_ddl.set_section_attribute('sg','fruit','optimized_for','search');
exec ctx_ddl.add_sdata_section('sg','price','price','number');
exec ctx_ddl.set_section_attribute('sg','price','optimized_for','search');
The following statement creates an index on sg
:
create index idx on tab(info) indextype is ctxsys.context parameters ('section group sg');
The following statements query tab
to demonstrate searchable SDATA:
Query 1
select id from tab where CONTAINS(info, 'SDATA(fruit = "apple")'); return id 1
Query 2
select id from tab where CONTAINS(info, 'Hello and SDATA(price > 4)'); return id 2
Limitations
-
If no
SDATA
tag occurs in a given document, then this is treated as anSDATA
value ofNULL
. -
Empty
SDATA
tags are treated asNULL
values. -
SDATA
sections cannot be nested. Sections that are nested inside are ignored.
Related Topics
"SDATA"
8.11 ADD_SEC_GRP_ATTR_VAL
Adds a section group attribute value to the list of values of an already existing section group attribute.
8.12 ADD_SPECIAL_SECTION
Adds a special section, either SENTENCE
or PARAGRAPH
, to a section group. This enables searching within sentences or paragraphs in documents with the WITHIN operator.
A special section in a document is a section which is not explicitly tagged like zone and field sections. The start and end of special sections are detected when the index is created. Oracle Text supports two such sections: paragraph and sentence.
The sentence and paragraph boundaries are determined by the lexer. For example, the lexer recognizes sentence and paragraph section boundaries as follows:
Table 8-1 Paragraph and Sentence Section Boundaries
Special Section | Boundary |
---|---|
SENTENCE |
WORD/PUNCT/WHITESPACE |
SENTENCE |
WORD/PUNCT/NEWLINE |
PARAGRAPH |
WORD/PUNCT/NEWLINE/WHITESPACE (indented paragraph) |
PARAGRAPH |
WORD/PUNCT/NEWLINE/NEWLINE (block paragraph) |
The punctuation, whitespace, and newline characters are determined by your lexer settings and can be changed.
If the lexer cannot recognize the boundaries, no sentence or paragraph sections are indexed.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.ADD_SPECIAL_SECTION( group_name IN VARCHAR2, section_name IN VARCHAR2 );
Example
The following example enables searching within sentences within HTML documents:
begin ctx_ddl.create_section_group('htmgroup', 'HTML_SECTION_GROUP'); ctx_ddl.add_special_section('htmgroup', 'SENTENCE'); end;
Add zone sections to the group to enable zone searching in addition to sentence searching. The following example adds the zone section Headline
to the section group htmgroup
:
begin ctx_ddl.create_section_group('htmgroup', 'HTML_SECTION_GROUP'); ctx_ddl.add_special_section('htmgroup', 'SENTENCE'); ctx_ddl.add_zone_section('htmgroup', 'Headline', 'H1'); end;
If you are only interested in sentence or paragraph searching within documents and not interested in defining zone or field sections, then use the NULL_SECTION_GROUP
as follows:
begin ctx_ddl.create_section_group('nullgroup', 'NULL_SECTION_GROUP'); ctx_ddl.add_special_section('nullgroup', 'SENTENCE'); end;
Related Topics
"WITHIN"
8.13 ADD_STOPCLASS
Adds a stopclass to a stoplist. A stopclass is a class of tokens that is not to be indexed. A stoplist cannot have more than 250 stopclasses with stoppatterns. This does not include the NUMBERS
stopclass. When indexing with Stop Patterns, the recommended memory setting is at least 500 MB to 1 GB to optimize the performance of indexing.
English is the only language supported for stopclasses.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.ADD_STOPCLASS( stoplist_name IN VARCHAR2, stopclass IN VARCHAR2, stoppattern IN VARCHAR2 default NULL );
- stoplist_name
-
Specify the name of the stoplist.
- stopclass
-
Specify the stopclass to be added to
stoplist_name
. It can be either theNUMBERS
stopclass or else it is considered as the pattern stopclass.NUMBERS
includes tokens that follow the number pattern: digits,numgroup
, andnumjoin
only. Therefore, 123ABC is not a number, nor is A123. These are labeled asMIXED
. $123 is not a number (this token is not common in a text index because non-alphanumerics become whitespace by default). In the United States, 123.45 is a number, but 123.456.789 is not; in Europe, where numgroup may be '.', the reverse is true.If NUMBERS is not specified for the stopclass
parameter
, then it is treated as a pattern stopclass, and you can provide any name to the stopclassparameter
. If you specify stopclass as a pattern class, then you need to specify the pattern in thestoppattern
parameter. The pattern includes any string pattern that may contain numbers and dates as well.The maximum number of stopwords, stopthemes, and stopclasses you can add to a stoplist is 4095.
- stoppattern
-
Specify the stop pattern to add to the stoplist. If the stopclass is specified as a pattern class, then the stop pattern must be specified. You can use the Oracle Regular Expression to specify the stop pattern.
Call the
ADD_STOPCLASS
procedure multiple times to add multiple stop patterns to a stoplist. You must specify different stopclass names for adding multiple stop patterns to a stoplist.A stop pattern is not case-sensitive by default, but acts as case-sensitive when the
MIXED_CASE
lexer preference is enabled. The stop pattern can have the maximum length of 512 characters. When indexing with Stop Patterns, the recommended memory setting is at least 500 MB to 1 GB to optimize the performance of indexing.
See Also:
Oracle Database Development Guide for more information about the syntax of the Oracle Regular Expression.
Example
The following example adds a stopclass of NUMBERS
to the stoplist mystoplist
:
begin ctx_ddl.add_stopclass('mystoplist', 'NUMBERS'); end;
The following example adds the pattern stopclass of SSN
to the stoplist mystoplist
:
begin ctx_ddl.add_stopclass('mystoplist', 'SSN', '\d{3}-\d{2}-\d{4}'); end;
In this example, the stopclass SSN
matches all the tokens of the form <3 digit number>-<2 digit number>-<4 digit number>, example, 234-11-8902
.
8.14 ADD_STOP_SECTION
Adds a stop section to an automatic section group. Adding a stop section causes the automatic section indexing operation to ignore the specified section in XML documents.
Note:
Adding a stop section causes no section information to be created in the index. However, the text within a stop section is always searchable.
Adding a stop section is useful when your documents contain many low information tags. Adding stop sections also improves indexing performance with the automatic section group.
The number of stop sections you can add is unlimited.
Stop sections do not have section names and hence are not recorded in the section views.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.ADD_STOP_SECTION( section_group IN VARCHAR2, tag IN VARCHAR2 );
- section_group
-
Specify the name of the automatic section group. If you do not specify an automatic section group, then this procedure returns an error.
- tag
-
Specify the tag to ignore during indexing. This parameter is case-sensitive. Defining a stop tag as such also stops the tag's attribute sections, if any.
Qualify the tag with document type in the form
(doctype)tag
. For example, if you wanted to make the<fluff>
tag a stop section only within themydoc
document type, specify(mydoc)fluff
for tag.
Example
Defining Stop Sections
The following example adds a stop section identified by the tag <fluff>
to the automatic section group myauto
:
begin ctx_ddl.add_stop_section('myauto', 'fluff'); end;
This example also stops any attribute sections contained within <fluff>
. For example, if a document contained:
<fluff type="computer">
Then the preceding example also stops the attribute section fluff@type.
Doctype Sensitive Stop Sections
The following example creates a stop section for the tag <fluff>
only in documents that have a root element of mydoc
:
begin ctx_ddl.add_stop_section('myauto', '(mydoc)fluff'); end;
8.15 ADD_STOPTHEME
Adds a single stoptheme to a stoplist. A stoptheme is a theme that is not to be indexed.
In English, query on indexed themes using the ABOUT operator.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.ADD_STOPTHEME( stoplist_name IN VARCHAR2, stoptheme IN VARCHAR2 );
- stoplist_name
-
Specify the name of the stoplist.
- stoptheme
-
Specify the stoptheme to be added to
stoplist_name
. The system normalizes thestoptheme
you enter using the knowledge base. If the normalized theme is more than one theme, then the system does not process your stoptheme. For this reason, Oracle recommends that you submit single stopthemes.The maximum number of stopwords, stopthemes, and stopclasses you can add to a stoplist is 4095.
Example
The following example adds the stoptheme banking
to the stoplist mystop
:
begin ctx_ddl.add_stoptheme('mystop', 'banking'); end;
8.16 ADD_STOPWORD
Use this procedure to add a single stopword to a stoplist.
To create a list of stopwords, you must call this procedure once for each word.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.ADD_STOPWORD(
stoplist_name IN VARCHAR2, stopword IN VARCHAR2, language IN VARCHAR2 default NULL, language_dependent IN BOOLEAN default TRUE
);
- stoplist_name
-
Specify the name of the stoplist.
- stopword
-
Specify the stopword to be added.
Language-specific stopwords must be unique across the other stopwords specific to the language. For example, it is valid to have a German die and an English die in the same stoplist.
The maximum number of stopwords, stopthemes, and stopclasses you can add to a stoplist is 4095.
- language
-
Specify the language of
stopword
when the stoplist you specify withstoplist_name
is of typeMULTI_STOPLIST
. You must specify the globalization support name or abbreviation of an Oracle Text-supported language.To make a stopword active in multiple languages, specify
ALL
for this parameter. For example, definingALL
stopwords is useful when you have international documents that contain English fragments that need to be stopped in any language.An
ALL
stopword is active in all languages. If you use the multi-lexer, the language-specific lexing of the stopword occurs, just as if it had been added multiple times in multiple specific languages.Otherwise, specify
NULL
. - language_dependent
-
Set this parameter to
FALSE
to indicate that any user-defined string can be specified for thelanguage
parameter.
Example
Single Language Stoplist
The following example adds the stopwords because, notwithstanding, nonetheless, and therefore to the stoplist mystop
:
begin
ctx_ddl.add_stopword('mystop', 'because'); ctx_ddl.add_stopword('mystop', 'notwithstanding'); ctx_ddl.add_stopword('mystop', 'nonetheless'); ctx_ddl.add_stopword('mystop', 'therefore');
end;
Multi-Language Stoplist
The following example adds the German word die to a multi-language stoplist:
begin
ctx_ddl.add_stopword('mystop', 'Die','german');
end;
Note:
Add stopwords after you create the index with ALTER
INDEX
.
Adding An ALL Stopword
The following adds the word the as an ALL
stopword to the multi-language stoplist globallist:
begin
ctx_ddl.add_stopword('globallist','the','ALL');
end;
Related Topics
"ALTER INDEX "
8.17 ADD_SUB_LEXER
Adds a sub-lexer to a multi-lexer preference. A sub-lexer identifies a language in a multi-lexer (multi-language) preference. Use a multi-lexer preference when you want to index more than one language.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.ADD_SUB_LEXER( lexer_name IN VARCHAR2, language IN VARCHAR2, sub_lexer IN VARCHAR2, alt_value IN VARCHAR2 default NULL, language_dependent IN BOOLEAN default TRUE );
- lexer_name
-
Specify the name of the multi-lexer preference.
