# WARNING ABOUT GENERATED CODE # # This file is generated. See the contributing guide for more information: # https://github.com/aws/aws-sdk-ruby/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md # # WARNING ABOUT GENERATED CODE require 'seahorse/client/plugins/content_length.rb' require 'aws-sdk-core/plugins/credentials_configuration.rb' require 'aws-sdk-core/plugins/logging.rb' require 'aws-sdk-core/plugins/param_converter.rb' require 'aws-sdk-core/plugins/param_validator.rb' require 'aws-sdk-core/plugins/user_agent.rb' require 'aws-sdk-core/plugins/helpful_socket_errors.rb' require 'aws-sdk-core/plugins/retry_errors.rb' require 'aws-sdk-core/plugins/global_configuration.rb' require 'aws-sdk-core/plugins/response_paging.rb' require 'aws-sdk-core/plugins/stub_responses.rb' require 'aws-sdk-core/plugins/idempotency_token.rb' require 'aws-sdk-core/plugins/jsonvalue_converter.rb' require 'aws-sdk-core/plugins/signature_v4.rb' require 'aws-sdk-core/plugins/protocols/rest_json.rb' require 'aws-sdk-cloudsearchdomain/plugins/conditional_signing.rb' require 'aws-sdk-cloudsearchdomain/plugins/switch_to_post.rb' Aws::Plugins::GlobalConfiguration.add_identifier(:cloudsearchdomain) module Aws::CloudSearchDomain class Client < Seahorse::Client::Base include Aws::ClientStubs @identifier = :cloudsearchdomain set_api(ClientApi::API) add_plugin(Seahorse::Client::Plugins::ContentLength) add_plugin(Aws::Plugins::CredentialsConfiguration) add_plugin(Aws::Plugins::Logging) add_plugin(Aws::Plugins::ParamConverter) add_plugin(Aws::Plugins::ParamValidator) add_plugin(Aws::Plugins::UserAgent) add_plugin(Aws::Plugins::HelpfulSocketErrors) add_plugin(Aws::Plugins::RetryErrors) add_plugin(Aws::Plugins::GlobalConfiguration) add_plugin(Aws::Plugins::ResponsePaging) add_plugin(Aws::Plugins::StubResponses) add_plugin(Aws::Plugins::IdempotencyToken) add_plugin(Aws::Plugins::JsonvalueConverter) add_plugin(Aws::Plugins::SignatureV4) add_plugin(Aws::Plugins::Protocols::RestJson) add_plugin(Aws::CloudSearchDomain::Plugins::ConditionalSigning) add_plugin(Aws::CloudSearchDomain::Plugins::SwitchToPost) # @option options [required, Aws::CredentialProvider] :credentials # Your AWS credentials. This can be an instance of any one of the # following classes: # # * `Aws::Credentials` - Used for configuring static, non-refreshing # credentials. # # * `Aws::InstanceProfileCredentials` - Used for loading credentials # from an EC2 IMDS on an EC2 instance. # # * `Aws::SharedCredentials` - Used for loading credentials from a # shared file, such as `~/.aws/config`. # # * `Aws::AssumeRoleCredentials` - Used when you need to assume a role. # # When `:credentials` are not configured directly, the following # locations will be searched for credentials: # # * `Aws.config[:credentials]` # * The `:access_key_id`, `:secret_access_key`, and `:session_token` options. # * ENV['AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID'], ENV['AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY'] # * `~/.aws/credentials` # * `~/.aws/config` # * EC2 IMDS instance profile - When used by default, the timeouts are # very aggressive. Construct and pass an instance of # `Aws::InstanceProfileCredentails` to enable retries and extended # timeouts. # # @option options [String] :access_key_id # # @option options [Boolean] :convert_params (true) # When `true`, an attempt is made to coerce request parameters into # the required types. # # @option options [Aws::Log::Formatter] :log_formatter (Aws::Log::Formatter.default) # The log formatter. # # @option options [Symbol] :log_level (:info) # The log level to send messages to the `:logger` at. # # @option options [Logger] :logger # The Logger instance to send log messages to. If this option # is not set, logging will be disabled. # # @option options [String] :profile ("default") # Used when loading credentials from the shared credentials file # at HOME/.aws/credentials. When not specified, 'default' is used. # # @option options [Integer] :retry_limit (3) # The maximum number of times to retry failed requests. Only # ~ 500 level server errors and certain ~ 400 level client errors # are retried. Generally, these are throttling errors, data # checksum errors, networking errors, timeout errors and auth # errors from expired credentials. # # @option options [String] :secret_access_key # # @option options [String] :session_token # # @option options [String] :sigv4_region # Only needed when sending authenticated/signed requests to a Cloud # Search domain and the endpoint does not contain the region name. # # @option options [Boolean] :stub_responses (false) # Causes the client to return stubbed responses. By default # fake responses are generated and returned. You can specify # the