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⚡ The Meilisearch integration for Ruby on Rails 💎
Meilisearch Rails is the Meilisearch integration for Ruby on Rails developers.
Meilisearch is an open-source search engine. Learn more about Meilisearch.
- 📖 Documentation
- 🤖 Compatibility with Meilisearch
- 🚀 Getting started
- Compatibility
- ⚙️ Settings
- 🔍 Custom search
- 🪛 Options
- ⚙️ Development workflow & contributing
- 👏 Credits
The whole usage of this gem is detailed in this README.
To learn more about Meilisearch, check out our Documentation or our API References.
This package guarantees compatibility with version v1.x of Meilisearch, but some features may not be present. Please check the issues for more info.
This package requires Ruby version 2.6.0 or later and Rails 5.2 or later.
With gem
in command line:
gem install meilisearch-rails
In your Gemfile
with bundler:
source 'https://rubygems.org'
gem 'meilisearch-rails'
There are many easy ways to download and run a Meilisearch instance.
For example, if you use Docker:
docker pull getmeili/meilisearch:latest # Fetch the latest version of Meilisearch image from Docker Hub
docker run -it --rm -p 7700:7700 getmeili/meilisearch:latest meilisearch --master-key=masterKey
NB: you can also download Meilisearch from Homebrew or APT.
Create a new file config/initializers/meilisearch.rb
to setup your MEILISEARCH_HOST
and MEILISEARCH_API_KEY
MeiliSearch::Rails.configuration = {
meilisearch_url: 'YourMeilisearchUrl', # example: http://localhost:7700
meilisearch_api_key: 'YourMeilisearchAPIKey',
}
The gem is compatible with ActiveRecord, Mongoid and Sequel.
meilisearch
block in your model.
The following code will create a Book
index and add search capabilities to your Book
model.
class Book < ActiveRecord::Base
include MeiliSearch::Rails
meilisearch do
attribute :title, :author # only the attributes 'title', and 'author' will be sent to Meilisearch
# all attributes will be sent to Meilisearch if block is left empty
end
end
As soon as you configure your model as mentioned above, meilisearch-rails
will keep your database table data in sync with your Meilisearch instance using the ActiveRecord
callbacks automatically.
We strongly recommend the use of front-end search through our JavaScript API Client or Instant Meilisearch plugin
Search returns ORM-compliant objects reloaded from your database.
# Meilisearch is typo-tolerant:
hits = Book.search('harry pottre')
hits.each do |hit|
puts hit.title
puts hit.author
end
Requests made to Meilisearch may timeout and retry. To adapt the behavior to your needs, you can change the parameters during configuration:
MeiliSearch::Rails.configuration = {
meilisearch_url: 'YourMeilisearchUrl',
meilisearch_api_key: 'YourMeilisearchAPIKey',
timeout: 2,
max_retries: 1,
}
If your model already has methods that meilisearch-rails defines such as search
and index
, they will not be redefined. You can target the meilisearch-rails-defined methods by prefixing with ms_
, e.g. Book.ms_search('harry potter')
.
You can configure the index settings by adding them inside the meilisearch
block as shown below:
class Book < ApplicationRecord
include MeiliSearch::Rails
meilisearch do
searchable_attributes [:title, :author, :publisher, :description]
filterable_attributes [:genre]
sortable_attributes [:title]
ranking_rules [
'proximity',
'typo',
'words',
'attribute',
'sort',
'exactness',
'publication_year:desc'
]
synonyms nyc: ['new york']
# The following parameters are applied when calling the search() method:
attributes_to_highlight ['*']
attributes_to_crop [:description]
crop_length 10
faceting max_values_per_facet: 2000
pagination max_total_hits: 1000
end
end
Check the dedicated section of the documentation, for more information on the settings.
All the supported options are described in the search parameters section of the documentation.
Book.search('Harry', attributes_to_highlight: ['*'])
Then it's possible to retrieve the highlighted or cropped value by using the formatted
method available in the object.
harry_book.formatted # => {"id"=>"1", "name"=>"<em>Harry</em> Potter", "description"=>…
👉 Don't forget that attributes_to_highlight
, attributes_to_crop
, and
crop_length
can be set up in the meilisearch
block of your model.