- language
-
Specify the globalization support language name or abbreviation of the sub-lexer. For example, specify
JAPANESE
orJA
for Japanese.The sub-lexer you specify with
sub_lexer
is used when the language column has a value case-insensitive equal to the globalization support name of abbreviation oflanguage
.Specify
DEFAULT
to assign a default sub-lexer to use when the value of the language column in the base table is null, invalid, or unmapped to a sub-lexer. TheDEFAULT
lexer is also used to parse stopwords.If a sub-lexer definition for
language
already exists, then it is replaced by this call. - sub_lexer
-
Specify the name of the sub-lexer to use for this language.
- alt_value
-
Optionally specify an alternate value for
language
.If you specify
DEFAULT
forlanguage
, then you cannot specify analt_value
.The
alt_value
is limited to 30 bytes and cannot be a globalization support language name, abbreviation, orDEFAULT
. - language_dependent
-
Set this parameter to
FALSE
to indicate that any user-defined string can be specified for thelanguage
parameter. If set toFALSE
, then the lexing applied to the search expression will not be dependent on the query language. TheFALSE
option can only be used when aBASIC_SECTION_GROUP
is in use for the index.
Example
This example shows how to create a multi-language text table and how to set up the multi-lexer to index the table.
Create the multi-language table with a primary key, a text column, and a language column as follows:
create table globaldoc ( doc_id number primary key, lang varchar2(3), text clob );
Assume that the table holds mostly English documents, with an occasional German or Japanese document. To handle the three languages, you must create three sub-lexers: one for English, one for German, and one for Japanese as follows:
ctx_ddl.create_preference('english_lexer','basic_lexer'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('english_lexer','index_themes','yes'); ctx_ddl.set_attribtue('english_lexer','theme_language','english'); ctx_ddl.create_preference('german_lexer','basic_lexer'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('german_lexer','composite','german'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('german_lexer','mixed_case','yes'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('german_lexer','alternate_spelling','german'); ctx_ddl.create_preference('japanese_lexer','japanese_vgram_lexer');
Create the multi-lexer preference:
ctx_ddl.create_preference('global_lexer', 'multi_lexer');
Because the stored documents are mostly English, make the English lexer the default:
ctx_ddl.add_sub_lexer('global_lexer','default','english_lexer');
Add the German and Japanese lexers in their respective languages. Also assume that the language column is expressed in ISO 639-2, so add those as alternative values.
ctx_ddl.add_sub_lexer('global_lexer','german','german_lexer','ger'); ctx_ddl.add_sub_lexer('global_lexer','japanese','japanese_lexer','jpn');
Create the index globalx
, specifying the multi-lexer preference and the language column in the parameters string as follows:
create index globalx on globaldoc(text) indextype is ctxsys.context parameters ('lexer global_lexer language column lang');
You can specify a user-defined string for the language
paramater as follows:
ctx_ddl.add_sub_lexer('global_lexer','mysymbol','german_lexer','my_alt_symbol', language_dependent => FALSE);
Restrictions
The following restrictions apply to using CTX_DDL.ADD_SUB_LEXER
:
-
The invoking user must be the owner of the multi-lexer or
CTXSYS
. -
The lexer_name parameter must name a preference which is a multi-lexer lexer.
-
A lexer for default must be defined before the multi-lexer can be used in an index.
-
The sub-lexer preference owner must be the same as multi-lexer preference owner.
-
The sub-lexer preference must not be a multi-lexer lexer.
-
A sub-lexer preference cannot be dropped while it is being used in a multi-lexer preference.
-
CTX_DDL.ADD_SUB_LEXER
records only a reference. The sub-lexer values are copied at create index time to index value storage.
8.18 ADD_ZONE_SECTION
Creates a zone section and adds the section to an existing section group. This enables zone section searching with the WITHIN operator.
Zone sections are sections delimited by start and end tags. The <B>
and </B>
tags in HTML, for instance, marks a range of words which are to be rendered in boldface.
Zone sections can be nested within one another, can overlap, and can occur more than once in a document.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.ADD_ZONE_SECTION( group_name IN VARCHAR2, section_name IN VARCHAR2, tag IN VARCHAR2 );
- group_name
-
Specify the name of the section group to which
section_name
is added. - section_name
-
Specify the name of the section to add to the group_name. Use this name to identify the section in
WITHIN
queries. Avoid using names that contain non-alphanumeric characters such as _, because most of these characters are special must be escaped in queries. Section names are case-insensitive.Within the same group, zone section names and field section names cannot be the same. The terms Paragraph and Sentence are reserved for special sections.
Section names need not be unique across tags. You can assign the same section name to more than one tag, making details transparent to searches.
- tag
-
Specify the pattern which marks the start of a section. For example, if
<H1>
is the HTML tag, specifyH1
fortag
. The start tag you specify must be unique within a section group.Oracle Text knows what the end tags look like from the
group_type
parameter you specify when you create the section group.If
group_name
is anHTML_SECTION_GROUP
, you can create zone sections for the META tag'sNAME/CONTENT
attribute pairs. To do so, specifytag
asmeta@namevalue
wherenamevalue
is the value of theNAME
attribute whoseCONTENT
attributes are to be indexed as a section. Refer to the example.If
group_name
is anXML_SECTION_GROUP
, you can optionally qualifytag
with a document type (root element) in the form(doctype)tag
. Doing so makessection_name
sensitive to the XML document type declaration. Refer to the example.
Examples
The following example defines a section group called htmgroup
of type HTML_SECTION_GROUP
. It then creates a zone section in htmgroup
called headline
identified by the <H1> tag:
begin ctx_ddl.create_section_group('htmgroup', 'HTML_SECTION_GROUP'); ctx_ddl.add_zone_section('htmgroup', 'heading', 'H1'); end;
After indexing with section group htmgroup
, query within the heading section by issuing a query as follows:
'Oracle WITHIN heading'
Creating Sections for <META NAME>
Tags
You can create zone sections for HTML META tags when you use the HTML_SECTION_GROUP
.
Consider an HTML document that has a META
tag as follows:
<META NAME="author" CONTENT="ken">
To create a zone section that indexes all CONTENT
attributes for the META
tag whose NAME
value is author:
begin ctx_ddl.create_section_group('htmgroup', 'HTML_SECTION_GROUP'); ctx_ddl.add_zone_section('htmgroup', 'author', 'meta@author'); end
After indexing with section group htmgroup
, query the document as follows:
'ken WITHIN author'
Creating Document Type Sensitive Sections (XML Documents Only)
You have an XML document set that contains the <book>
tag declared for different document types (DTDs). You want to create a distinct book section for each document type.
Assume that myDTDname
is declared as an XML document type as follows:
<!DOCTYPE myDTDname> <myDTDname> ...
(Note: the DOCTYPE
must match the top-level tag.)
Within myDTDname
, the element <book>
is declared. For this tag, create a section named mybooksec
that is sensitive to the tag's document type as follows:
begin ctx_ddl.create_section_group('myxmlgroup', 'XML_SECTION_GROUP'); ctx_ddl.add_zone_section('myxmlgroup', 'mybooksec', '(myDTDname)book'); end;
Notes
Zone sections can repeat. Each occurrence is treated as a separate section. For example, if <H1> denotes a heading
section, they can repeat in the same documents as follows:
<H1> The Brown Fox </H1>
<H1> The Gray Wolf </H1>
Assuming that these zone sections are named Heading
, the query Brown WITHIN Heading returns this document. However, a query of (Brown and Gray) WITHIN Heading does not.
Zone sections can overlap each other. For example, if <B>
and <I>
denote two different zone sections, they can overlap in document as follows:
plain <B> bold <I> bold and italic </B> only italic </I> plain
Zone sections can nest, including themselves as follows:
<TD> <TABLE><TD>nested cell</TD></TABLE></TD>
Using the WITHIN
operator, you can write queries to search for text in sections within sections. For example, assume the BOOK1
, BOOK2
, and AUTHOR
zone sections occur as follows in documents doc1 and doc2:
doc1:
<book1> <author>Scott Tiger</author> This is a cool book to read.</book1>
doc2:
<book2> <author>Scott Tiger</author> This is a great book to read.</book2>
Consider the nested query:
'(Scott within author) within book1'
This query returns only doc1.
Related Topics
"WITHIN"
8.19 COPY_POLICY
Creates a new policy from an existing policy or index.
Syntax
ctx_ddl.copy_policy( source_policy VARCHAR2, policy_name VARCHAR2 );
- source_policy
-
The name of the policy or index being copied.
- policy_name
-
The name of the new policy copy.
The preference values are copied from the source_policy
. Both the source policy or index and the new policy must be owned by the same database user.
8.20 CREATE_INDEX_SET
Creates an index set for CTXCAT
index types. Name this index set in the parameter clause of CREATE
INDEX
when you create a CTXCAT
index.
8.21 CREATE_POLICY
Creates a policy to use with the CTX_DOC.POLICY_*
procedures and the ORA:CONTAINS
function. ORA:CONTAINS
is a function you use within an XPATH
query expression with existsNode()
.
See Also:
Syntax
CTX_DDL.CREATE_POLICY( policy_name IN VARCHAR2, filter IN VARCHAR2 DEFAULT NULL, section_group IN VARCHAR2 DEFAULT NULL, lexer IN VARCHAR2 DEFAULT NULL, stoplist IN VARCHAR2 DEFAULT NULL, wordlist IN VARCHAR2 DEFAULT NULL);
- policy_name
-
Specify the name for the new policy. Policy names and Text indexes share the same namespace.
- filter
-
Specify the filter preference to use.
- section_group
-
Specify the section group to use. You can specify any section group that is supported by
CONTEXT
index. - lexer
-
Specify the lexer preference to use. Your
INDEX_THEMES
attribute must be disabled. - stoplist
-
Specify the stoplist to use.
- wordlist
-
Specify the wordlist to use.
Example
Create mylex lexer preference named mylex.
begin ctx_ddl.create_preference('mylex', 'BASIC_LEXER'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('mylex', 'printjoins', '_-'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute ( 'mylex', 'index_themes', 'NO'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute ( 'mylex', 'index_text', 'YES'); end;
Create a stoplist preference named mystop.
begin ctx_ddl.create_stoplist('mystop', 'BASIC_STOPLIST'); ctx_ddl.add_stopword('mystop', 'because'); ctx_ddl.add_stopword('mystop', 'nonetheless'); ctx_ddl.add_stopword('mystop', 'therefore'); end;
Create a wordlist preference named 'mywordlist'.
begin ctx_ddl.create_preference('mywordlist', 'BASIC_WORDLIST'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('mywordlist','FUZZY_MATCH','ENGLISH'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('mywordlist','FUZZY_SCORE','0'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('mywordlist','FUZZY_NUMRESULTS','5000'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('mywordlist','SUBSTRING_INDEX','TRUE'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('mywordlist','STEMMER','ENGLISH'); end;
exec ctx_ddl.create_policy('my_policy', NULL, NULL, 'mylex', 'mystop', 'mywordlist');
or
exec ctx_ddl.create_policy(policy_name => 'my_policy', lexer => 'mylex', stoplist => 'mystop', wordlist => 'mywordlist');
Then enter the following existsNode()
query with your own defined policy:
select id from xmltab where existsNode(doc, '/book/chapter[ ora:contains(summary,"dog or cat", "my_policy") >0 ]', 'xmlns:ora="http://xmlns.example.com/xdb" ')=1;
Update the policy with the following:
exec ctx_ddl.update_policy(policy_name => 'my_policy', lexer => 'my_new_lex');
Drop the policy with the following:
exec ctx_ddl.drop_policy(policy_name => 'my_policy');
8.22 CREATE_PREFERENCE
Creates a preference in the Text data dictionary. Specify preferences in the parameter string of CREATE INDEX or ALTER INDEX .
