Elasticsearch driver for Laravel Scout.
The current version of Elastic Scout Driver has been tested with the following configuration:
If your project uses older Laravel (or PHP) version check the previous major version of the package.
The library can be installed via Composer:
composer require babenkoivan/elastic-scout-driver
Note, that this library is just a driver for Laravel Scout, don't forget to install it beforehand:
composer require laravel/scout
After Scout has been installed, publish its configuration file using:
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Laravel\Scout\ScoutServiceProvider"
Then, change the driver
option in the config/scout.php
file to elastic
:
// config/scout.php
'driver' => env('SCOUT_DRIVER', 'elastic'),
If you want to use Elastic Scout Driver with Lumen framework check this guide.
Elastic Scout Driver uses babenkoivan/elastic-client as a dependency. To change the client settings you need to publish the configuration file first:
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Elastic\Client\ServiceProvider"
In the newly created config/elastic.client.php
file you can define the default connection name using configuration hashes.
Please, refer to the elastic-client documentation for more details.
Elastic Scout Driver itself has only one configuration option at the moment - refresh_documents
.
If it's set to true
(false
by default) documents are indexed immediately, which might be handy for testing.
You can configure refresh_documents
in the config/elastic.scout_driver.php
file after publishing it with the following command:
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Elastic\ScoutDriver\ServiceProvider"
At last, do not forget, that with Scout you can configure the searchable data, the model id and the index name. Check the official Scout documentation for more details.
Note, that the
_id
field can't be part of the searchable data, so make sure the field is excluded or renamed in thetoSearchableArray
method in case you are using MongoDB as the database.
Elastic driver uses Elasticsearch query string wrapped in a bool query under the hood. It means that you can use mini-language syntax when searching a model:
$orders = App\Order::search('title:(Star OR Trek)')->get();
When the query string is omitted, the match all query is used:
$orders = App\Order::search()->where('user_id', 1)->get();
Please refer to the official Laravel Scout documentation for more details and usage examples.
In case the basic search doesn't cover your project needs check Elastic Scout Driver Plus, which extends standard Scout search capabilities by introducing advanced query builders. These builders give you possibility to use compound queries, custom filters and sorting, highlights and more.
If you are looking for a way to control Elasticsearch index schema programmatically check Elastic Migrations. Elastic Migrations allow you to modify application's index schema and share it across multiple environments with the same ease, that gives you Laravel database migrations.
There are few things, which are slightly different from other Scout drivers:
toSearchableArray
method.
Elastic driver indexes a model even when toSearchableArray
returns an empty array. You can change this behaviour by
overwriting the shouldBeSearchable
method of your model:
public function shouldBeSearchable()
{
return count($this->toSearchableArray()) > 0;
}
SearchResult
class (see Elastic Adapter):
$searchResult = App\Order::search('Star Trek')->raw();
search
method:
App\Order::search('Star Trek', function () {
// this will not be triggered
})->get()