This lets the slop library be stand-alone without dependence on coded-sequence.
The change also gets rid of the vestigial seek() method in ColumnReader.
The most common error when dealing with Slop columns is that they can fall out of sync with each other if the programmer accidentally does a conditional read and forgets to skip.
The second most common error is forgetting to close one of the columns in a reader or writer.
To deal with both cases, a new class SlopTable is added that keeps track of the lifecycle of all slop columns and performs a check when closing them that they are in sync.
Refactoring keyword extraction to extract spans information.
Modifying the intermediate storage of converted data to use the new slop library, which is allows for easier storage of ad-hoc binary data like spans and positions.
This is a bit of a katamari damacy commit that ended up dragging along a bunch of other fairly tangentially related changes that are hard to break out into separate commits after the fact. Will push as-is to get back to being able to do more isolated work.
Decorates DocumentSentences with information about which HTML tags they are nested in, and removes some redundant data on this rather memory hungry object. Separator information is encoded as a bit set instead of an array of integers.
The change also cleans up the SentenceExtractor class a fair bit. It no longer extracts ngrams, and a significant amount of redundant operations were removed as well. This is still a pretty unpleasant class to work in, but this is the first step in making it a little bit better.
This is not hooked in yet, and the term metadata is still left intact. It should probably shrink to a smaller representation (byte?) with the upcoming removal of the position mask.
Roll back to JDK 21 for now, and make Java version configurable in the root build.gradle
The project has run into no less than three distinct show-stopping bugs in JDK22, across multiple vendors, and gradle still doesn't fully support it, meaning you need multiple JDK versions installed.
Previously, in an experimental change, only the first paragraph was indexed, intended to reduce the amount of noisy tangential hits. This was not a good idea, so the change is reverted.
Look, this will make the git history look funny, but trimming unnecessary depth from the source tree is a very necessary sanity-preserving measure when dealing with a super-modularized codebase like this one.
While it makes the project configuration a bit less conventional, it will save you several clicks every time you jump between modules. Which you'll do a lot, because it's *modul*ar. The src/main/java convention makes a lot of sense for a non-modular project though. This ain't that.
To avoid having to either hard-code or manually configure service addresses (possibly several dozen), and to reduce the project's dependency on docker to deal with routing and discovery, the option to use [Zookeeper](https://zookeeper.apache.org/) to manage services and discovery has been added.
A service registry interface was added, with a Zookeeper implementation and a basic implementation that only works on docker and hard-codes everything.
The last remaining REST service, the assistant-service, has been migrated to gRPC.
This also proved a good time to clear out primordial technical debt from the root of the codebase. The 'service-client' library has been taken behind the barn and given a last farewell. It's replaced by a small library for managing gRPC channels.
Since it's no longer used by anything, RxJava has been removed as a dependency from the project.
Although the current state seems reasonably stable, this is a work-in-progress commit.
Clean up the sideloading code a bit, making the Reddit sideloader use the more sophisticated SideloaderProcessing approach to sideloading, instead of mimicing StackexchangeSideloader's cruder approach.
The reddit sideloader now uses the SideloaderProcessing class. It also properly sets js-attributes for the sideloaded documents.
The control GUI now also filters the upload directory items based on name, and disables the items that do not have appropriate filenames.
Adds experimental sideloading support for pusshift.io style reddit data. This dataset is limited to data older than 2023, due to licensing changes making large-scale data extraction difficult.
Since the median post quality on reddit is not very good, he sideloader will only load a subset of self-texts and top-level comments that have sufficiently many upvotes. Empirically this appears to mostly return good matches, even if it probably could index more.
Tests were written for this, but all require local reddit data which can't be distributed with the source code. If these can not be found, the tests will shortcircuit as OK. They're mostly there for debugging, and it's fine if they don't always run.
The change also refactors the sideloading a bit since it was a bit messy.
Look at whether the property 'system.conserveProperty' is enabled when deciding he default pool size for the converter.
If true, a much more conservative default is used, limiting the risk of running out of memory.
The codebase used to have a monkey patched version of gson that made special optimizations for the unusually large JSON files that used to store e.g. crawl data.
Since JSON is no longer used in this fashion, the GSON fork is not needed anymore.
This update enhances the SideloaderProcessing and DocumentClass modules to specially handle sideloaded wiki documents. Wiki content is generally truncated to the first paragraph, which generally tends to be too short to be included independently. An additional DocumentClass (SIDELOAD) has been introduced to suppress the length check in this case.
Wrote a new test to examine the redirect behavior of the crawler, ensuring that the redirect URL is the URL that is reported in the parquet file. This works as intended.
Noticed in the course of this that the crawler doesn't add links from meta-tag redirects to the crawl frontier. Added logic to handle this case, amended the test case to verify the new behavior. Added the meta-redirect case to the HtmlDocumentProcessorPlugin as well, so that we consider it a link between documents in the unlikely case that a meta redirect is to another domain.
The method `isApplicable` in the `PlainTextDocumentProcessorPlugin` was refactored to handle a wider range of content types beyond merely "text/plain". It now also handles any content type that starts with "text/plain;", to accomodate contentTypes that append a charset as well.
Removed the need to have to run an external tool to pre-process the data in order to load stackexchange-style data into the search engine.
Removed the tool itself.