Caution:
CTX_DDL.CREATE_PREFERENCE
does not respect the current schema as set by ALTER
SESSION
SET
current_schema
. Therefore, if you need to create or delete a preference owned by another user, then you must explicitly state this, and you must have the CREATE
ANY
TABLE
system privilege.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.CREATE_PREFERENCE(preference_name in varchar2, object_name in varchar2);
- preference_name
-
Specify the name of the preference to be created.
- object_name
-
Specify the name of the preference type.
See Also:
For a complete list of preference types and their associated attributes, see Oracle Text Indexing Elements
Examples
Creating Text-only Index
The following example creates a lexer preference that specifies a text-only index. It does so by creating a BASIC_LEXER
preference called my_lexer
with CTX_DDL.CREATE_PREFERENCE
. It then calls CTX_DDL.SET_ATTRIBUTE twice, first specifying YES for the INDEX_TEXT
attribute, then specifying NO for the INDEX_THEMES
attribute.
begin ctx_ddl.create_preference('my_lexer', 'BASIC_LEXER'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('my_lexer', 'INDEX_TEXT', 'YES'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('my_lexer', 'INDEX_THEMES', 'NO'); end;
The following example creates a data storage preference called mypref
that tells the system that the files to be indexed are stored in the operating system. The example then uses CTX_DDL.SET_ATTRIBUTE to set the PATH
attribute of to the directory /docs
.
begin ctx_ddl.create_preference('mypref', 'FILE_DATASTORE'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('mypref', 'PATH', '/docs'); end;
See Also:
For more information about data storage, see "Datastore Types "
Creating Master/Detail Relationship
Use CTX_DDL.CREATE_PREFERENCE to create a preference with DETAIL_DATASTORE
. Use CTX_DDL.SET_ATTRIBUTE to set the attributes for this preference. The following example shows how this is done:
begin ctx_ddl.create_preference('my_detail_pref', 'DETAIL_DATASTORE'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('my_detail_pref', 'binary', 'true'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('my_detail_pref', 'detail_table', 'my_detail'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('my_detail_pref', 'detail_key', 'article_id'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('my_detail_pref', 'detail_lineno', 'seq'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('my_detail_pref', 'detail_text', 'text'); end;
See Also:
For more information about master/detail, see "DETAIL_DATASTORE "
The following examples specify that the index tables are to be created in the foo
tablespace with an initial extent of 1K:
begin ctx_ddl.create_preference('mystore', 'BASIC_STORAGE'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('mystore', 'I_TABLE_CLAUSE', 'tablespace foo storage (initial 1K)'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('mystore', 'K_TABLE_CLAUSE', 'tablespace foo storage (initial 1K)'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('mystore', 'R_TABLE_CLAUSE', 'tablespace foo storage (initial 1K)'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('mystore', 'S_TABLE_CLAUSE', 'tablespace foo storage (initial 1K)'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('mystore', 'N_TABLE_CLAUSE', 'tablespace foo storage (initial 1K)'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('mystore', 'I_INDEX_CLAUSE', 'tablespace foo storage (initial 1K)'); end;
Note:
If S_TABLE_CLAUSE
is specified for a storage preference in an index without SDATA
, then it has no effect on the index, and the index creation will still succeed.
See Also:
Creating Preferences with No Attributes
When you create preferences with types that have no attributes, you need only create the preference, as in the following example which sets the filter to the NULL_FILTER
:
begin ctx_ddl.create_preference('my_null_filter', 'NULL_FILTER'); end;
Specifying BIGRAM Mode for Japanese VGRAM Lexer
The following example creates a Japanese VGRAM lexer preference that specifies the BIGRAM mode of operation for the Japanese queries:
begin ctx_ddl.create_preference('jp_lexer','JAPANESE_VGRAM_LEXER'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('jp_lexer','BIGRAM','TRUE'); end; /* create the index */ create index jp_idx on jp_doc(text) indextype is ctxsys.context parameters('lexer jp_lexer');
Related Topics
"ALTER INDEX "
8.23 CREATE_SECTION_GROUP
Creates a section group for defining sections in a text column.
When you create a section group, you can add to it zone, field, or special sections with ADD_ZONE_SECTION , ADD_FIELD_SECTION, ADD_MDATA_SECTION, or ADD_SPECIAL_SECTION .
You also use CREATE_SECTION_GROUP
with CTX_DDL.SET_SEC_GRP_ATTR to set xml_enable
to create an Oracle XML Search Index.
When you index, name the section group in the parameter string of CREATE INDEX or ALTER INDEX .
After indexing, query within your defined sections with the WITHIN operator.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.CREATE_SECTION_GROUP( group_name in varchar2, group_type in varchar2 );
- group_name
-
Specify the section group name to create as
section_group_name
. This parameter must be unique within an owner. - group_type
-
Specify section group type. The
group_type
parameter can be one of the following:Section Group Preference Description NULL_SECTION_GROUP
Use this group type when you define no sections or when you define only SENTENCE or PARAGRAPH sections. This is the default.
BASIC_SECTION_GROUP
Use this group type for defining sections where the start and end tags are of the form
<A>
and</A>
.Note: This group type does not support input such as unbalanced parentheses, comments tags, and attributes. Use
HTML_SECTION_GROUP
for this type of input.HTML_SECTION_GROUP
Use this group type for indexing HTML documents and for defining sections in HTML documents.
Use this group to create a JSON enabled context index. The
JSON ENABLE
attribute cannot be used withXML ENABLE
. A section group can only be marked asJSON ENABLE
. If it is already marked withXML ENABLE
, then the path section group cannot be used forJSON ENABLE
and vice versa.XML_SECTION_GROUP
Use this group type for indexing XML documents and for defining sections in XML documents.
AUTO_SECTION_GROUP
Use this group type to automatically create a zone section for each start-tag/end-tag pair in an XML document. The section names derived from XML tags are case sensitive as in XML.
Attribute sections are created automatically for XML tags that have attributes. Attribute sections are named in the form attribute@tag.
Stop sections, empty tags, processing instructions, and comments are not indexed.
The following limitations apply to automatic section groups:
-
You cannot add zone, field, or special sections to an automatic section group.
-
Automatic sectioning does not index XML document types (root elements.) However, you can define stop sections with document type.
-
The length of the indexed tags, including prefix and namespace, cannot exceed 64 bytes. Tags longer than this are not indexed.
PATH_SECTION_GROUP
Use this group type to index XML documents. Behaves like the
AUTO_SECTION_GROUP
.The difference is that with this section group you can do path searching with the
INPATH
andHASPATH
operators. Queries are also case-sensitive for tag and attribute names.NEWS_SECTION_GROUP
Use this group for defining sections in newsgroup formatted documents according to RFC 1036.
-
Note:
Starting with Oracle Database 18c, use ofNEWS_SECTION_GROUP
is deprecated in Oracle Text. Use external processing instead. If you want to index USENET posts, then preprocess the posts to use BASIC_SECTION_GROUP
or HTML_SECTION_GROUP
within Oracle Text. USENET is rarely used commercially.
Examples
The following command creates a section group called htmgroup
with the HTML group type.
begin
ctx_ddl.create_section_group('htmgroup', 'HTML_SECTION_GROUP');
end;
The following command creates a section group called auto
with the AUTO_SECTION_GROUP
group type to be used to automatically index tags in XML documents.
begin
ctx_ddl.create_section_group('auto', 'AUTO_SECTION_GROUP');
end;
The following example creates an Oracle XML Search index:
exec CTX_DDL.CREATE_SECTION_GROUP('secgroup','PATH_SECTION_GROUP'); exec CTX_DDL.SET_SEC_GRP_ATTR('secgroup','xml_enable','t'); CREATE INDEX po_ctx_idx on T(X) indextype is ctxsys.context parameters ('section group SECGROUP');
Related Topics
"WITHIN"
8.24 CREATE_SHADOW_INDEX
Creates index metadata (or policy) for the specified index. If the index is not partitioned, then it also creates the index tables. This procedure is only supported in Enterprise Edition of Oracle Database.
The following changes are not supported:
-
Transition from non-composite domain index to composite, or changing the composite domain index columns.
-
Rebuild indexes that have partitioned index tables, for example, $I, $P, $K.
Note:
For a partitioned index, you must first call this procedure to create the shadow index metadata. This procedure will not create index tables. It has no effect on query, DML, sync, or optimize operations.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.CREATE_SHADOW_INDEX( idx_name IN VARCHAR2, parameter_string IN VARCHAR2 DEFAULT NULL, parallel_degree IN NUMBER DEFAULT 1 );
- idx_name
-
The name of a valid
CONTEXT
indextype. - parameter_string
-
For nonpartitioned index, the same string as in
ALTER
INDEX
. For partitioned index, the same string as inALTER
INDEX
PARAMETER
. - parallel_degree
-
Reserved for future use. Specify the degree of parallelism. Parallel operation is not currently supported.
Example
Example 8-1 Scheduled Global Index RECREATE (Incremental Rebuild)
In this example, you have the finest control over each stage of RECREATE_INDEX_ONLINE. Since SYNC_INDEX
can take a time limit, you can limit SYNC_INDEX
during non-business hours and incrementally recreate the index.
/* create lexer and original index */ exec ctx_ddl.create_preference('us_lexer','basic_lexer'); create index idx on tbl(text) indextype is ctxsys.context parameters('lexer us_lexer'); /* create a new lexer */ begin ctx_ddl.create_preference('e_lexer','basic_lexer'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('e_lexer','base_letter','yes'); ctx_ddl.create_preference('m_lexer','multi_lexer'); ctx_ddl.add_sub_lexer('m_lexer','default','us_lexer'); ctx_ddl.add_sub_lexer('m_lexer','e','e_lexer'); end; / /* add new language column to the table for multi-lexer */ alter table tbl add(lang varchar2(10) default 'us'); /* create shadow index */ exec ctx_ddl.create_shadow_index('idx', 'replace lexer m_lexer language column lang NOPOPULATE'); declare idxid integer; begin /* figure out shadow index name */ select idx_id into idxid from ctx_user_indexes where idx_name ='IDX'; /* populate pending */ ctx_ddl.populate_pending('RIO$'||idxid); /* time limited sync */ ctx_ddl.sync_index(idx_name =>'RIO$'||idxid, maxtime =>480); /* more sync until no pending rows for the shadow index */ end; /* swap in the shadow index */ exec ctx_ddl.exchange_shadow_index('idx');
Notes
The index name for the shadow index is RIO$index_id
. By default it will also populate index tables for nonpartitioned indexes, unless NOPOPULATE
is specified in CREATE
INDEX
or in ALTER
INDEX
. For a local partitioned index, it will only create index metadata without creating the index tables for each partition. Each index can have only one shadow index.