response data to return or errors to raise by calling # {ClientStubs#stub_responses}. See {ClientStubs} for more information. # # ** Please note ** When response stubbing is enabled, no HTTP # requests are made, and retries are disabled. # # @option options [Boolean] :validate_params (true) # When `true`, request parameters are validated before # sending the request. # def initialize(*args) super end # @!group API Operations # Retrieves a list of documents that match the specified search # criteria. How you specify the search criteria depends on which query # parser you use. Amazon CloudSearch supports four query parsers: # # * `simple`\: search all `text` and `text-array` fields for the # specified string. Search for phrases, individual terms, and # prefixes. # * `structured`\: search specific fields, construct compound queries # using Boolean operators, and use advanced features such as term # boosting and proximity searching. # * `lucene`\: specify search criteria using the Apache Lucene query # parser syntax. # * `dismax`\: specify search criteria using the simplified subset of # the Apache Lucene query parser syntax defined by the DisMax query # parser. # # For more information, see [Searching Your Data][1] in the *Amazon # CloudSearch Developer Guide*. # # The endpoint for submitting `Search` requests is domain-specific. You # submit search requests to a domain's search endpoint. To get the # search endpoint for your domain, use the Amazon CloudSearch # configuration service `DescribeDomains` action. A domain's endpoints # are also displayed on the domain dashboard in the Amazon CloudSearch # console. # # # # [1]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/cloudsearch/latest/developerguide/searching.html # # @option params [String] :cursor # Retrieves a cursor value you can use to page through large result # sets. Use the `size` parameter to control the number of hits to # include in each response. You can specify either the `cursor` or # `start` parameter in a request; they are mutually exclusive. To get # the first cursor, set the cursor value to `initial`. In subsequent # requests, specify the cursor value returned in the hits section of the # response. # # For more information, see [Paginating Results][1] in the *Amazon # CloudSearch Developer Guide*. # # # # [1]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/cloudsearch/latest/developerguide/paginating-results.html # # @option params [String] :expr # Defines one or more numeric expressions that can be used to sort # results or specify search or filter criteria. You can also specify # expressions as return fields. # # You specify the expressions in JSON using the form # `\{"EXPRESSIONNAME":"EXPRESSION"\}`. You can define and use multiple # expressions in a search request. For example: # # ` \{"expression1":"_score*rating", "expression2":"(1/rank)*year"\} ` # # For information about the variables, operators, and functions you can # use in expressions, see [Writing Expressions][1] in the *Amazon # CloudSearch Developer Guide*. # # # # [1]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/cloudsearch/latest/developerguide/configuring-expressions.html#writing-expressions # # @option params [String] :facet # Specifies one or more fields for which to get facet information, and # options that control how the facet information is returned. Each # specified field must be facet-enabled in the domain configuration. The # fields and options are specified in JSON using the form # `\{"FIELD":\{"OPTION":VALUE,"OPTION:"STRING"\},"FIELD":\{"OPTION":VALUE,"OPTION":"STRING"\}\}`. # # You can specify the following faceting options: # # * `buckets` specifies an array of the facet values or ranges to count. # Ranges are specified using the same syntax that you use to search # for a range of values. For more information, see [ Searching for a # Range of Values][1] in the *Amazon CloudSearch Developer Guide*. # Buckets are returned in the order they are specified in the request. # The `sort` and `size` options are not valid if you specify # `buckets`. # # * `size` specifies the maximum number of facets to include in the # results. By default, Amazon CloudSearch returns counts for the top # 10. The `size` parameter is only valid when you specify the `sort` # option; it cannot be used in conjunction with `buckets`. # # * `sort` specifies how you want to sort the facets in the results: # `bucket` or `count`. Specify `bucket` to sort alphabetically or # numerically by facet value (in ascending order). Specify `count` to # sort by the facet counts computed for each facet value (in # descending order). To retrieve facet counts for particular values or # ranges of values, use the `buckets` option instead of `sort`. # # If no facet options are specified, facet counts are computed for all # field values, the facets are sorted by facet count, and the top 10 # facets are returned in the results. # # To count particular buckets of values, use the `buckets` option. For # example, the following request uses the `buckets` option to calculate # and return facet counts by decade. # # ` # \{"year":\{"buckets":["[1970,1979]","[1980,1989]","[1990,1999]","[2000,2009]","[2010,\}"]\}\} # ` # # To sort facets by facet count, use the `count` option. For example, # the following request sets the `sort` option to `count` to sort the # facet values by facet count, with the facet values that have the most # matching documents listed first. Setting the `size` option to 3 # returns only the top three facet values. # # ` \{"year":\{"sort":"count","size":3\}\} ` # # To sort the facets by value, use the `bucket` option. For example, the # following request sets the `sort` option to `bucket` to sort the facet # values numerically by year, with earliest year listed first. # # ` \{"year":\{"sort":"bucket"\}\} ` # # For more information, see [Getting and Using Facet Information][2] in # the *Amazon CloudSearch Developer Guide*. # # # # [1]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/cloudsearch/latest/developerguide/searching-ranges.html # [2]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/cloudsearch/latest/developerguide/faceting.html # # @option params [String] :filter_query # Specifies a structured query that filters the results of a search # without affecting how the results are scored and sorted. You use # `filterQuery` in conjunction with the `query` parameter to filter the # documents that match the constraints specified in the `query` # parameter. Specifying a filter controls only which matching documents # are included in the results, it has no effect on how they are scored # and sorted. The `filterQuery` parameter supports the full structured # query syntax. # # For more information about using filters, see [Filtering Matching # Documents][1] in the *Amazon CloudSearch Developer Guide*. # # # # [1]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/cloudsearch/latest/developerguide/filtering-results.html # # @option params [String] :highlight # Retrieves highlights for matches in the specified `text` or # `text-array` fields. Each specified field must be highlight enabled in # the domain configuration. The fields and options are specified in JSON # using the form # `\{"FIELD":\{"OPTION":VALUE,"OPTION:"STRING"\},"FIELD":\{"OPTION":VALUE,"OPTION":"STRING"\}\}`. # # You can specify the following highlight options: # # * `format`\: specifies the format of the data in the text field: # `text` or `html`. When data is returned as HTML, all # non-alphanumeric characters are encoded. The default is `html`. # * `max_phrases`\: specifies the maximum number of occurrences of the # search term(s) you want to highlight. By default, the first # occurrence is highlighted. # * `pre_tag`\: specifies the string to prepend to an occurrence of a # search term. The default for HTML highlights is `<em>`. The # default for text highlights is `*`. # * `post_tag`\: specifies the string to append to an occurrence of a # search term. The default for HTML highlights is `</em>`. The # default for text highlights is `*`. # # If no highlight options are specified for a field, the returned field # text is treated as HTML and the first match is highlighted with # emphasis tags: `<em>search-term</em>`. # # For example, the following request retrieves highlights for the # `actors` and `title` fields. # # `\{ "actors": \{\}, "title": \{"format": "text","max_phrases": # 2,"pre_tag": "","post_tag": ""\} \}` # # @option params [Boolean] :partial # Enables partial results to be returned if one or more index partitions # are unavailable. When your search index is partitioned across multiple # search instances, by default Amazon CloudSearch only returns results # if every partition can be queried. This means that the failure of a # single search instance can result in 5xx (internal server) errors. # When you enable partial results, Amazon CloudSearch returns whatever # results are available and includes the percentage of documents # searched in the search results (percent-searched). This enables you to # more gracefully degrade your users' search experience. For example, # rather than displaying no results, you could display the partial # results and a message indicating that the results might be incomplete # due to a temporary system outage. # # @option params [required, String] :query # Specifies the search criteria for the request. How you specify the # search criteria depends on the query parser used for the