The query syntax can be used in Squirro to search items.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Title and body fields are taken into account when searching.
By default the terms entered are or-combined with an additional clause that at least 1/3 of all terms must appear in a document to match. That means for a query with up to five terms, at least one must match and for a query between 6 and 8 terms, at least two terms must match and so on.
Boolean Operators
Use AND, OR, NOT, + (plus sign) or - (minus sign) to explicitly combine terms. Be aware that the operators need to be in all capital letters.
The following restrictions apply:
- The + or required operator requires that the term after the + symbol exist somewhere.
- The - or prohibit operator excludes documents that contain the term after the - symbol.
Example Queries
Query | Description |
---|---|
squirro AND memonic | Search documents that contain squirro and memonic. |
squirro OR memonic | Search documents that contain either squirro or memonic. |
+memonic -squirro | Search documents that contain memonic but do not contain squirro. |
squirro NOT memonic | Search documents that contain squirro but do not contain memonic. |
Grouping
Use brackets for grouping.
Example Queries
Query | Description |
---|---|
(java AND solr) OR (python AND elasticsearch) | Search documents that contain both java and solar, or documents that contain both python and elasticsearch. |
nektoon AND (squirro OR memonic) | Search documents that contain nektoon and either squirro or memonic. |
Phrase Search
Use double quotes at the beginning and ending of a phrase to perform a phrase search. Phrases must match exactly (i.e. no stemming is applied within a phrase). You can also add a slop to the phrase with a tilde ~ at the end of the phrase to do a proximity search.
Example Queries
Query | Description |
---|---|
"oracle financial services" | Search documents where oracle, financial and services match in exact this order and within three terms. |
"oracle financial leasing"~3 | Search documents where oracle, financial and leasing must match in exact this order but allow for up to 3 additional terms between them. |
Wildcard Search
Use * and ? to perform a wildcard search. Multiple character wildcard searches looks for 0 or more characters and the single character wildcard search looks for terms that match that with the single character replaced. Leading wildcards are allowed. Wildcard search can also apply per field.
Example Queries
Query | Description |
---|---|
squirr* | Search documents that contain e.g. for squirro and squirrel. |
*emonic | Search documents that contain e.g. for memonic and mnemonic. |
te?t | Search documents that contain e.g. for test and text. |
name:* | Search documents that have e.g. the field "name" 1 |
-name:* | Search documents that do not have e.g. the field "name" 1 |
name: | Search documents that contain the "name" field started by "squir", e.g. name:squirro and name:squirrel. 1 |
1 Note that facet names containing spaces need to be put inside quotes in queries
Field Search
Only search in specific fields
Query | Description |
---|---|
$title:France | Search documents that have the term France in the title |
$body:France | Search document that have the term France in the document body |
$item_id:PgnAQM1FTSCP1uNOesoE7Q | Search for a specific document by id |
$item_created_at >= "2015-02-01T00:00:00" | Search documents created after Feb. 2, 2015 |
$item_created_at <= "2015-02-01T00:00:00" | Search documents created before Feb. 2, 2015 |
$_size > 100000 | Search documents with size > 100'000 bytes |
Facet Search
Use any document facet to restrict the search.
Query | Description |
---|---|
Country:France | Search documents that have a facet named Country with a value France |
Country:"United Kingdom" | Search documents that have a facet named Country with a value United Kingdom |
"Mixed Sentiment":Yes 1 | Search document that have a facet named Mixed Sentiment with a value Yes |
1 Note that facet names containing spaces need to be put inside quotes in queries
Sorting
You can use the following query syntax to sort the result:
sort:<field_name>[:<order>]
Where <field_name> is either 'date' (default) or 'relevance' or any item field name you want to sort by and <order> is either 'asc' for ascending or 'desc' for descending. The order suffix is optional, default order is descending.
Additionally you can add a second (or third etc) sorting criteria by adding
[;<2nd_sort_field[:<2nd_order]]
to the query syntax.
Time Increment
It is possible to control the time increments shown in the main timeline and in the dashboard widgets. To do so, add time_increment:<value>
to a query.
Here is the Bugzilla Project without a time_increment set:
The same query, with time_increment:year
Possible values are:
time_increment:minute time_increment:hour time_increment:day time_increment:week time_increment:month time_increment:quarter time_increment:year
This can also be combined with values for more flexibility. For example:
time_increment:12hours time_increment:4days time_increment:8weeks time_increment:6months time_increment:3year
There is a performance impact when using a time increment that results in many individual increments. This impact is both in the user interface, where each increment needs to be drawn, as well as on the Elasticsearch level, where they need to be calculated. So use the time_increment
setting carefully.