When building a nonpartitioned index online, you can first call this procedure to create index metadata and index tables. If you specify POPULATE
, then this procedure will populate the index, but will not do swapping. You can schedule the swapping at a later, preferred time.
If you specify NOPOPULATE
, it will only create metadata for the index tables, but will not populate them. You must perform POPULATE_PENDING
(CTX_DDL.POPULATE_PENDING) to populate the pending queues after running this procedure, and then sync the indexes. This is referred to as incremental re-create.
Queries are all processed normally when this procedure is running.
If POPULATE
is specified, then DML is blocked for a very short time at the beginning of populate, after which all further DML is logged into an online pending queue and processed later.
Sync with CTX_DDL.SYNC_INDEX runs normally on the index. OPTIMIZE_INDEX runs without doing anything, but does not return an error.
Related Topics
POPULATE
| NOPOPULATE
in ALTER INDEX
CREATE INDEX in Oracle Text SQL Statements and Operators
CTX_DDL.DROP_SHADOW_INDEX
CTX_DDL.EXCHANGE_SHADOW_INDEX
CTX_DDL.SYNC_INDEX
CTX_DDL.POPULATE_PENDING
8.25 CREATE_STOPLIST
Use this procedure to create a new, empty stoplist. Stoplists can contain words or themes that are not to be indexed.
You can also create multi-language stoplists to hold language-specific stopwords. A multi-language stoplist is useful when you index a table that contains documents in different languages, such as English, German, and Japanese. When you do so, the text table must contain a language column.
Add either stopwords, stopclasses, or stopthemes to a stoplist using ADD_STOPWORD, ADD_STOPCLASS, or ADD_STOPTHEME. Specify a stoplist in the parameter string of CREATE INDEX or ALTER INDEX to override the default stoplist CTXSYS.DEFAULT_STOPLIST
.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.CREATE_STOPLIST(
stoplist_name IN VARCHAR2, stoplist_type IN VARCHAR2 DEFAULT 'BASIC_STOPLIST');
- stoplist_name
-
Specify the name of the stoplist to be created.
- stoplist_type
-
Specify
BASIC_STOPLIST
to create a stoplist for a single language. This is the default.Specify
MULTI_STOPLIST
to create a stoplist with language-specific stopwords.At indexing time, the language column of each document is examined, and only the stopwords for that language are eliminated. At query time, the session language setting determines the active stopwords, like it determines the active lexer when using the multi-lexer.
Note:
When indexing a multi-language table with a multi-language stoplist, the table must have a language column.
Examples
Example 8-2 Single Language Stoplist
The following example creates a stoplist called mystop
:
begin ctx_ddl.create_stoplist('mystop', 'BASIC_STOPLIST'); end;
Example 8-3 Multi-Language Stoplist
The following example creates a multi-language stoplist called multistop
and then adds tow language-specific stopwords:
begin ctx_ddl.create_stoplist('multistop', 'MULTI_STOPLIST'); ctx_ddl.add_stopword('mystop', 'Die','german'); ctx_ddl.add_stopword('mystop', 'Or','english'); end;
8.28 DROP_PREFERENCE
The DROP_PREFERENCE
procedure deletes the specified preference from the Text data dictionary. Dropping a preference does not affect indexes that have already been created using that preference.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.DROP_PREFERENCE( preference_name IN VARCHAR2 );
Example
The following example drops the preference my_lexer
.
begin ctx_ddl.drop_preference('my_lexer'); end;
Related Topics
CTX_DDL.CREATE_PREFERENCE
8.29 DROP_SECTION_GROUP
The DROP_SECTION_GROUP
procedure deletes the specified section group, as well as all the sections in the group, from the Text data dictionary.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.DROP_SECTION_GROUP( group_name IN VARCHAR2 );
Example
The following example drops the section group htmgroup
and all its sections:
begin ctx_ddl.drop_section_group('htmgroup'); end;
8.30 DROP_SHADOW_INDEX
Drops a shadow index for the specified index. When you drop a shadow index, if it is partitioned, then its metadata and the metadata of all this shadow index's partitions are dropped. This procedure also drops all the shadow index tables and cleans up any online pending queue.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.DROP_SHADOW_INDEX( idx_name in VARCHAR2 );
Example
The following example drops the shadow index myshadowidx
:
begin ctx_ddl.drop_shadow_index('myshadowidx'); end;
Related Topics
CTX_DDL.CREATE_SHADOW_INDEX
8.31 DROP_STOPLIST
Drops a stoplist from the Text data dictionary. When you drop a stoplist, you must re-create or rebuild the index for the change to take effect.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.DROP_STOPLIST(stoplist_name in varchar2);
Example
The following example drops the stoplist mystop
:
begin ctx_ddl.drop_stoplist('mystop'); end;
Related Topics
CTX_DDL.CREATE_STOPLIST
8.32 EXCHANGE_SHADOW_INDEX
This procedure swaps the index (or index partition) metadata and index (or index partition) data.
For nonpartitioned indexes, this procedure swaps both the metadata and the index data, and processes the online pending queue.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.EXCHANGE_SHADOW_INDEX( idx_name IN VARCHAR2 partition_name IN VARCHAR2 default NULL );
Example
Example 8-4 Global Index RECREATE with Scheduled Swap
This example demonstrates running CTX_DDL.EXCHANGE_SHADOW_INDEX
during non-business hours when query failures and DML blocking can be tolerated.
/* create lexer and original index */ exec ctx_ddl.create_preference('us_lexer','basic_lexer'); create index idx on tbl(text) indextype is ctxsys.context parameters('lexer us_lexer'); /* create a new lexer */ begin ctx_ddl.create_preference('e_lexer','basic_lexer'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('e_lexer','base_letter','yes'); ctx_ddl.create_preference('m_lexer','multi_lexer'); ctx_ddl.add_sub_lexer('m_lexer','default','us_lexer'); ctx_ddl.add_sub_lexer('m_lexer','e','e_lexer'); end; / /* add new language column to the table for multi-lexer */ alter table tbl add(lang varchar2(10) default 'us'); /* recreate index online with the new multip-lexer */ exec ctx_ddl.create_shadow_index('idx', 'replace lexer m_lexer language column lang'); exec ctx_ddl.exchange_shadow_index('idx');
Notes
Using EXCHANGE_SHADOW_INDEX with Nonpartitioned Indexes
For nonpartitioned indexes, this procedure will swap both metadata and index data, and will process the online pending queue.
Queries will return column not indexed errors when swapping metadata and index data, but queries are processed normally when processing online pending queue. The period of errors being raised should be short.
If you specify POPULATE
when you create the shadow index, and if many DML operations have been issued since the creation of the shadow index, then there could be a large pending queue. However, if you use incremental recreate, that is, specify NOPOPULATE
when you create the shadow index, and you then populate the pending queue and sync, then the online pending queue is always empty no matter how many DML operations have occurred since CREATE_SHADOW_INDEX
was issued.
When this procedure is running, DML will first fail with an error about index being in in-progress status. After that DML could be blocked (hang) if there are rows in online pending queue that need to be reapplied.
Note:
When this procedure is running, DML statements will fail with an error that the index is in "in-progress status." If, when this error occurs, there are rows in the online pending queue that need to be reapplied, then the DML could be blocked and hang.
Using EXCHANGE_SHADOW_INDEX with Partitioned Indexes
For partitions that are recreated with NOSWAP
: when the index is partitioned, and if partition_name is a valid index partition, then this procedure will swap the index partition data and the index partition metadata, and will process the online pending queue for this partition.
This procedure swaps only one partition at a time. When you run this procedure on partitions that are recreated with NOSWAP
:
-
Queries that span multiple partitions will not return consistent results across all partitions.
-
Queries on the partition that is being swapped will return errors.
-
Queries on partitions that are already swapped will be based on the new index.
-
Queries on the partitions that haven't been swapped will be based on the old index.
If the partition_name is NULL, then this procedure will swap the index metadata. Run this procedure as the last step when recreating a local partitioned index online.
Related Topics
CTX_DDL."RECREATE_INDEX_ONLINE"
CTX_DDL."CREATE_SHADOW_INDEX"
CTX_DDL."DROP_SHADOW_INDEX"
8.33 OPTIMIZE_INDEX
Use this procedure to optimize the index. Optimize your index after you synchronize it. Optimizing an index removes old data and minimizes index fragmentation, which can improve query response time. Querying and DML may proceed while optimization takes place.
You can optimize in fast, full, rebuild, token, token-type, or merge mode.
-
Fast mode compacts data but does not remove rows.
-
Full mode compacts data and removes rows.
-
Optimize in rebuild mode rebuilds the
$I
table (the inverted list table) in its entirety. Rebuilding an index is often significantly faster than performing a full optimization, and is more likely to result in smaller indexes, especially if the index is heavily fragmented.Rebuild optimization creates a more compact copy of the
$I
table, and then switches the original$I
table and the copy. The rebuild operation will therefore require enough space to store the copy as well as the original. (If redo logging is enabled, then additional space is required in the redo log as well.) At the end of the rebuild operation, the original$I
table is dropped, and the space can be reused. A temporary "change capture trigger" is used to ensure that updates to the$I
table during the optimization are not lost. For this reason, the user callingOPTIMIZE_INDEX
inREBUILD
mode must have theCREATE
TRIGGER
privilege.Optimize in rebuild mode supports partitioning on the
$I
table via thei_table_clause
attribute of thebasic_storage
preference with the following limitations:-
The
i_index_clause
must specify using a local btree index if the$I
table is partitioned. -
Partitioning schemes on the
token_first
,token_last
, ortoken_count
columns are not allowed.
-
-
In token mode, specify a specific token to be optimized (for example, all rows with documents containing the word elections). Use this mode to optimize index tokens that are frequently searched, without spending time on optimizing tokens that are rarely referenced. An optimized token can improve query response time (but only for queries on that token).
-
Token-type optimization is similar to token mode, except that the optimization is performed on field,
MDATA
, orSDATA
sections (for example, sections with an<A>
tag). This is useful in keeping critical field orMDATA
sections optimal. -
Use the merge mode to optimize the $I table for the CONTEXT indexes that are frequently used for DML operations. The merge operation removes the old data (deleted rows) from the $G table, compacts the existing data in the $G table, and then copies that data to the $I table. Using merge optimization for a particular token copies only that token from the $G table to the $I table.
A common strategy for optimizing indexes is to perform regular token optimizations on frequently referenced terms, and to perform rebuild optimizations less frequently. (Use CTX_REPORT.QUERY_LOG_SUMMARY to find out which queries are made most frequently.) You can perform full, fast, or token-type optimizations instead of token optimizations.
Some users choose to perform frequent time-limited full optimizations along with occasional rebuild optimizations.
Note:
-
Optimizing an index can result in better response time only if you insert, delete, or update documents in the base table after your initial indexing operation.
-
When you run index optimization, any work in the session is committed effectively and that work cannot be rolled back.
Using this procedure to optimize the index is recommended over using the ALTER
INDEX
statement.
Optimization of a large index may take a long time. To monitor the progress of a lengthy optimization, log the optimization with CTX_OUTPUT.START_LOG and check the resultant logfile from time to time.
Note that, unlike serial optimize full, CTX_DDL.OPTIMIZE_INDEX()
run with optlevel
of FULL
and parallel_degree
> 1 is not resumable. That is, it will not resume from where it left after a time-out or failure.