request and # the parser options specified in the `queryOptions` parameter. By # default, the `simple` query parser is used to process requests. To use # the `structured`, `lucene`, or `dismax` query parser, you must also # specify the `queryParser` parameter. # # For more information about specifying search criteria, see [Searching # Your Data][1] in the *Amazon CloudSearch Developer Guide*. # # # # [1]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/cloudsearch/latest/developerguide/searching.html # # @option params [String] :query_options # Configures options for the query parser specified in the `queryParser` # parameter. You specify the options in JSON using the following form # `\{"OPTION1":"VALUE1","OPTION2":VALUE2"..."OPTIONN":"VALUEN"\}.` # # The options you can configure vary according to which parser you use: # # * `defaultOperator`\: The default operator used to combine individual # terms in the search string. For example: `defaultOperator: 'or'`. # For the `dismax` parser, you specify a percentage that represents # the percentage of terms in the search string (rounded down) that # must match, rather than a default operator. A value of `0%` is the # equivalent to OR, and a value of `100%` is equivalent to AND. The # percentage must be specified as a value in the range 0-100 followed # by the percent (%) symbol. For example, `defaultOperator: 50%`. # Valid values: `and`, `or`, a percentage in the range 0%-100% # (`dismax`). Default: `and` (`simple`, `structured`, `lucene`) or # `100` (`dismax`). Valid for: `simple`, `structured`, `lucene`, and # `dismax`. # * `fields`\: An array of the fields to search when no fields are # specified in a search. If no fields are specified in a search and # this option is not specified, all text and text-array fields are # searched. You can specify a weight for each field to control the # relative importance of each field when Amazon CloudSearch calculates # relevance scores. To specify a field weight, append a caret (`^`) # symbol and the weight to the field name. For example, to boost the # importance of the `title` field over the `description` field you # could specify: `"fields":["title^5","description"]`. Valid values: # The name of any configured field and an optional numeric value # greater than zero. Default: All `text` and `text-array` fields. # Valid for: `simple`, `structured`, `lucene`, and `dismax`. # * `operators`\: An array of the operators or special characters you # want to disable for the simple query parser. If you disable the # `and`, `or`, or `not` operators, the corresponding operators (`+`, # `|`, `-`) have no special meaning and are dropped from the search # string. Similarly, disabling `prefix` disables the wildcard operator # (`*`) and disabling `phrase` disables the ability to search for # phrases by enclosing phrases in double quotes. Disabling precedence # disables the ability to control order of precedence using # parentheses. Disabling `near` disables the ability to use the ~ # operator to perform a sloppy phrase search. Disabling the `fuzzy` # operator disables the ability to use the ~ operator to perform a # fuzzy search. `escape` disables the ability to use a backslash (``) # to escape special characters within the search string. Disabling # whitespace is an advanced option that prevents the parser from # tokenizing on whitespace, which can be useful for Vietnamese. (It # prevents Vietnamese words from being split incorrectly.) For # example, you could disable all operators other than the phrase # operator to support just simple term and phrase queries: # `"operators":["and","not","or", "prefix"]`. Valid values: `and`, # `escape`, `fuzzy`, `near`, `not`, `or`, `phrase`, `precedence`, # `prefix`, `whitespace`. Default: All operators and special # characters are enabled. Valid for: `simple`. # * `phraseFields`\: An array of the `text` or `text-array` fields you # want to use for phrase searches. When the terms in the search string # appear in close proximity within a field, the field scores higher. # You can specify a weight for each field to boost that score. The # `phraseSlop` option controls how much the matches can deviate from # the search string and still be boosted. To specify a field weight, # append a caret (`^`) symbol and the weight to the field name. For # example, to boost phrase matches in the `title` field over the # `abstract` field, you could specify: `"phraseFields":["title^3", # "plot"]` Valid values: The name of any `text` or `text-array` field # and an optional numeric value greater than zero. Default: No fields. # If you don't specify any fields with `phraseFields`, proximity # scoring is disabled even if `phraseSlop` is specified. Valid for: # `dismax`. # * `phraseSlop`\: An integer value that specifies how much matches can # deviate from the search phrase and still be boosted according to the # weights specified in the `phraseFields` option; for example, # `phraseSlop: 2`. You must also specify `phraseFields` to enable # proximity scoring. Valid values: positive integers. Default: 0. # Valid for: `dismax`. # * `explicitPhraseSlop`\: An integer value that specifies how much a # match can deviate from the search phrase when the phrase is enclosed # in double quotes in the search string. (Phrases that exceed this # proximity distance are not considered a match.) For example, to # specify a slop of three for dismax phrase queries, you would specify # `"explicitPhraseSlop":3`. Valid values: positive integers. Default: # 0. Valid for: `dismax`. # * `tieBreaker`\: When a term in the search string is found in a # document's field, a score is calculated for that field based on how # common the word is in that field compared to other documents. If the # term occurs in multiple fields within a document, by default only # the highest scoring field contributes to the document's overall # score. You can specify a `tieBreaker` value to enable the matches in # lower-scoring fields to contribute to the document's score. That # way, if two documents have the same max field score for a particular # term, the score for the document that has matches in more fields # will be higher. The formula for calculating the score with a # tieBreaker is `(max field score) + (tieBreaker) * (sum of the scores # for the rest of the matching fields)`. Set `tieBreaker` to 0 to # disregard all but the highest scoring field (pure max): # `"tieBreaker":0`. Set to 1 to sum the scores from all fields (pure # sum): `"tieBreaker":1`. Valid values: 0.0 to 1.0. Default: 0.0. # Valid for: `dismax`. # # @option params [String] :query_parser # Specifies which query parser to use to process the request. If # `queryParser` is not specified, Amazon CloudSearch uses the `simple` # query parser. # # Amazon CloudSearch supports four query parsers: # # * `simple`\: perform simple searches of `text` and `text-array` # fields. By default, the `simple` query parser searches all `text` # and `text-array` fields. You can specify which fields to search by # with the `queryOptions` parameter. If you prefix a search term with # a plus sign (+) documents must contain the term to be considered a # match. (This is the default, unless you configure the default # operator with the `queryOptions` parameter.) You can use the `-` # (NOT), `|` (OR), and `*` (wildcard) operators to exclude particular # terms, find results that match any of the specified terms, or search # for a prefix. To search for a phrase rather than individual terms, # enclose the phrase in double quotes. For more information, see # [Searching for Text][1] in the *Amazon CloudSearch Developer Guide*. # * `structured`\: perform advanced searches by combining multiple # expressions to define the search criteria. You can also search # within particular fields, search for values and ranges of values, # and use advanced options such as term boosting, `matchall`, and # `near`. For more information, see [Constructing Compound Queries][2] # in the *Amazon CloudSearch Developer Guide*. # * `lucene`\: search using the Apache Lucene query parser syntax. For # more information, see [Apache Lucene Query Parser Syntax][3]. # * `dismax`\: search using the simplified subset of the Apache Lucene # query parser syntax defined by the DisMax query parser. For more # information, see [DisMax Query Parser Syntax][4]. # # # # [1]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/cloudsearch/latest/developerguide/searching-text.html # [2]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/cloudsearch/latest/developerguide/searching-compound-queries.html # [3]: http://lucene.apache.org/core/4_6_0/queryparser/org/apache/lucene/queryparser/classic/package-summary.html#package_description # [4]: http://wiki.apache.org/solr/DisMaxQParserPlugin#Query_Syntax # # @option params [String] :return # Specifies the field and expression values to include in the response. # Multiple fields or expressions are specified as a comma-separated # list. By default, a search response includes all return enabled fields # (`_all_fields`). To return only the document IDs for the matching # documents, specify `_no_fields`. To retrieve the relevance score # calculated for each document, specify `_score`. # # @option params [Integer] :size # Specifies the maximum number of search hits to include in the # response. # # @option params [String] :sort # Specifies the fields or custom expressions to use to sort the search # results. Multiple fields or expressions