solrq
is a Python Solr query utility. It helps making query strings for Solr
and also helps with escaping reserved characters. solrq
is has no external
dependencies and is compatibile with python3.7
, python3,8
, python3.9
, python3.10
, python3.11
, pypy
and pypy3
.
It might be compatibile with other python releases/implentations but this has
not been tested yet or is no longer tested (e.g python3.2
or python2.7
).
pip install solrq
And you're ready to go!
Everything in solrq
is about Q()
object. Drop into python repl and just
feed it with bunch of field and search terms to see how it works:
>>> from solrq import Q
>>> # note: all terms in single Q object are implicitely joined with 'AND'
>>> query = Q(type="animal", species="dog")
>>> query
<Q: type:animal AND species:dog>
>>> # ohh, forgot about cats?
>>> query | Q(type="animal", species="cat")
<Q: (type:animal AND species:dog) OR (type:animal AND species:cat)>
>>># more a cat lover? Let's give them a boost boost
>>> Q(type="animal") & (Q(species="cat")^2 | Q(species="dog"))
<Q: type:animal AND ((species:cat^2) OR species:dog)>
But what to do with this Q
? Simply pass it to your Solr library of choice,
like pysolr or
mysolr. Most of python Solr libraries
expect simple string as a query parameter and do not bother with escaping
of reserved characters so you must take care of that by yourself. This is why
solrq
integrates so easily. Here is an example how you can use it with
pysolr:
from solrq import Q
import pysolr
solr = Solr("<your solr url>")
# simply using Q object
solr.search(Q(text="easy as f***"))
# or explicitely making it string
solr.search(str(Q(text="easy as f***")))
Full reference can be found in API reference documentation page but here is a short reference.
Use python ^
operator:
>>> Q(text='cat') ^ 2
<Q: text:cat^2>
Use python &
operator:
>>> Q(text='cat') & Q(text='dog')
<Q: text:cat AND text:dog>
Use python |
operator:
>>> Q(text='cat') | Q(text='dog')
<Q: text:cat OR text:dog>
Use python ~
operator:
>>> ~ Q(text='cat')
<Q: !text:cat>
Use solrq.Range
wrapper:
>>> from solrq import Range
>>> Q(age=Range(18, 25))
<Q: age:[18 TO 25]>
Use solrq.Proximity
wrapper:
>>> from solrq import Proximity
>>> Q(age=Proximity("cat dogs", 5))
<Q: age:"cat\ dogs"~5>
All raw string values are treated as unsafe by default and will be escaped to
ensure that final query string will not be broken by some rougue search value.
This of course can be disabled if you know what you're doing using
Value
wrapper:
>>> from solrq import Q, Value
>>> Q(type='foo bar[]')
<Q: type:foo\ bar\[\]>
>>> Q(type=Value('foo bar[]', safe=True))
<Q: type:foo bar[]>
Simply as:
>>> from datetime import datetime, timedelta
>>> Q(date=datetime(1970, 1, 1))
<Q: date:"1970-01-01T00:00:00Z">
>>> # note that timedeltas has any sense mostly with ranges
>>> Q(delta=timedelta(days=1))
<Q: delta:NOW+1DAYS+0SECONDS+0MILLISECONDS>
If you need to use wildcards in field names just use dict and unpack it inside
of Q()
instead of using keyword arguments:
>>> Q(**{"*_t": "text_to_search"})
<Q: *_t:text_to_search>
Any contribution is welcome. Issues, suggestions, pull requests - whatever. There are no strict contribution guidelines beyond PEP-8 and sanity. Code style is checked with flakes8 and any PR that has failed build will not be merged.
One thing: if you submit a PR please do not rebase it later unless you are asked for that explicitely. Reviewing pull requests that suddenly had their history rewritten just drives me crazy.
Tests are run using tox. Simply install it and run:
pip install tox
tox
And that's all.