Note:
There is a very small window of time when a query might fail in CTX_DDL.OPTIMIZE_INDEX
REBUILD
mode when the $I
table is being swapped with the optimized shadow $I
table.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.OPTIMIZE_INDEX(
idx_name IN VARCHAR2, optlevel IN VARCHAR2, maxtime IN NUMBER DEFAULT NULL, token IN VARCHAR2 DEFAULT NULL, part_name IN VARCHAR2 DEFAULT NULL, token_type IN NUMBER DEFAULT NULL, parallel_degree IN NUMBER DEFAULT 1, maxtokens IN NUMBER DEFAULT NULL, section_type IN NUMBER DEFAULT NULL
);
- idx_name
-
Specify the name of the index. If you do not specify an index name, then Oracle Text chooses a single index to optimize.
- optlevel
-
Specify optimization level as a string. You can specify one of the following methods for optimization:
optlevel value Description FAST
orCTX_DDL.OPTLEVEL_FAST
This method compacts fragmented rows. However, old data is not removed.
FAST
optimization is not supported forCTXCAT
indexes.FAST
optimization will not optimize$S
index table.FULL
orCTX_DDL.OPTLEVEL_FULL
In this mode you can optimize the entire index or a portion of the index. This method compacts rows and removes old data (deleted rows). Optimizing in full mode runs even when there are no deleted rows.
Full optimization is not supported for
CTXCAT
indexes.REBUILD
orCTX_DDL.OPTLEVEL_REBUILD
This
optlevel
rebuilds the$I
table (the inverted list table) to produce more compact token info rows. LikeFULL
optimize, this mode also deletes information pertaining to deleted rows of the base table.REBUILD
is not supported forCTCAT
andCTXRULE
indexes.REBUILD
is not supported when the$I
table is partitioned.TOKEN
orCTX_DDL.OPTLEVEL_TOKEN
This method lets you specify a specific token to be optimized. Oracle Text does a full optimization on the token you specify with token. If no token type is provided, 0 (zero) will be used as the default.
Use this method to optimize those tokens that are searched frequently.
Token optimization is not supported for
CTCAT
andCTXRULE
indexes.TOKEN_TYPE
orCTX_DDL.OPTLEVEL_TOKEN_TYPE
This optlevel optimizes on demand all tokens in the index matching either the input token type or the input section type.
When
optlevel
isTOKEN_TYPE
, either token_type or section_type must be provided.TOKEN_TYPE
performsFULL
optimize on any token of the input token_type or section_type, whichever is provided. Like aTOKEN
optimize,TOKEN_TYPE
optimize does not change theFULL
optimize state, and runs to completion on each invocation.Token_type optimization is not supported for
CTCAT
andCTXRULE
indexes.MERGE
orCTX_DDL.OPTLEVEL_MERGE
This optlevel optimizes the
$I
table. It removes the old data (deletes rows) from the$G
table, compacts the existing data in the$G
table, and then copies that optimized data to the$I
table.When this option is used for a particular token, only that token gets copied from the $G table to the $I table.
Merge optimization should be used for
CONTEXT
indexes with theSTAGE_ITAB
index option enabled.The behavior of
CTX_DDL.OPTIMIZE_INDEX
with respect to the $S index table is as follows:optlevel value Will Optimize $S Index Table Yes/No Notes FAST
orCTX_DDL.OPTLEVEL_FAST
No
FULL
orCTX_DDL.OPTLEVEL_FULL
Yes
-
The optimize process will optimize $I table first. Once $I table optimize is finished,
CTX_DDL.OPTIMIZE_INDEX
will continue on to optimize $S index table. -
MAXTIME
will also be honored. OnceCTX_DDL.OPTIMIZE_INDEX
completes optimizing $S rows for a givenSDATA_ID
, it will checkMAXTIME
and exit if total elapsed time (including time taken to optimize $I) exceeds specifiedMAXTIME
. The nextCTX_DDL.OPTIMIZE_INDEX
withoptlevel=>'FULL'
will pick up where it left off. -
$S table optimize will be done in serial.
REBUILD
orCTX_DDL.OPTLEVEL_REBUILD
Yes
-
$S optimize will start after $I rebuild finishes.
-
$S optimize in this case will be processed the same way as $S optimize in
FULL
mode. $S table is optimized in place, not rebuilt.Note: If for some reason $S optimize exits abnormally, then it is recommended that you use
optlevel=>TOKEN_TYPE
to optimize $S to avoid rebuilding the $I table again. -
$S table optimize will be done in serial.
TOKEN
orCTX_DDL.OPTLEVEL_TOKEN
No
TOKEN_TYPE
orCTX_DDL.OPTLEVEL_TOKEN_TYPE
Yes
You can optimize $S rows for a given
SDATA_ID
by settingoptlevel => TOKEN_TYPE
and theTOKEN_TYPE
parameter to the targetSDATA_ID
. -
- maxtime
-
Specify maximum optimization time, in minutes, for
FULL
optimize.When you specify the symbol
CTX_DDL
.MAXTIME_UNLIMITED
(or pass in NULL), the entire index is optimized. This is the default. - token
-
Specify the
token
to be optimized. - part_name
-
If your index is a local index, then you must specify the name of the index partition to synchronize otherwise an error is returned.
If your index is a global, nonpartitioned index, then specify
NULL,
which is the default. - token_type
-
Specify the
token_type
to be optimized.You can find the
token_type
by using theCTX_REPORT.TOKEN_TYPE
method or theCTX_USER_SECTIONS
view. - parallel_degree
-
Specify the parallel degree as a number for parallel optimization. The actual parallel degree depends on your resources.
Because the
optlevel
values are executed serially, this setting throws the error DRG-10598 for the following values:-
TOKEN
orCTX_DDL.OPTLEVEL_TOKEN
-
FAST
orCTX_DDL.OPTLEVEL_FAST
-
- maxtokens
-
Specify the
maxtokens
to be optimized.maxtokens
attribute can be specified only whenoptlevel
value is set toTOKEN
orCTX_DDL.OPTLEVEL_TOKEN
and when thetoken
parameter isNULL.
Note:
-
If the number of fragmented tokens exceeds 50% of total number of tokens in $I and
maxtokens
is not specified, then “index too fragmented” error is returned. -
If
maxtokens
specified is negative or greater than 50% of total number of tokens in $I, then “invalid value for maxtokens” error is returned.
-
- section_type
-
Specify the
section_type
to optimize all sections of a certain type. This parameter can have one of the following values:section_type value Description CTX_DDL.SECTION_FIELD
The optimization is run for all field sections in the index.
CTX_DDL.SECTION_SORT_SDATA
The optimization is run for all
optimized_for
sort SDATA sections in the index.CTX_DDL.SECTION_MDATA
The optimization is run for all MDATA sections in the index.
CTX_DDL.SECTION_SEARCH_SDATA
The optimization is run for all
optimized_for
search SDATA sections in the index.CTX_DDL.SECTION_WILDCARD_INDEX
The optimization is run for the $KG table (that is, the wildcard search index).
Note:
section_type
can be specified only when theoptlevel
value is set toTOKEN_TYPE
orCTX_DDL.OPTLEVEL_TOKEN_TYPE
.
Examples
The following two examples are equivalent ways of optimizing an index using fast optimization:
begin ctx_ddl.optimize_index('myidx','FAST'); end; begin ctx_ddl.optimize_index('myidx',CTX_DDL.OPTLEVEL_FAST); end;
The following example optimizes the index token Oracle:
begin ctx_ddl.optimize_index('myidx','token', TOKEN=>'Oracle'); end;
To optimize all tokens of field section MYSEC
in index MYINDEX
:
begin ctx_ddl.optimize_index('myindex', ctx_ddl.optlevel_token_type, token_type=> ctx_report.token_type('myindex','field mysec text'));end;
The following two examples are equivalent ways of optimizing an index using merge optimization:
begin ctx_ddl.optimize_index('idx','MERGE'); end; begin ctx_ddl.optimize_index('idx',CTX_DDL.OPTLEVEL_MERGE); end;
The following example optimizes the top 10 fragmented tokens in $I:
begin ctx_ddl.optimize_index('idx','TOKEN',maxtokens=>10); end;
Notes
You can run CTX_DDL.SYNC_INDEX
and CTX_DDL.OPTIMIZE_INDEX
at the same time. You can also run CTX_DDL.SYNC_INDEX
and CTX_DDL.OPTIMIZE_INDEX
with parallelism at the same time. However, you should not:
-
Run
CTX_DDL.SYNC_INDEX
with parallelism at the same time asCTX_DDL.OPTIMIZE_INDEX
-
Run
CTX_DDL.SYNC_INDEX
with parallelism at the same time asCTX_DDL.OPTIMIZE_INDEX
with parallelism.
If you should run one of these combinations, no error is generated; however, one operation will wait until the other is done.
8.34 POPULATE_PENDING
This procedure populates the pending queue with every rowid in the base table or table partition. This procedure is only supported for CONTEXT
indexes.
This procedure is valuable for large installations that cannot afford to have the indexing process run continuously, and, therefore, need finer control over creating text indexes. The preferred method is to create an empty index, place all the rowids into the pending queue, and build the index through CTX_DDL.SYNC_INDEX.
Syntax
ctx_ddl.populate_pending( idx_name IN VARCHAR2, part_name IN VARCHAR2 DEFAULT NULL );
Notes
The SYNC_INDEX
is blocked for the duration of the processing. The index unit must be totally empty (idx_docid_count
= 0, idx_nextid
= 1). The rowids of rows waiting to be indexed are inserted into table ctxsys.dr$pending
. You should ensure that there is sufficient space in this table to hold the rowids of the base table.
Related Topics
8.35 PREFERENCE_IMPLICIT_COMMIT
This variable, set at the package level for CTX_DDL, determines whether procedures related to CTX_DDL
preferences issue an implicit commit and is session duration.
You can set the PREFERENCE_IMPLICIT_COMMIT
variable for the procedures listed in the following table.
Procedure Name | Procedure Name |
---|---|
Note:
The REMOVE_STOPCLASS
, REMOVE_STOPTHEME
, and REMOVE_STOPWORD
procedures do not issue an implicit commit, and, therefore, do not use the PREFERENCE_IMPLICIT_COMMIT
flag.
Syntax
exec CTX_DDL.PREFERENCE_IMPLICIT_COMMIT := TRUE|FALSE ;
The default value of the PREFERENCE_IMPLICIT_COMMIT
variable is TRUE
. When this variable is set to FALSE
, procedures related to CTX_DDL
preferences will not issue an implicit commit. This enables you to easily rollback multiple preference changes. This variable is session duration.
Example
The following example turns off implicit commit.
exec CTX_DDL.PREFERENCE_IMPLICIT_COMMIT : update_sub_lexer = FALSE;
8.36 RECREATE_INDEX_ONLINE
Recreates the specified index, or recreates the passed-in index partition if the index is local partitioned. For global nonpartitioned indexes, this is a one-step procedure. For local partitioned indexes, this procedure must be run separately on every partition after first using CREATE_SHADOW_INDEX to create a shadow policy (or metadata). This procedure is only supported in Enterprise Edition of Oracle Database.
The following changes are not supported:
-
Transitioning from non-composite domain index to composite, or changing the composite domain index columns.
