Typesense
zombodb
Typesense | zombodb | |
---|---|---|
131 | 23 | |
17,965 | 4,608 | |
2.7% | - | |
9.8 | 8.3 | |
9 days ago | 24 days ago | |
C++ | PLpgSQL | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Typesense
-
FlowDiver: The Road to SSR - Part 1
Disregarding props-drilling technique in favor of a more reliable and elegant solution we looked for inspiration elsewhere. Another project of ours .find was using Typesense/Algolia components, which looked a bit like black-box/magic, but at the same time provided a clean approach to build complex and highly customizable solutions.
-
Release Radar · April 2024 Edition: Major updates from the open source community
Have you ever tried to look up something, only to realise your search engine doesn't recognise your typos? Typesense to the rescue! It's a fast, typo-tolerant search engine built for an easier browsing experience. The latest version comes with new features such as built-in conversational search, image search, voice search, analytics, and more. Dive into the release notes for the full list of changes and enhancements.
-
Website Search Hurts My Feelings
There are actually plenty of non-ES products that are way easier to integrate and tune (and get better results with less effort).
- Typesense (https://github.com/typesense/typesense)
- Algolia
- Google Programmable Search Engine (https://programmablesearchengine.google.com/about/)
- Remote Machine Learning and Searching on a Raspberry Pi 5
-
Open Source alternatives to tools you Pay for
Typesense - Open Source Alternative to Algolia
-
DNS record "hn.algolia.com" is gone
If you like your penny take a look at Typesense https://typesense.org/ - nothing to complain here. Especially nothing complain about pricing.
-
Vector databases: analyzing the trade-offs
I work on Typesense [1] (historically considered an open source alternative to Algolia).
We then launched vector search in Jan 2023, and just last week we launched the ability to generate embeddings from within Typesense.
You'd just need to send JSON data, and Typesense can generate embeddings for your data using OpenAI, PaLM API, or built-in models like S-BERT, E-5, etc (running on a GPU if you prefer) [2]
You can then do a hybrid (keyword + semantic) search by just sending the search keywords to Typesense, and Typesense will automatically generate embeddings for you internally and return a ranked list of keyword results weaved with semantic results (using Rank Fusion).
You can also combine filtering, faceting, typo tolerance, etc - the things Typesense already had.
[1] https://github.com/typesense/typesense
[2] https://typesense.org/docs/0.25.0/api/vector-search.html
-
Creating an advanced search engine with PostgreSQL
For something small with a minimal footprint, I'd recommend Typesense. https://github.com/typesense/typesense
-
Obsidian Publish full text search
I haven’t used Publish, but I’d assume you could use something like https://typesense.org/ to index and search the vault.
-
DynamoDB search options
A cheaper option would be to use https://typesense.org. You can use DynamoDb streams to automatically load records. It has worked well for me.
zombodb
-
Introducing pgzx: create PostgreSQL extensions using Zig
And lots of interesting extensions use it, like
https://github.com/tembo-io/pgmq
https://github.com/zombodb/zombodb
https://github.com/supabase/pg_jsonschema
-
Create a search engine with PostgreSQL: Postgres vs Elasticsearch
Point 2 is generally solvable via engineering effort and careful dedicated code. From the existing tools, PGSync is an open source project that aims to specifically solve this problem. ZomboDB is an interesting Postgres extension that tackles point 2 (and I think partially point 3), by controlling and querying Elasticsearch through Postgres. I haven't yet tried either of these two projects, so I can't comment on their trade-offs, but I wanted to mention them.
-
Creating an advanced search engine with PostgreSQL
Curious, did you try zombodb? [https://www.zombodb.com/]
-
💃🏼 Quickwit 0.6 released!🕺🏼: Elasticsearch API compatibility, Grafana plugin, and more....
What about zombodb, do you think that quickwit has all the necessary APIs?
-
Write Postgres functions in Rust
No. Haha. Was just the right name for https://github.com/zombodb/zombodb at the time. Software where the only limit is yourself!
- Integrate PostgreSQL and Elasticsearch – ZomboDB
- Postgres Full Text Search vs. the Rest
- ZomboDB: Making Postgres and Elasticsearch work together like it's 2022
-
Postgres Full-Text Search: A Search Engine in a Database
> The hardest part of building any search engine is keeping the index up-to-date with changes made to the underlying data store.
This deserves mention, as it solves that problem: https://github.com/zombodb/zombodb
From the README:
> ZomboDB brings powerful text-search and analytics features to Postgres by using Elasticsearch as an index type. Its comprehensive query language and SQL functions enable new and creative ways to query your relational data.
> From a technical perspective, ZomboDB is a 100% native Postgres extension that implements Postgres' Index Access Method API. As a native Postgres index type, ZomboDB allows you to CREATE INDEX ... USING zombodb on your existing Postgres tables. At that point, ZomboDB takes over and fully manages the remote Elasticsearch index and guarantees transactionally-correct text-search query results.
I find other things also hard in search engines: dealing with the plethora of human languages and all the requirements we may have to processing them. A mature solution like ES therefor is almost a must in the more demanding cases.
-
State of the art for serde-compatible CBOR encoding/decoding?
You can read more about it on our GitHub repo, but basically it brings most of the power of elasticsearch’s searching and analytics abilities straight into Postgres.
What are some alternatives?
MeiliSearch - A lightning-fast search API that fits effortlessly into your apps, websites, and workflow
pg_search - pg_search builds ActiveRecord named scopes that take advantage of PostgreSQL’s full text search
Elasticsearch - Free and Open, Distributed, RESTful Search Engine
noria - Fast web applications through dynamic, partially-stateful dataflow
Apache Solr - Apache Lucene and Solr open-source search software
squawk - 🐘 linter for PostgreSQL, focused on migrations
meilisearch-laravel-scout - MeiliSearch integration for Laravel Scout
stolon - PostgreSQL cloud native High Availability and more.
loki - Like Prometheus, but for logs.
helium-etl-queries - A collection of SQL views used to enrich data produced by a Helium blockchain-etl
sonic - 🦔 Fast, lightweight & schema-less search backend. An alternative to Elasticsearch that runs on a few MBs of RAM.
pg_cjk_parser - Postgres CJK Parser pg_cjk_parser is a fts (full text search) parser derived from the default parser in PostgreSQL 11. When a postgres database uses utf-8 encoding, this parser supports all the features of the default parser while splitting CJK (Chinese, Japanese, Korean) characters into 2-gram tokens. If the database's encoding is not utf-8, the parser behaves just like the default parser.