As an example of how to use the sort option, here is how you could achieve returning all books sorted by title in ascending order:
Book.search('*', sort: ['title:asc'])
👉 Don't forget to set up the sortable_attributes
option in the meilisearch
block of your model.
This gem supports:
Specify the :pagination_backend
in the configuration file:
MeiliSearch::Rails.configuration = {
meilisearch_url: 'YourMeilisearchUrl',
meilisearch_api_key: 'YourMeilisearchAPIKey',
pagination_backend: :kaminari # :will_paginate
}
Then, as soon as you use the search
method, the returning results will be paginated:
# controller
@hits = Book.search('harry potter')
# views
<% @hits.each do |hit| %>
<%= hit.title %>
<%= hit.author %>
<% end %>
<%= paginate @hits %> # if using kaminari
<%= will_paginate @hits %> # if using will_paginate
The number of hits per page defaults to 20, you can customize it by adding the hits_per_page
parameter to your search:
Book.search('harry potter', hits_per_page: 10)
This gem supports pagy to paginate your search results.
To use pagy
with your meilisearch-rails
you need to:
Add the pagy
gem to your Gemfile.
Create a new initializer pagy.rb
with this:
# config/initializers/pagy.rb
require 'pagy/extras/meilisearch'
Then in your model you must extend Pagy::Meilisearch
:
class Book < ApplicationRecord
include MeiliSearch::Rails
extend Pagy::Meilisearch
meilisearch # ...
end
And in your controller and view:
# controllers/books_controller.rb
def search
hits = Book.pagy_search(params[:query])
@pagy, @hits = pagy_meilisearch(hits, items: 25)
end
# views/books/search.html.rb
<%== pagy_nav(@pagy) %>
pagination_backend
in the configuration block MeiliSearch::Rails.configuration
for pagy
.
Check ddnexus/pagy
for more information.
By default HTTP connections to the Meilisearch URL is always active, but sometimes you want to disable the HTTP requests in a particular moment or environment.
you have multiple ways to achieve this.
By adding active: false
in the configuration initializer:
MeiliSearch::Rails.configuration = {
meilisearch_url: 'YourMeilisearchUrl',
meilisearch_api_key: 'YourMeilisearchAPIKey',
active: false
}
Or you can disable programmatically:
MeiliSearch::Rails.deactivate! # all the following HTTP calls will be dismissed.
# or you can pass a block to it:
MeiliSearch::Rails.deactivate! do
# every Meilisearch call here will be dismissed, no error will be raised.
# after the block, Meilisearch state will be active.
end
You can also activate if you deactivated earlier:
MeiliSearch::Rails.activate!
By default, the index_uid will be the class name, e.g. Book
. You can customize the index_uid by using the index_uid:
option.
class Book < ActiveRecord::Base
include MeiliSearch::Rails
meilisearch index_uid: 'MyCustomUID'
end
You can suffix the index UID with the current Rails environment by setting it globally:
MeiliSearch::Rails.configuration = {
meilisearch_url: 'YourMeilisearchUrl',
meilisearch_api_key: 'YourMeilisearchAPIKey',
per_environment: true
}
This way your index UID will look like this "Book_#{Rails.env}"
.
You can add a custom attribute by using the add_attribute
option or by using a block.
will_save_change_to_#{attr_name}?
method.
class Author < ApplicationRecord
include MeiliSearch::Rails
meilisearch do
attribute :first_name, :last_name
attribute :full_name do
"#{first_name} #{last_name}"
end
add_attribute :full_name_reversed
end
def full_name_reversed
"#{last_name} #{first_name}"
end
def will_save_change_to_full_name?
will_save_change_to_first_name? || will_save_change_to_last_name?
end
def will_save_change_to_full_name_reversed?
will_save_change_to_first_name? || will_save_change_to_last_name?
end
end
By default, the primary key is based on your record's id. You can change this behavior by specifying the primary_key:
option.