-
Rebuilding indexes that have partitioned index tables, for example,
$I
,$P
,$K
.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.RECREATE_INDEX_ONLINE( idx_name IN VARCHAR2, parameter_string IN VARCHAR2 default NULL, parallel_degree IN NUMBER default 1, partition_name IN VARCHAR2 default NULL );
- idx_name
-
The name of a valid
CONTEXT
indextype. - parameter_string
-
If the index is a global nonpartitioned index, specify the same index-level parameter string as in
ALTER
INDEX
. Must start withREPLACE
, if it is notNULL
. Optionally specifySWAP
orNOSWAP
. The default isSWAP
. - parallel_degree
-
Reserved for future use. Specify the degree of parallelism. Parallel operation is not supported in the current release.
- partition_name
-
Specify the name of a valid index partition for a local partitioned index. Otherwise, the default is
NULL
. If the index is partitioned, then first pass a partition name, and then specify the partition-level parameter string forALTER
INDEX
REBUILD
PARTITION
.
Examples
Example 8-5 Recreate Simple Global Index
The following example creates an index idx
with a BASIC_LEXER
-based preference us_lexer
. It then recreates the index with a new MULTI_LEXER
based preference m_lexer
in one step. You can use this one step approach when you do not mind that a query might fail for a small window of time at the end of the operation, and DML might get blocked at the beginning for a short time and again at the end.
/* create lexer and original index */ exec ctx_ddl.create_preference('us_lexer','basic_lexer'); create index idx on tbl(text) indextype is ctxsys.context parameters('lexer us_lexer'); /* create a new lexer */ begin ctx_ddl.create_preference('e_lexer','basic_lexer'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('e_lexer','base_letter','yes'); ctx_ddl.create_preference('m_lexer','multi_lexer'); ctx_ddl.add_sub_lexer('m_lexer','default','us_lexer'); ctx_ddl.add_sub_lexer('m_lexer','e','e_lexer'); end; / /* add new language column to the table for multi-lexer */ alter table tbl add(lang varchar2(10) default 'us'); /* recreate index online with the new multip-lexer */ exec ctx_ddl.recreate_index_online('idx', 'replace lexer m_lexer language column lang');
Example 8-6 Local Index Recreate with All-At-Once Swap
The following example creates a local partitioned index idxp
with a basic lexer us_lexer
. It has two index partitions idx_p1
and idx_p2
. It then recreates a local partitioned index idxp
online with partition idx_p1
, which will have a new storage preference new_store
. The swapping of the partition metadata and index partition data occur at the end. In this example, queries spanning multiple partitions return consistent results across partitions when recreate is in process, except at the end when EXCHANGE_SHADOW_INDEX is running. The extra space required is the combined index size of partition idx_p1
and idx_p2
.
/* create a basic lexer and a local partition index with the lexer*/ exec ctx_ddl.create_preference('us_lexer','basic_lexer'); create index idxp on tblp(text) indextype is ctxsys.context local (partition idx_p1, partition idx_p2) parameters('lexer us_lexer'); /* create new preferences */ begin ctx_ddl.create_preference('my_store','basic_storage'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('my_store','i_table_clause','tablespace tbs'); end; / begin ctx_ddl.create_preference('e_lexer','basic_lexer'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('e_lexer','base_letter','yes'); ctx_ddl.create_preference('m_lexer','multi_lexer'); ctx_ddl.add_sub_lexer('m_lexer','default','us_lexer'); ctx_ddl.add_sub_lexer('m_lexer','e','e_lexer'); end; / /* add new language column */ alter table tblp add column (lang varchar2(10) default 'us'); /* create a shadow policy with a new lexer */ exec ctx_ddl.create_shadow_index('idxp', null, 'replace lexer m_lexer language column lang'); /* recreate every index partition online without swapping */ exec ctx_ddl.recreate_index_online('idxp', 'replace storage my_store NOSWAP', 1, 'idx_p1'); exec ctx_ddl.recreate_index_online('idxp','replace NOSWAP',1,'idx_p2'); /* exchange in shadow index partition all at once */ exec ctx_ddl.exchange_shadow_index('idxp', 'idx_p1') /* exchange index partition data*/ exec ctx_ddl.exchange_shadow_index('idxp', 'idx_p2') /* exchange index partition data*/ /* exchange in shadow index metadata */ exec ctx_ddl.exchange_shadow_index('idxp')
Example 8-7 Local Index Recreate with Per-Partition Swap
This example performs the same tasks as Example 8-6, except that each index partition is swapped in as it is completed. Queries across all partitions may return inconsistent results in this example.
/* create a basic lexer and a local partition index with the lexer*/ exec ctx_ddl.create_preference('us_lexer','basic_lexer'); create index idxp on tblp(text) indextype is ctxsys.context local (partition idx_p1, partition idx_p2) parameters('lexer us_lexer'); /* create new preferences */ begin ctx_ddl.create_preference('my_store','basic_storage'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('my_store','i_table_clause','tablespace tbs'); end; / begin ctx_ddl.create_preference('e_lexer','basic_lexer'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('e_lexer','base_letter','yes'); ctx_ddl.create_preference('m_lexer','multi_lexer'); ctx_ddl.add_sub_lexer('m_lexer','default','us_lexer'); ctx_ddl.add_sub_lexer('m_lexer','e','e_lexer'); end; / /* add new language column */ alter table tblp add column (lang varchar2(10) default 'us'); /* create a shadow policy with a new lexer * exec ctx_ddl.create_shadow_index('idxp', 'replace lexer m_lexer language column lang'); /* recreate every index partition online and swap (default) */ exec ctx_ddl.recreate_index_online('idxp', 'replace storage my_store', 1, 'idx_p1'); exec ctx_ddl.recreate_index_online('idxp', 'replace SWAP', 1, 'idx_p2', /* exchange in shadow index metadata */ exec ctx_ddl.exchange_shadow_index('idxp')
Example 8-8 Scheduled Local Index Recreate with All-At-Once Swap
This example shows the incremental recreation of a local partitioned index, where partitions are all swapped at the end.
/* create a basic lexer and a local partition index with the lexer*/ exec ctx_ddl.create_preference('us_lexer','basic_lexer'); create index idxp on tblp(text) indextype is ctxsys.context local (partition idx_p1, partition idx_p2) parameters('lexer us_lexer'); /* create new preferences */ begin ctx_ddl.create_preference('my_store','basic_storage'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('my_store','i_table_clause','tablespace tbs'); end; / begin ctx_ddl.create_preference('e_lexer','basic_lexer'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('e_lexer','base_letter','yes'); ctx_ddl.create_preference('m_lexer','multi_lexer'); ctx_ddl.add_sub_lexer('m_lexer','default','us_lexer'); ctx_ddl.add_sub_lexer('m_lexer','e','e_lexer'); end; / /* add new language column */ alter table tblp add column (lang varchar2(10) default 'us'); /* create a shadow policy with a new lexer * exec ctx_ddl.create_shadow_index('idxp', 'replace lexer m_lexer language column lang'); /* create shadow partition with new storage preference */ exec ctx_ddl.recreate_index_online('idxp', 'replace storage ctxsys.default_storage nopopulate',1,'idx_p1'); exec ctx_ddl.recreate_index_online('idxp', 'replace storage ctxsys.default_storage nopopulate',1,'idx_p2'); declare idxid integer; ixpid integer; begin select idx_id into idxid from ctx_user_indexes where idx_name = 'IDXP'; select ixp_id into ixpid from ctx_user_index_partitions where ixp_index_name = 'IDXP' and ixp_index_partition_name = 'IDX_P1'; /* populate pending */ ctx_ddl.populate_pending('RIO$'||idxid, 'RIO$'||idxid||'#'||ixpid); /* incremental sync ctx_ddl.sync_index('RIO$'||idxid, null, 'RIO$'||idxid||'#'||ixpid, maxtime=>400); /* more incremental sync until no more pending rows */ select ixp_id into ixpid from ctx_user_index_partitions where ixp_index_name = 'IDXP' and ixp_index_partition_name = 'IDX_P2'; /* populate pending */ ctx_ddl.populate_pending('RIO$'||idxid, 'RIO$'||idxid||'#'||ixpid); /* incremental sync ctx_ddl.sync_index('RIO$'||idxid, null, 'RIO$'||idxid||'#'||ixpid, maxtime=>400); /* more incremental sync until no more pending rows */ end; / exec ctx_ddl.exchange_shadow_index('idxp','idx_p1'); exec ctx_ddl.exchange_shadow_index('idxp','idx_p2'); exec ctx_ddl.exchange_shadow_index('idxp');
Example 8-9 Schedule Local Index Recreate with Per-Partition Swap
For incremental recreate where partitions are swapped as they becomes available, follow the steps in example Example 8-8, except instead of waiting until all syncs are finished before starting exchange shadow index, EXCHANGE_SHADOW_INDEX is done for each partition right after sync is finished.
Notes
Using RECREATE_INDEX_ONLINE with Global Nonpartitioned Indexes
For global indexes, this procedure provides a one-step process to recreate an index online. It recreates an index, with new preference values, while preserving base table DML and query capability during the recreate process.
Note:
Because the new index is created alongside the existing index, this operation requires additional storage roughly equal to the size of the existing index.
- DML Behavior
-
Because this procedure is performed online, DML on the base table are permitted during this operation, and are processed as normal. All DML statements that occur during
RECREATE_INDEX_ONLINE
are logged into an online pending queue.Towards the end of the recreate operation, there will be a short duration when DML will fail with an error being raised stating that the index is in an in-progress status. DML may hang again during the process, and the duration will depend on how many DML are logged in the online pending queue since the start of the recreate process.
Note that after the recreate index operation is complete, new information, from all the DML that becomes pending since
RECREATE_INDEX_ONLINE
started, may not be immediately reflected. As with creating an index withINDEXTYPE
IS
ctxsys.context
ONLINE
, the index should be synchronized after the recreate index operation is complete, to bring it fully up-to-date.See Also:
-
CTX_DDL.CREATE_SHADOW_INDEX and CTX_DDL.EXCHANGE_SHADOW_INDEX for information about how to manually go through each stage of recreation, and to schedule each step to run at a preferred time
-
The
ONLINE
parameter under "Syntax for CONTEXT Index Type"
-
- Sync and Optimize Behavior
-
Syncs issued against the index during the recreate operation are processed against the old, existing data. Syncs are also blocked during the same window when queries return errors. Optimize commands issued against the index during the recreate operation return immediately without error and without processing.
- Query Behavior
-
During the recreate operation, the index can be queried normally most of the time. Queries return results based on the existing index and policy (or metadata) until after the final swap.
There is a short interval towards the end of
RECREATE_INDEX_ONLINE
when queries will return an error indicating that the column is not indexed. This duration should be short for regular queries. It is mainly the time taken for swapping data segments of the shadow index tables and the index tables, plus the time to delete all the rows in the pending queue. This is the same window of time when DML will fail.During
RECREATE_INDEX_ONLINE
, if you issue DML statements and synchronize them, then you will be able to see the new rows when you query on the existing index. However, afterRECREATE_INDEX_ONLINE
finishes (swapping completes and query is on the new index) and before sync is performed, it is possible that you will not be able to query on the new rows, which once could be queried on the old index.
