69 lines
3.3 KiB
Markdown
69 lines
3.3 KiB
Markdown
# Advanced Syntax Search **(STARTER ONLY)**
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> **Notes:**
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>
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> - Introduced in [GitLab Enterprise Starter](https://about.gitlab.com/pricing/) 9.2
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> - This is the user documentation. To install and configure Elasticsearch,
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> visit the [administrator documentation](../../integration/elasticsearch.md).
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NOTE: **Note**
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Advanced Global Search (powered by Elasticsearch) is not yet available on GitLab.com. We are working on adding it. [Follow this epic for the latest updates](https://gitlab.com/groups/gitlab-org/-/epics/153).
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Use advanced queries for more targeted search results.
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## Overview
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The Advanced Syntax Search is a subset of the
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[Advanced Global Search](advanced_global_search.md), which you can use if you
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want to have more specific search results.
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Advanced Global Search only supports searching the [default branch](../project/repository/branches/index.md#default-branch).
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## Use cases
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Let's say for example that the product you develop relies on the code of another
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product that's hosted under some other group.
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Since under your GitLab instance there are hosted hundreds of different projects,
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you need the search results to be as efficient as possible. You have a feeling
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of what you want to find (e.g., a function name), but at the same you're also
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not so sure.
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In that case, using the advanced search syntax in your query will yield much
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better results.
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## Using the Advanced Syntax Search
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The Advanced Syntax Search supports fuzzy or exact search queries with prefixes,
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boolean operators, and much more.
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Full details can be found in the [Elasticsearch documentation](https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/5.3/query-dsl-simple-query-string-query.html#_simple_query_string_syntax), but
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here's a quick guide:
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- Searches look for all the words in a query, in any order - e.g.: searching
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issues for `display bug` will return all issues matching both those words, in any order.
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- To find the exact phrase (stemming still applies), use double quotes: `"display bug"`
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- To find bugs not mentioning display, use `-`: `bug -display`
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- To find a bug in display or sound, use `|`: `bug display | sound`
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- To group terms together, use parentheses: `bug | (display +sound)`
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- To match a partial word, use `*`: `bug find_by_*`
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- To find a term containing one of these symbols, use `\`: `argument \-last`
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### Syntax search filters
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The Advanced Syntax Search also supports the use of filters. The available filters are:
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- filename: Filters by filename. You can use the glob (`*`) operator for fuzzy matching.
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- path: Filters by path. You can use the glob (`*`) operator for fuzzy matching.
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- extension: Filters by extension in the filename. Please write the extension without a leading dot. Exact match only.
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To use them, simply add them to your query in the format `<filter_name>:<value>` without
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any spaces between the colon (`:`) and the value.
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Examples:
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- Finding a file with any content named `hello_world.rb`: `* filename:hello_world.rb`
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- Finding a file named `hello_world` with the text `whatever` inside of it: `whatever filename:hello_world`
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- Finding the text 'def create' inside files with the `.rb` extension: `def create extension:rb`
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- Finding the text `sha` inside files in a folder called `encryption`: `sha path:encryption`
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- Finding any file starting with `hello` containing `world` and with the `.js` extension: `world filename:hello* extension:js`
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