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Customize search

Describes how to customize and extend the search in Optimizely Customized Commerce by adding index fields and creating new search indexers for specific purposes.

Classes in this topic are available in the following namespaces:

  • EPiServer.DataAnnotations
  • Mediachase.Search
  • Mediachase.Search.Extensions
  • Mediachase.Search.Extensions.Indexers

See also Creating a search provider.

Add index fields

The process of adding a new field can differ depending on the provider and where the data comes from. Here, we explain the steps for adding a field to the catalog index using Lucene and Solr providers.

When using Lucene, if you want to make a field searchable, decorate the property on the Catalog content model with the [Searchable] attribute. For legacy sites not using the Content model, the equivalent action is to go to the meta-field configuration in Commerce Manager and mark it searchable; the field is automatically added to the index.

When using Solr, add that field to the Solr configuration file, which is located in APACHERROOT\solr\catalog\conf\catalog.schema.xml.

Example: adding an index field to the Solr schema

<field name="MyNewField" type="string" indexed="true" stored="true" multiValued="true" />

To add a field programmatically if data comes from an external data source or needs to be computed, create a new class that inherits the existing CatalogIndexer.

public class MyCatalogIndexer : Mediachase.Search.Extensions.Indexers.CatalogIndexBuilder
      {
        /// <summary>
        /// Called when catalog entry is indexed. Override this method to add some extra fields.
        /// </summary>
        /// <param name="document">The document.</param>
        /// <param name="entry">The entry.</param>
        /// <param name="language"></param>
        protected override void OnCatalogEntryIndex(ref SearchDocument document, 
        CatalogEntryDto.CatalogEntryRow entry, string language)
          {
            // Example, add all apple products as featured
            if(entry.Name.Contains("apple")) document.Add(new SearchField("featured", true));
            base.OnCatalogEntryIndex(ref document, entry, language);
          }
      }

Create a search indexer

Search Indexer is a component that is responsible for assembling data into documents that Search Provider can then index. It typically connects subsystems like Catalogs, gets a list of changes, and submits to the search provider.

By default, Optimizely Customized Commerce indexes catalog data with the BaseCatalogIndexBuilder class or an inheriting class. However, third party implementations may implement ISearchIndexBuilder instead of extending BaseCatalogIndexBuilder.

/// <summary>
    /// Search Index Builder Interface.
    /// </summary>
    public interface ISearchIndexBuilder
      {
        /// <summary>
        /// An event handler for progress message events.
        /// </summary>
        event SearchIndexHandler SearchIndexMessage;
    
        /// <summary>
        /// Gets or sets the manager.
        /// </summary>
        /// <value>The manager.</value>
        SearchManager Manager { get; set; }
    
        /// <summary>
        /// Gets or sets the build indexer.
        /// </summary>
        /// <value>The build indexer.</value>
        IndexBuilder Indexer { get; set; }
    
        /// <summary>
        /// Builds the index.
        /// </summary>
        /// <param name="rebuild">if set to <c>true</c> the full rebuild will be done, if not. The last build date will be used.</param>
        void BuildIndex(bool rebuild);
    
        /// <summary>
        /// Updates the specified items in the index.
        /// </summary>
        /// <param name="itemIds">The ids of the items to update.</param>
        /// <returns>True if successful; otherwise, false.</returns>        
        bool UpdateIndex(IEnumerable<int> itemIds);
      }

The updated catalog event system uses the UpdateIndex method and calls it for any changed or deleted catalog entries. The parameter enumerates catalog entry IDs of changed or delete entries. The implementation is expected to update the search indexes appropriately for these entries.

If a transient error occurs (such as a network error when accessing a remote service), UpdateIndex should return false. The system may then retry the same batch of updates later. If a non-transient error occurs, the implementation should throw an exception.

An implementation of ISearchIndexBuilder should throw an exception from UpdateIndex if the updated event system is not supported, and scheduled tasks are used to execute BuildIndex.