Note:
Transactional queries are not supported.
Using RECREATE_INDEX_ONLINE with Local Partitioned Indexes
If the index is local partitioned, you cannot recreate index in one step. You must first create a shadow policy, and then run this procedure for every partition. You can specify SWAP
or NOSWAP
to indicate whether RECREATE_INDEX_ONLINE
partition will swap the index partition data and index partition metadata or not. If the partition was built with NOSWAP
, then another call to EXCHANGE_SHADOW_INDEX
must be invoked later against this partition.
This procedure can also be used to update the metadata (for example, storage preference) of each partition when you specify NOPOPULATE
in the parameter string. This is useful for incremental building of a shadow index through time-limited sync.
If NOPOPULATE
is specified, then NOSWAP
is silently enforced.
- NOSWAP Behavior
-
During the recreate of the index partition, since no swapping is performed, queries on the partition are processed regularly. Until the swapping stage is reached, queries spanning multiple partitions return consistent results across partitions.
DML and sync are processed normally. Running optimize on partitions that are being recreated, or that have been built (but not swapped), simply returns without doing anything. Running optimize on a partition that has not been rebuilt processes normally.
As with a global index, when all of the partitions use
NOSWAP
, the additional storage requirement is roughly equal to the size of the existing index. - SWAP Behavior
-
Because index partition data and metadata are swapped after index recreate, queries that span multiple partitions will not return consistent results from partition to partition, but will always be correct with respect to each index partition. There is also a short interval towards the end of partition recreate, when the index partition is swapped, during which a query will return a "column not indexed" error.
When partitions are recreated with
SWAP
, the additional storage requirement for the operation is equal to the size of the existing index partition.DML on the partition is blocked. Sync is also blocked during swapping.
8.37 REM_SEC_GRP_ATTR_VAL
Removes a specific section group attribute value from the list of values of an existing section group attribute.
8.38 REMOVE_AUTO_OPTIMIZE
Removes an index or partition from the list of indexes subject to auto optimization. No new auto optimization calls are made to this index. The removal takes effect immediately.
If the specified index is not in the existing list of indexes, then an error occurs. For partitioned indexes, an error occurs when the partition name is not specified.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.REMOVE_AUTO_OPTIMIZE(
idx_name IN VARCHAR2, part_name IN VARCHAR2 default NULL );
Related Topic
8.39 REMOVE_INDEX
Removes the index with the specified column list from a CTXCAT
index set preference.
Note:
This procedure does not remove a CTXCAT
sub-index from the existing index. To do so, you must drop your index and re-index with the modified index set preference.
8.40 REMOVE_MDATA
Use this procedure to remove metadata values, which are associated with an MDATA
section, from a document. Only the owner of the index is allowed to call ADD_MDATA and REMOVE_MDATA
.
CTX_DDL.REMOVE_MDATA
is transactional and takes effect immediately in the calling session. This procedure can be seen only in the calling session and must be committed to take permanent effect. You can reverse this procedure with a ROLLBACK
command.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.REMOVE_MDATA( idx_name IN VARCHAR2, section_name IN VARCHAR2, values SYS.ODCIVARCHAR2LIST, rowids SYS.ODCIRIDLIST, [part_name] IN VARCHAR2 );
- idx_name
-
Name of the text index that contains the named rowids.
- section_name
-
Name of the
MDATA
section. - values
-
List of metadata values. If a metadata value contains a comma, the comma must be escaped with a backslash.
- rowids
-
Rowids
from which to remove the metadata values. - [part_name]
-
Name of the index partition, if any. Must be provided for local partitioned indexes and must be NULL for global, nonpartitioned indexes.
Example
This example removes the MDATA
value blue from the MDATA
section BGCOLOR
.
ctx_ddl.remove_mdata('idx_docs', 'bgcolor', 'blue', 'rows');
Notes
These updates are updates directly on the index itself, not on the actual contents stored in the base table. Therefore, they will not survive when the Text index is rebuilt.
8.41 REMOVE_SECTION
The REMOVE_SECTION
procedure removes the specified section from the specified section group. You can specify the section by name or ID. View section ID with the CTX_USER_SECTIONS
view.
Syntax 1
Use the following syntax to remove a section by section name:
CTX_DDL.REMOVE_SECTION( group_name IN VARCHAR2, section_name IN VARCHAR2 );
Syntax 2
Use the following syntax to remove a section by section ID:
CTX_DDL.REMOVE_SECTION( group_name IN VARCHAR2, section_id IN NUMBER );
Example
The following example drops a section called Title
from the htmgroup
:
begin ctx_ddl.remove_section('htmgroup', 'Title'); end;
8.42 REMOVE_STOPCLASS
Removes a stopclass from a stoplist.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.REMOVE_STOPCLASS( stoplist_name IN VARCHAR2, stopclass IN VARCHAR2 );
Example
The following example removes the stopclass NUMBERS
from the stoplist mystop
.
begin ctx_ddl.remove_stopclass('mystop', 'NUMBERS'); end;
Related Topic
8.43 REMOVE_STOPTHEME
Removes a stoptheme from a stoplist.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.REMOVE_STOPTHEME( stoplist_name IN VARCHAR2, stoptheme IN VARCHAR2 );
Example
The following example removes the stoptheme banking from the stoplist mystop
:
begin ctx_ddl.remove_stoptheme('mystop', 'banking'); end;
Related Topic
8.44 REMOVE_STOPWORD
Removes a stopword from a stoplist. To have the removal of a stopword be reflected in the index, you must rebuild your index. You can also remove a language-independent stopword.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.REMOVE_STOPWORD(
stoplist_name IN VARCHAR2, stopword IN VARCHAR2, language IN VARCHAR2 default NULL
);
- stoplist_name
-
Specify the name of the stoplist.
- stopword
-
Specify the stopword to be removed from
stoplist_name
. - language
-
Specify the language of
stopword
to remove when the stoplist you specify withstoplist_name
is of typeMULTI_STOPLIST
. You must specify the globalization support name or abbreviation of an Oracle Text-supported language. You can also removeALL
stopwords.
Example
The following example removes a stopword because from the stoplist mystop
:
begin
ctx_ddl.remove_stopword('mystop','because');
end;
Related Topic
"ADD_STOPWORD "
8.45 REMOVE_SUB_LEXER
Removes a sub-lexer from a multi-lexer preference. You cannot remove the lexer for DEFAULT
. You can also remove a language-independent sub-lexer.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.REMOVE_SUB_LEXER(
lexer_name IN VARCHAR2, language IN VARCHAR2 default NULL
);
Example
The following example removes a sub-lexer german_lexer of language german
:
begin
ctx_ddl.remove_sub_lexer('german_lexer','german');
end;
Related Topic
8.46 REPLACE_INDEX_METADATA
Use this procedure to replace metadata in local domain indexes at the global (index) level.
Note:
The ALTER INDEX PARAMETERS
command performs the same function as this procedure and can replace more than just metadata. For that reason, using ALTER INDEX PARAMETERS
is the preferred method of replacing metadata at the global (index) level and should be used in place of this procedure when possible. For more information, see "ALTER INDEX PARAMETERS Syntax".
CTX_REPLACE_INDEX_METADATA
may be deprecated in a future release of Oracle Text.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.REPLACE_INDEX_METADATA( idx_name IN VARCHAR2, parameter_string IN VARCHAR2 );
Notes
ALTER INDEX REBUILD PARAMETERS ('REPLACE METADATA')
does not work for a local partitioned index at the index (global) level. You cannot, for example, use that ALTER INDEX
syntax to change a global preference, such as filter or lexer type, without rebuilding the index. Therefore, CTX_DDL.REPLACE_INDEX_METADATA
is provided as a method of overcoming this limitation of ALTER INDEX
. Also, ALTER INDEX REBUILD PARAMETERS ('REPLACE METADATA')
does not work with forward_index; instead use 'REPLACE STORAGE'
.
Though it is meant as a way to replace metadata for a local partitioned index, CTX_DDL.REPLACE_INDEX_METADATA
can be used on a global, nonpartitioned index, as well.
REPLACE_INDEX_METADATA
cannot be used to change the sync type at the partition level; that is, parameter_string cannot be 'REPLACE METADATA SYNC'
. For that purpose, use ALTER INDEX REBUILD PARTITION
to change the sync type at the partition level.
8.47 SET_ATTRIBUTE
Sets a preference attribute. Use this procedure after you have created a preference with CTX_DDL.CREATE_PREFERENCE .
Syntax
CTX_DDL.SET_ATTRIBUTE( preference_name IN VARCHAR2, attribute_name IN VARCHAR2, attribute_value IN VARCHAR2 );
Examples
Example 8-10 Specifying File Data Storage
The following example creates a data storage preference called filepref
that tells the system that the files to be indexed are stored in the operating system. The example then uses CTX_DDL.SET_ATTRIBUTE to set the PATH
attribute to the directory /docs
.
begin ctx_ddl.create_preference('filepref', 'FILE_DATASTORE'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('filepref', 'PATH', '/docs'); end;
See Also:
For more information about data storage, see "Datastore Types "
For more examples of using SET_ATTRIBUTE
, see "CREATE_PREFERENCE "
Example 8-11 Storing Text Index Tables in the In-Memory Column Store
This example creates a storage preference called mysto
of type BASIC_STORAGE
that specifies that the $I
index table must be stored in the In-Memory Column Store (IM column store).
exec ctx_ddl.create_preference('mysto', 'basic_storage');
exec ctx_ddl.set_attribute('mysto', 'I_TABLE_CLAUSE', 'inmemory’);
See Also:
For more information about the storage attributes that support IM column store, see BASIC_STORAGE
8.48 SET_SEC_GRP_ATTR
Adds a section group-specific attribute to a section group identified by name.
Also used to set xml_enable
to support XML awareness.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.SET_SEC_GRP_ATTR( group_name IN VARCHAR2, attribute_name IN VARCHAR2, attribute_value IN VARCHAR2 );
- group_name
-
Specify the name of the section group.
- attribute_name
-
Specify the name of the section group attribute.
- attribute_value
-
Specify the section group attribute value. The following are the attributes with their supported values:
-
xml_enable
: Specify boolean values asTRUE
orFALSE
,T
orF
,YES
orNO
,Y
orN
,ON
orOFF
, or1
or0
.
-
Related Topics
8.49 SET_SECTION_ATTRIBUTE
Use SET_SECTION_ATTRIBUTE
to specify attributes or properties for a given section.
The attribute names listed under "Syntax" are supported. Note that some attributes only apply to sections that are tokenized. The following section types are tokenized:
-
Field sections
-
Zone sections
-
SDATA sections
Syntax
CTX_DDL.SET_SECTION_ATTRIBUTE( group_name IN VARCHAR2, section_name IN VARCHAR2, attribute IN VARCHAR2, value IN VARCHAR2 );
- group_name
-
Specify the name of the section group.
- section_name
-
Specify the name of the section.
- attribute
-
Specify this attribute for SDATA sections:
-
Visible
section attributeThis attribute works with FIELD sections only. For FIELD sections:
Specify TRUE to make the text visible within the rest of the document. By default, the visible flag is FALSE. This means that Oracle Text indexes the text within field sections as a sub-document separate from the rest of the document. However, you can set the visible flag to TRUE if you want text within the field section to be indexed as part of the enclosing document.