Note that the primary key must return a unique value otherwise your data could be overwritten.
class Book < ActiveRecord::Base
include MeiliSearch::Rails
meilisearch primary_key: :isbn # isbn is a column in your table definition.
end
You can also set the primary_key
as a method, this method will be evaluated in runtime, and its return
will be used as the reference to the document when Meilisearch needs it.
class Book < ActiveRecord::Base
include MeiliSearch::Rails
meilisearch primary_key: :my_custom_ms_id
private
def my_custom_ms_id
"isbn_#{primary_key}" # ensure this return is unique, otherwise you'll lose data.
end
end
You can control if a record must be indexed by using the if:
or unless:
options.
As soon as you use those constraints, add_documents
and delete_documents
calls will be performed in order to keep the index synced with the DB. To prevent this behavior, you can create a will_save_change_to_#{attr_name}?
method.
class Book < ActiveRecord::Base
include MeiliSearch::Rails
meilisearch if: :published?, unless: :premium?
def published?
# [...]
end
def premium?
# [...]
end
def will_save_change_to_published?
# return true only if you know that the 'published' state changed
end
end
You can index a record in several indexes using the add_index
option:
class Book < ActiveRecord::Base
include MeiliSearch::Rails
PUBLIC_INDEX_UID = 'Books'
SECURED_INDEX_UID = 'PrivateBooks'
# store all books in index 'SECURED_INDEX_UID'
meilisearch index_uid: SECURED_INDEX_UID do
searchable_attributes [:title, :author]
# store all 'public' (released and not premium) books in index 'PUBLIC_INDEX_UID'
add_index PUBLIC_INDEX_UID, if: :public? do
searchable_attributes [:title, :author]
end
end
private
def public?
released? && !premium?
end
end
You may want to share an index between several models. You'll need to ensure you don't have any conflict with the primary_key
of the models involved.
class Cat < ActiveRecord::Base
include MeiliSearch::Rails
meilisearch index_uid: 'Animals', primary_key: :ms_id
private
def ms_id
"cat_#{primary_key}" # ensure the cats & dogs primary_keys are not conflicting
end
end
class Dog < ActiveRecord::Base
include MeiliSearch::Rails
meilisearch index_uid: 'Animals', primary_key: :ms_id
private
def ms_id
"dog_#{primary_key}" # ensure the cats & dogs primary_keys are not conflicting
end
end
You can configure the auto-indexing & auto-removal process to use a queue to perform those operations in background. ActiveJob queues are used by default but you can define your own queuing mechanism:
class Book < ActiveRecord::Base
include MeiliSearch::Rails
meilisearch enqueue: true # ActiveJob will be triggered using a `meilisearch` queue
end
🤔 If you are performing updates and deletions in the background, a record deletion can be committed to your database prior to the job actually executing. Thus if you were to load the record to remove it from the database then your ActiveRecord#find
will fail with a RecordNotFound
.
In this case you can bypass loading the record from ActiveRecord and just communicate with the index directly.
With ActiveJob:
class Book < ActiveRecord::Base
include MeiliSearch::Rails
meilisearch enqueue: :trigger_job do
attribute :title, :author, :description
end
def self.trigger_job(record, remove)
MyActiveJob.perform_later(record.id, remove)
end
end
class MyActiveJob < ApplicationJob
def perform(id, remove)
if remove
# The record has likely already been removed from your database so we cannot
# use ActiveRecord#find to load it.
# We access the underlying Meilisearch index object.
Book.index.delete_document(id)
else
# The record should be present.
Book.find(id).index!
end
end
end
With Sidekiq:
class Book < ActiveRecord::Base
include MeiliSearch::Rails
meilisearch enqueue: :trigger_sidekiq_job do
attribute :title, :author, :description
end
def self.trigger_sidekiq_job(record, remove)
MySidekiqJob.perform_async(record.id, remove)
end
end
class MySidekiqJob
def perform(id, remove)
if remove
# The record has likely already been removed from your database so we cannot
# use ActiveRecord#find to load it.
# We access the underlying Meilisearch index object.
Book.index.delete_document(id)
else
# The record should be present.
Book.find(id).index!
end
end
end
With DelayedJob:
class Book < ActiveRecord::Base
include MeiliSearch::Rails
meilisearch enqueue: :trigger_delayed_job do
attribute :title, :author, :description
end
def self.trigger_delayed_job(record, remove)
if remove
record.delay.remove_from_index!
else
record.delay.index!
end
end
end
Extend a change to a related record.