This stirred up some issues with the dependencies, that were due to both third-party:ing xz and importing it as a dependency. This has been fixed, and :third-party:xz was removed.
Use a system.properties file to configure the system. This is loaded statically by MainClass or ProcessMainClass. Update the property names to be more consistent, and update the documentations to reflect the changes.
The changeset also makes the control service responsible for flyway migrations. This helps reduce the number of places the database configuration needs to be spread out. These automatic migrations can be disabled with -DdisableFlyway=true.
The commit also adds curl to the docker container, to enable docker health checks and interdependencies.
This seems like it would make the wikipedia search result worse, but it drastically improves the result quality!
This is because wikipedia has a lot of articles that each talk about a lot of irrelevant concepts, and indexing the entire document means tangentially relevant results tend to displace the most relevant results.
Modify processingiterator to be constructed via a factory, to enable re-use of its backing executor service.
This reduces thread churn in the converter sideloader style processing of regular crawl data.
Route the sizeHint from the input parquet file to SideloadProcessing, so that it can set sideloadSizeAdvice appropriately, instead of using a fixed "large" number.
This is necessary to populate the KNOWN_URL column in the domain data table, which is important as it is used in e.g. calculating how far to re-crawl the site in the future.
Use ProcessingIterator to fan out processing of documents across more cores, instead of doing all of it in the writer thread blocking everything else with slow single-threaded processing.
This commit adds a safety check that the URL of the document is from the correct domain.
It also adds a sizeHint() method to SerializableCrawlDataStream which *may* provide an indication if the stream is very large and benefits from sideload-style processing (which is slow).
It furthermore addresses a bug where the ProcessedDomain.write() invoked the wrong method on ConverterBatchWriter and only wrote the domain metadata, not the rest...
The processor normally retains the domain data in memory after processing to be able to do additional site-wide analysis. This works well, except there are a number of outlier websites that have an absurd number of documents that can rapidly fill up the heap of the process.
These websites now receive a simplified treatment. This is executed in the converter batch writer thread. This is slower, but the documents will not be persisted in memory.
With the new crawler modifications, the crawl data comes in a slightly different order, and a result of this is that we can optimize the converter. This is a breaking change that will be incompatible with the old style of crawl data, hence it will linger as a branch for a while.
The first step is to move stuff out of the domain processor into the document processor.
Since the sideloaders don't populate the documents list in ProcessedDomain to keep the memory footprint manageable, the code that estimates knownUrls etc. will set them to zero, which has negative effects on their ranking. This change will populate them with a bullshit value within a sane ballpark, ensuring that these domains show up in the rankings.
Make some temporary modifications to the CrawledDocument model to support both a "big string" style headers field like in the old formats, and explicit fields as in the new formats. This is a bit awkward to deal with, but it's a necessity until we migrate off the old formats entirely.
The commit also adds a few tests to this logic.
The size of the ArrayBlockingQueue in ConverterWriter.java has been reduced from 4 to 1. This change aims to reduce the memory utilization by not having fully processed domains piling up in RAM. This may cause the writer to go idle in waiting for new data, but that may be preferable to an OOM.
We do both ip2location and ASN data.
The change also adds some keywords based on autonomous system information, on a somewhat experimental basis. It would be neat to be able to e.g. exclude cloud services or just e.g. cloudflare from the search results.
This variable had a very confusing name, and was dangerously easy to use in the wrong place with the result of getting something that only works as expected half the time.
Ideally this class needs an overhaul, the assumptions it makes about domain names aren't great.
This variable had a very confusing name, and was dangerously easy to use in the wrong place with the result of getting something that only works as expected half the time.
Ideally this class needs an overhaul, the assumptions it makes about domain names aren't great.
In encyclopedia, add a class "mw-content-text" that the WikiSpecialization class is looking for during pruning to give the articles a more fair treatment.
Also add generator keywords based on the generator type provided, to ensure that these documents show up in appropriate filters.
Further, add a new document flag value 'Sideloaded' to be able to distinguish these entries.
There really is no fantastic place to put this logic, but we need to remove entries with an X-Robots-Tags header where that header indicates it doesn't want to be crawled by Marginalia.
We want to mute some of these records so that they don't produce documents, but in some cases we want a document to be produced for accounting purposes.
Added improved tests that reach for known resources on www.marginalia.nu to test the behavior when encountering bad content type and 404s.
The commit also adds some safety try-catch:es around the charset handling, as it may sometimes explode when fed incorrect data, and we do be guessing...
This commit updates CrawlingThenConvertingIntegrationTest with additional tests for invalid, redirecting, and blocked domains. Improvements have also been made to filter out irrelevant entries in ParquetSerializableCrawlDataStream.
This update includes the addition of timestamps to the parquet format for crawl data, as extracted from the Warc stream.
The parquet format stores the timestamp as a 64 bit long, seconds since unix epoch, without a logical type. This is to avoid having to do format conversions when writing and reading the data.
This parquet field populates the timestamp field in CrawledDocument.
Add an optional new field to CrawledDocument containing information about whether the domain has cookies. This was previously on the CrawledDomain object, but since the WarcFormat requires us to write a WarcInfo object at the start of a crawl rather than at the end, this information is unobtainable when creating the CrawledDomain object.
Also fix a bug in the deduplication logic in the DomainProcessor class that caused a test to break.