For field sections, attribute will override the value specified in CTX_DDL.ADD_FIELD_SECTION.
An error is thrown if you try to set the
visible
attribute for a zone section.An error is thrown if the
visible
attribute is set on a non-tokenized section.
-
save_copy
. Set to True or False. Thesave_copy
option is valid for all types of sections, but only SDATA attributes are fetched from $D table. The rest of the sections are stored for display purposes only (depending on value ofsave_copy
). SDATA sections are never stored for display purposes, but are stored independently (in a separate column of $D table) for efficient fetching (depending on value ofsave_copy
). For all sections (except for SDATA sections): A section is either displayed or discarded during document service procedures (snippet, markup, highlight) depending on the value ofsave_copy
. -
optimized_for
section attributeThis attribute makes an SDATA section optimal for search, optimal for sort, or optimal for both search and sort. These are achieved by setting the attribute value to
search
,sort
, orsort_and_search
.-
search
provides efficient searching on SDATA sections. -
sort
provides efficient sorting on SDATA sections. This is the default value. -
sort_and_search
provides efficient searching and sorting on SDATA sections.
-
-
- value
-
Specify the attribute value. Specify boolean values as
TRUE
orFALSE
,T
orF
,YES
orNO
,Y
orN
,ON
orOFF
, or1
or0
.
Example
The following example creates a basic section group called sg
, adds a SDATA section to it and marks that SDATA section to be searchable by using the ctx_ddl.set_section_attribute
:
begin exec ctx_ddl.create_section_group('sg', 'basic_section_group'); exec ctx_ddl.add_sdata_section('sg', 'sec1', 'sec1', 'varchar2'); exec ctx_ddl.set_section_attribute('sg', 'sec1', 'optimized_for', 'search'); end;
Notes
Like CTX_DDL.SET_ATTRIBUTE, this procedure issues a commit.
Related Topic
See also the "Searching Document Sections in Oracle Text" chapter of Oracle Text Application Developer's Guide.
8.50 SYNC_INDEX
Synchronizes the index to process inserts, updates, and deletes to the base table.
Note:
Because CTX_DDL.SYNC_INDEX
issues implicit commits, calling CTX_DDL.SYNC_INDEX
in a trigger is strongly discouraged. Doing so can result in errors being raised, as both SYNC_INDEX
and post-commit $R
LOB
maintenance try to update the same $R
LOB
.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.SYNC_INDEX(
idx_name IN VARCHAR2 DEFAULT NULL memory IN VARCHAR2 DEFAULT NULL, part_name IN VARCHAR2 DEFAULT NULL, parallel_degree IN NUMBER DEFAULT 1 maxtime IN NUMBER DEFAULT NULL, locking IN NUMBER DEFAULT LOCK_WAIT );
- idx_name
-
Specify the name of the index to synchronize.
Note:
When
idx_name
is null, allCONTEXT
andCTXRULE
indexes that have pending changes are synchronized. You must be connected asctxsys
to perform this operation. Each index or index partition is synchronized in sequence, one after the other. Because of this, the individual syncs are performed with locking set toNOWAIT
and maxtime set to0
. Any values that you specify for locking or maxtime on theSYNC_INDEX
call are ignored. However, thememory
andparallel_degree
parameters are passed on to the individual synchronizations. - memory
-
Specify the runtime memory to use for synchronization. This value overrides the
DEFAULT_INDEX_MEMORY
system parameter.The memory parameter specifies the amount of memory Oracle Text uses for the synchronization operation before flushing the index to disk. Specifying a large amount of memory:
-
Improves indexing performance because there is less I/O
-
Improves query performance and maintenance because there is less fragmentation
-
The indexing memory size specified in the second argument applies to each parallel slave. For example, if the
memory
argument is set to 500M andparallel_degree
is set to 2, then ensure that there is at least 1GB of memory available on the system used for the parallelSYNC_INDEX
.
Specifying smaller amounts of memory increases disk I/O and index fragmentation, but might be useful when runtime memory is scarce.
- part_name
-
If your index is a local index, then you must specify the name of the index partition to synchronize otherwise an error is returned.
If your index is a global, nonpartitioned index, then specify NULL, which is the default.
- parallel_degree
-
Specify the degree to run parallel synchronize. A number greater than 1 turns on parallel synchronize. The actual degree of parallelism might be smaller depending on your resources.
- maxtime
-
Indicate a suggested time limit on the operation, in minutes.
SYNC_INDEX
will process as many documents in the queue as possible within the time limit. Themaxtime
value of NULL is equivalent toCTX_DDL.MAXTIME_UNLIMITED
. This parameter is ignored whenSYNC_INDEX
is invoked without an index name, in which casemaxtime
value of 0 is used instead. Thelocking
parameter is ignored for automatic syncs (that is,SYNC
ON
COMMIT
orSYNC
EVERY
).The time limit specified is treated as approximate. The actual time taken may be somewhat less than or greater than what you specify. The "time clock" for
maxtime
does not start until the SYNC lock is acquired. - locking
-
Configure how
SYNC_INDEX
deals with the situation where another sync is already running on the same index or index partition. When locking is ignored becauseSYNC_INDEX
is invoked without an index name, then locking value ofLOCK_NOWAIT
is used instead. Thelocking
parameter is ignored for automatic syncs (that is,SYNC
ON
COMMIT
orSYNC
EVERY
).The options for
locking
are:
Locking Parameter | Description |
---|---|
|
If another sync is running, wait until the running sync is complete, then begin sync. (In the event of not being able to get a lock, it will wait forever and ignore the |
|
If another sync is running, immediately returns without error. |
|
If another sync is running, error "DRG-51313: timeout while waiting for DML or optimize lock" is raised. |
Example
The following example synchronizes the index myindex
with 2 megabytes of memory:
begin
ctx_ddl.sync_index('myindex', '2M');
end;
The following example synchronizes the part1
index partition with 2 megabytes of memory:
begin
ctx_ddl.sync_index('myindex', '2M', 'part1');
end;
Notes
You can run CTX_DDL.SYNC_INDEX
and CTX_DDL.OPTIMIZE_INDEX
at the same time. You can also run CTX_DDL.SYNC_INDEX
and CTX_DDL.OPTIMIZE_INDEX
with parallelism at the same time. However, you should not run CTX_DDL.SYNC_INDEX
with parallelism at the same time as CTX_DDL.OPTIMIZE_INDEX
, nor CTX_DDL.SYNC_INDEX
with parallelism at the same time as CTX_DDL.OPTIMIZE_INDEX
with parallelism. If you should run one of these combinations, no error is generated; however, one operation will wait until the other is done.
If the stage_itab
option is in use for the index and stage_itab_max_rows
is greater than 0, SYNC_INDEX
automatically merges data back from the stage_itab ($G)
to $I
when stage_itab_max_rows
reaches a value of 1 million and degree of parallelism value of 4. Therefore, it is not necessary to run the optimize job in merge mode explicitly, or to setup an auto optimize background job.
If you want to schedule an auto optimize background job, then you must explicitly set the stage_itab_max_rows
to a value of 0. This turns off the automatic merge operation that occurs during SYNC_INDEX
. The rows are instead merged periodically through the scheduled background process.
When stage_itab_max_rows
is set to a value greater than 0, it is possible that some SYNC operations take an unexpectedly long time to compete due to the merging of rows from $G
to $I
.
Related Topics
"ALTER INDEX "
8.51 UNSET_ATTRIBUTE
Removes a set attribute from a preference.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.UNSET_ATTRIBUTE(preference_name varchar2, attribute_name varchar2);
Example
Enabling/Disabling Alternate Spelling
The following example shows how you can enable alternate spelling for German and disable alternate spelling with CTX_DDL.UNSET_ATTRIBUTE
:
begin ctx_ddl.create_preference('GERMAN_LEX', 'BASIC_LEXER'); ctx_ddl.set_attribute('GERMAN_LEX', 'ALTERNATE_SPELLING', 'GERMAN'); end;
To disable alternate spelling, use the CTX_DDL.UNSET_ATTRIBUTE
procedure as follows:
begin ctx_ddl.unset_attribute('GERMAN_LEX', 'ALTERNATE_SPELLING'); end;
Related Topics
8.52 UNSET_SEC_GRP_ATTR
Removes a section group-specific attribute.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.UNSET_SEC_GRP_ATTR(group_name varchar2, attribute_name varchar2);
Related Topics
8.53 UPDATE_SUB_LEXER
Updates a sub-lexer and modifies its multi-lexer preference, language, or sub-lexer. You can also update default sub-lexers using this procedure. This procedure can be used in conjunction with the CTX_DDL.PREFERENCE_IMPLICIT_COMMIT
variable.
See Also:
"PREFERENCE_IMPLICIT_COMMIT" for information about setting this variable
Syntax
UPDATE_SUB_LEXER ( lexer_name IN VARCHAR2, language IN VARCHAR2, sub_lexer IN VARCHAR2 );
- lexer_name
-
Specify the name of the multi-lexer preference that needs to be updated.
- language
-
Specify the language name of the sub-lexer. Use
DEFAULT
for the default sub-lexers.See ""language"" for information on how to specify the globalization support language name or abbreviation of the sub-lexer.
- sub_lexer
-
Specify the name of the sub-lexer to use for this language.
8.54 UPDATE_POLICY
Updates a policy created with CREATE_POLICY
. Replaces the preferences of the policy. Null arguments are not replaced.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.UPDATE_POLICY( policy_name IN VARCHAR2, filter IN VARCHAR2 DEFAULT NULL, section_group IN VARCHAR2 DEFAULT NULL, lexer IN VARCHAR2 DEFAULT NULL, stoplist IN VARCHAR2 DEFAULT NULL, wordlist IN VARCHAR2 DEFAULT NULL);
8.55 UPDATE_SDATA
UPDATE_SDATA
is an index API that modifies the specified SDATA
values in the index. It does not store or modify column values in a base table, where the base table column may have been used as an SDATA
section.
Export/import operations rebuild the index from the base table using the specified preferences. Since modifications made using the UPDATE_SDATA
API are not present in the base table, the export/import operation does not preserve these changes.
UPDATE_SDATA
modifies temporary metadata it adds in the index table, not the base table. It cannot be used to directly add metadata. For export/import of metadata that is persistent, create a base table column that contains the metadata values. You can then update the metadata through the column in the base table.
UPDATE_SDATA
truncates data which is larger than 249 bytes.
Syntax
CTX_DDL.UPDATE_SDATA( idx_name IN VARCHAR2 DEFAULT NULL, section_name IN VARCHAR2 DEFAULT NULL, sdata_value IN sys.anydata, sdata_rowid IN rowid, part_name IN VARCHAR2 DEFAULT NULL);
- idx_name
-
Specify the name of the index.
- section_name
-
Specify the name of the
SDATA
section. - sdata_value
-
Specify the new
SDATA
value. - sdata_rowid
-
Specify the rowid for which the
SDATA
value needs to be updated. - part_name
-
Specify the name of the locally partitioned index, if applicable. Specify
NULL
for the global index.
Related Topics
"SDATA"
See Also:
Chapter 8, "Searching Document Sections in Oracle Text" in Oracle Text Application Developer's Guide