This client has been written to interface with Sphinx[http://sphinxsearch.com/]. It is written by {Pat Allan}[http://freelancing-gods.com], and has been influenced by both Dmytro Shteflyuk's Ruby client and the original PHP client - credit where credit's due, after all. It does not follow the same syntax as those two, though (not much point writing this otherwise) - opting for a more Ruby-like structure. While it doesn't (yet) exist as a gem, you can obtain the sourcecode via subversion. If you are after a specific release, use the tag as follows: svn co http://rails-oceania.googlecode.com/svn/patallan/riddle/tags/0.9.8-r871 riddle Or for the most current, just use trunk: svn co http://rails-oceania.googlecode.com/svn/patallan/riddle/trunk riddle Please note that at the time of writing, only 0.9.8r871 is supported. To get started, just instantiate a Client object: client = Riddle::Client.new # defaults to localhost and port 3312 client = Riddle::Client.new "sphinxserver.domain.tld", 3333 # custom settings And then set the parameters to what you want, before running a query: client.match_mode = :extended client.query "Pat Allan @state Victoria" The results from a query are similar to the other clients - but here's the details. It's a hash with the following keys: * :matches * :fields * :attributes * :attribute_names * :words * :total * :total_found * :time * :status * :warning (if appropriate) * :error (if appropriate) The key <tt>:matches</tt> returns an array of hashes - the actual search results. Each hash has the document id (<tt>:doc</tt>), the result weighting (<tt>:weight</tt>), and a hash of the attributes for the document (<tt>:attributes</tt>). The <tt>:fields</tt> and <tt>:attribute_names</tt> keys return list of fields and attributes for the documents. The key <tt>:attributes</tt> will return a hash of attribute name and type pairs, and <tt>:words</tt> returns a hash of hashes representing the words from the search, with the number of documents and hits for each, along the lines of: results[:words]["Pat"] #=> {:docs => 12, :hits => 15} <tt>:total</tt>, <tt>:total_found</tt> and <tt>:time</tt> return the number of matches available, the total number of matches (which may be greater than the maximum available), and the time in milliseconds that the query took to run. <tt>:status</tt> is the error code for the query - and if there was a related warning, it will be under the <tt>:warning</tt> key. Fatal errors will be described under <tt>:error</tt>.