With ActiveRecord, you'll need to use touch
and after_touch
.
class Author < ActiveRecord::Base
include MeiliSearch::Rails
has_many :books
# If your association uses belongs_to
# - use `touch: true`
# - do not define an `after_save` hook
after_save { books.each(&:touch) }
end
class Book < ActiveRecord::Base
include MeiliSearch::Rails
belongs_to :author
after_touch :index!
meilisearch do
attribute :title, :description, :publisher
attribute :author do
author.name
end
end
end
With Sequel, you can use the touch
plugin to propagate changes.
# app/models/author.rb
class Author < Sequel::Model
include MeiliSearch::Rails
one_to_many :books
plugin :timestamps
# Can't use the associations since it won't trigger the after_save
plugin :touch
# Define the associations that need to be touched here
# Less performant, but allows for the after_save hook to be triggered
def touch_associations
apps.map(&:touch)
end
def touch
super
touch_associations
end
end
# app/models/book.rb
class Book < Sequel::Model
include MeiliSearch::Rails
many_to_one :author
after_touch :index!
plugin :timestamps
plugin :touch
meilisearch do
attribute :title, :description, :publisher
attribute :author do
author.name
end
end
end
You can strip all HTML tags from your attributes with the sanitize
option.
class Book < ActiveRecord::Base
include MeiliSearch::Rails
meilisearch sanitize: true
end
You can force the UTF-8 encoding of all your attributes using the force_utf8_encoding
option.
class Book < ActiveRecord::Base
include MeiliSearch::Rails
meilisearch force_utf8_encoding: true
end
You can eager load associations using meilisearch_import
scope.
class Author < ActiveRecord::Base
include MeiliSearch::Rails
has_many :books
scope :meilisearch_import, -> { includes(:books) }
end
You can manually index a record by using the index!
instance method and remove it by using the remove_from_index!
instance method.
book = Book.create!(title: 'The Little Prince', author: 'Antoine de Saint-Exupéry')
book.index!
book.remove_from_index!
book.destroy!
To reindex all your records, use the reindex!
class method:
Book.reindex!
# You can also index a subset of your records
Book.where('updated_at > ?', 10.minutes.ago).reindex!
To delete all your records, use the clear_index!
class method:
Book.clear_index!
To access the index object and use the Ruby SDK methods for an index, call the index
class method:
index = Book.index
# index.get_settings, index.number_of_documents
You can disable exceptions that could be raised while trying to reach Meilisearch's API by using the raise_on_failure
option:
class Book < ActiveRecord::Base
include MeiliSearch::Rails
# Only raise exceptions in development environment.
meilisearch raise_on_failure: Rails.env.development?
end
You can force indexing and removing to be synchronous by setting the following option:
class Book < ActiveRecord::Base
include MeiliSearch::Rails
meilisearch synchronous: true
end
🚨 This is only recommended for testing purposes, the gem will call the wait_for_task
method that will stop your code execution until the asynchronous task has been processed by MeilSearch.
You can disable auto-indexing and auto-removing setting the following options:
class Book < ActiveRecord::Base
include MeiliSearch::Rails
meilisearch auto_index: false, auto_remove: false
end
You can temporarily disable auto-indexing using the without_auto_index scope:
Book.without_auto_index do
# Inside this block, auto indexing task will not run.
1.upto(10000) { Book.create! attributes }
end
Any new contribution is more than welcome in this project!
If you want to know more about the development workflow or want to contribute, please visit our contributing guidelines for detailed instructions!
The provided features and the code base is inspired by algoliasearch-rails.
Meilisearch provides and maintains many SDKs and Integration tools like this one. We want to provide everyone with an amazing search experience for any kind of project. If you want to contribute, make suggestions, or just know what's going on right now, visit us in the integration-guides repository.