are specified as a # comma-separated list. You must specify the sort direction (`asc` or # `desc`) for each field; for example, `year desc,title asc`. To use a # field to sort results, the field must be sort-enabled in the domain # configuration. Array type fields cannot be used for sorting. If no # `sort` parameter is specified, results are sorted by their default # relevance scores in descending order: `_score desc`. You can also sort # by document ID (`_id asc`) and version (`_version desc`). # # For more information, see [Sorting Results][1] in the *Amazon # CloudSearch Developer Guide*. # # # # [1]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/cloudsearch/latest/developerguide/sorting-results.html # # @option params [Integer] :start # Specifies the offset of the first search hit you want to return. Note # that the result set is zero-based; the first result is at index 0. You # can specify either the `start` or `cursor` parameter in a request, # they are mutually exclusive. # # For more information, see [Paginating Results][1] in the *Amazon # CloudSearch Developer Guide*. # # # # [1]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/cloudsearch/latest/developerguide/paginating-results.html # # @option params [String] :stats # Specifies one or more fields for which to get statistics information. # Each specified field must be facet-enabled in the domain # configuration. The fields are specified in JSON using the form: # # `\{"FIELD-A":\{\},"FIELD-B":\{\}\}` There are currently no options supported for statistics. # # @return [Types::SearchResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods: # # * {Types::SearchResponse#status #status} => Types::SearchStatus # * {Types::SearchResponse#hits #hits} => Types::Hits # * {Types::SearchResponse#facets #facets} => Hash<String,Types::BucketInfo> # * {Types::SearchResponse#stats #stats} => Hash<String,Types::FieldStats> # # @example Request syntax with placeholder values # # resp = client.search({ # cursor: "Cursor", # expr: "Expr", # facet: "Facet", # filter_query: "FilterQuery", # highlight: "Highlight", # partial: false, # query: "Query", # required # query_options: "QueryOptions", # query_parser: "simple", # accepts simple, structured, lucene, dismax # return: "Return", # size: 1, # sort: "Sort", # start: 1, # stats: "Stat", # }) # # @example Response structure # # resp.status.timems #=> Integer # resp.status.rid #=> String # resp.hits.found #=> Integer # resp.hits.start #=> Integer # resp.hits.cursor #=> String # resp.hits.hit #=> Array # resp.hits.hit[0].id #=> String # resp.hits.hit[0].fields #=> Hash # resp.hits.hit[0].fields["String"] #=> Array # resp.hits.hit[0].fields["String"][0] #=> String # resp.hits.hit[0].exprs #=> Hash # resp.hits.hit[0].exprs["String"] #=> String # resp.hits.hit[0].highlights #=> Hash # resp.hits.hit[0].highlights["String"] #=> String # resp.facets #=> Hash # resp.facets["String"].buckets #=> Array # resp.facets["String"].buckets[0].value #=> String # resp.facets["String"].buckets[0].count #=> Integer # resp.stats #=> Hash # resp.stats["String"].min #=> String # resp.stats["String"].max #=> String # resp.stats["String"].count #=> Integer # resp.stats["String"].missing #=> Integer # resp.stats["String"].sum #=> Float # resp.stats["String"].sum_of_squares #=> Float # resp.stats["String"].mean #=> String # resp.stats["String"].stddev #=> Float # # @overload search(params = {}) # @param [Hash] params ({}) def search(params = {}, options = {}) req = build_request(:search, params) req.send_request(options) end # Retrieves autocomplete suggestions for a partial query string. You can # use suggestions enable you to display likely matches before users # finish typing. In Amazon CloudSearch, suggestions are based on the # contents of a particular text field. When you request suggestions, # Amazon CloudSearch finds all of the documents whose values in the # suggester field start with the specified query string. The beginning # of the field must match the query string to be considered a match. # # For more information about configuring suggesters and retrieving # suggestions, see [Getting Suggestions][1] in the *Amazon CloudSearch # Developer Guide*. # # The endpoint for submitting `Suggest` requests is domain-specific. You # submit suggest requests to a domain's search endpoint. To get the # search endpoint for your domain, use the Amazon CloudSearch # configuration service `DescribeDomains` action. A domain's endpoints # are also displayed on the domain dashboard in the Amazon CloudSearch # console. # # # # [1]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/cloudsearch/latest/developerguide/getting-suggestions.html # # @option params [required, String] :query # Specifies