MarginaliaSearch/code/processes/crawling-process/model/readme.md
Viktor Lofgren aebb2652e8 (wip) Extract and encode spans data
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.
2024-07-27 11:44:13 +02:00

2.9 KiB

Crawling Models

Contains crawl data models shared by the crawling-process and converting-process.

To ensure backward compatibility with older versions of the data, the serialization is abstracted away from the model classes.

The new way of serializing the data is to use parquet files.

The old way was to use zstd-compressed JSON. The old way is still supported for now, but the new way is preferred as it's not only more succinct, but also significantly faster to read and much more portable. The JSON support will be removed in the future.

Central Classes

Serialization

These serialization classes automatically negotiate the serialization format based on the file extension.

Data is accessed through a SerializableCrawlDataStream, which is a somewhat enhanced Iterator that can be used to read data.

Parquet Serialization

The parquet serialization is done using the CrawledDocumentParquetRecordFileReader and CrawledDocumentParquetRecordFileWriter classes, which read and write parquet files respectively.

The model classes are serialized to parquet using the CrawledDocumentParquetRecord

The record has the following fields:

  • domain - The domain of the document
  • url - The URL of the document
  • ip - The IP address of the document
  • cookies - Whether the document has cookies
  • httpStatus - The HTTP status code of the document
  • timestamp - The timestamp of the document
  • contentType - The content type of the document
  • body - The body of the document
  • etagHeader - The ETag header of the document
  • lastModifiedHeader - The Last-Modified header of the document

The easiest way to interact with parquet files is to use DuckDB, which lets you run SQL queries on parquet files (and almost anything else).

e.g.

$ select httpStatus, count(*) as cnt 
       from 'my-file.parquet' 
       group by httpStatus;
┌────────────┬───────┐
 httpStatus   cnt  
   int32     int64 
├────────────┼───────┤
        200     43 
        304      4 
        500      1 
└────────────┴───────┘