the string for which you want to get suggestions. # # @option params [required, String] :suggester # Specifies the name of the suggester to use to find suggested matches. # # @option params [Integer] :size # Specifies the maximum number of suggestions to return. # # @return [Types::SuggestResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods: # # * {Types::SuggestResponse#status #status} => Types::SuggestStatus # * {Types::SuggestResponse#suggest #suggest} => Types::SuggestModel # # @example Request syntax with placeholder values # # resp = client.suggest({ # query: "Query", # required # suggester: "Suggester", # required # size: 1, # }) # # @example Response structure # # resp.status.timems #=> Integer # resp.status.rid #=> String # resp.suggest.query #=> String # resp.suggest.found #=> Integer # resp.suggest.suggestions #=> Array # resp.suggest.suggestions[0].suggestion #=> String # resp.suggest.suggestions[0].score #=> Integer # resp.suggest.suggestions[0].id #=> String # # @overload suggest(params = {}) # @param [Hash] params ({}) def suggest(params = {}, options = {}) req = build_request(:suggest, params) req.send_request(options) end # Posts a batch of documents to a search domain for indexing. A document # batch is a collection of add and delete operations that represent the # documents you want to add, update, or delete from your domain. Batches # can be described in either JSON or XML. Each item that you want Amazon # CloudSearch to return as a search result (such as a product) is # represented as a document. Every document has a unique ID and one or # more fields that contain the data that you want to search and return # in results. Individual documents cannot contain more than 1 MB of # data. The entire batch cannot exceed 5 MB. To get the best possible # upload performance, group add and delete operations in batches that # are close the 5 MB limit. Submitting a large volume of single-document # batches can overload a domain's document service. # # The endpoint for submitting `UploadDocuments` requests is # domain-specific. To get the document endpoint for your domain, use the # Amazon CloudSearch configuration service `DescribeDomains` action. A # domain's endpoints are also displayed on the domain dashboard in the # Amazon CloudSearch console. # # For more information about formatting your data for Amazon # CloudSearch, see [Preparing Your Data][1] in the *Amazon CloudSearch # Developer Guide*. For more information about uploading data for # indexing, see [Uploading Data][2] in the *Amazon CloudSearch Developer # Guide*. # # # # [1]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/cloudsearch/latest/developerguide/preparing-data.html # [2]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/cloudsearch/latest/developerguide/uploading-data.html # # @option params [required, String, IO] :documents # A batch of documents formatted in JSON or HTML. # # @option params [required, String] :content_type # The format of the batch you are uploading. Amazon CloudSearch supports # two document batch formats: # # * application/json # * application/xml # # @return [Types::UploadDocumentsResponse] Returns a {Seahorse::Client::Response response} object which responds to the following methods: # # * {Types::UploadDocumentsResponse#status #status} => String # * {Types::UploadDocumentsResponse#adds #adds} => Integer # * {Types::UploadDocumentsResponse#deletes #deletes} => Integer # * {Types::UploadDocumentsResponse#warnings #warnings} => Array<Types::DocumentServiceWarning> # # @example Request syntax with placeholder values # # resp = client.upload_documents({ # documents: "data", # required # content_type: "application/json", # required, accepts application/json, application/xml # }) # # @example Response structure # # resp.status #=> String # resp.adds #=> Integer # resp.deletes #=> Integer # resp.warnings #=> Array # resp.warnings[0].message #=> String # # @overload upload_documents(params = {}) # @param [Hash] params ({}) def upload_documents(params = {}, options = {}) req = build_request(:upload_documents, params) req.send_request(options) end # @!endgroup # @param params ({}) # @api private def build_request(operation_name, params = {}) handlers = @handlers.for(operation_name) context = Seahorse::Client::RequestContext.new( operation_name: operation_name, operation: config.api.operation(operation_name), client: self, params: params, config: config) context[:gem_name] = 'aws-sdk-cloudsearchdomain' context[:gem_version] = '1.0.0.rc8' Seahorse::Client::Request.new(handlers, context) end # @api private # @deprecated def waiter_names [] end class << self # @api private attr_reader :identifier # @api private def errors_module Errors end end end end