The PHP7 bindings for Xapian are packaged in the xapian extension. The PHP API provided by this extension largely follows Xapian's C++ API. This document lists the differences and additions.
PHP strings, arrays, etc., are converted automatically to and from the corresponding C++ types in the bindings, so generally you can pass arguments as you would expect. One thing to be aware of though is that SWIG implements dispatch functions for overloaded methods based on the types of the parameters, so you can't always pass in a string containing a number (e.g. "42") where a number is expected as you usually can in PHP. You need to explicitly convert to the type required - e.g. use (int) to convert to an integer, (string) to string, (double) to a floating point number.
You can subclass Xapian classes in PHP and virtual methods defined in PHP are called from C++ in the way you'd expect.
PHP has a lot of reserved words of various sorts, which sadly clash with common method names. Because of this empty() methods of various container-like classes are wrapped as is_empty() for PHP.
The examples subdirectory contains examples showing how to use the PHP bindings based on the simple examples from xapian-examples: simpleindex.php7, simplesearch.php7, simpleexpand.php7, simplematchdecider.php7.
Note that these examples are written to work with the command line (CLI) version of the PHP interpreter, not through a webserver. Xapian's PHP bindings may of course also be used under CGI, Apache's modphp, ISAPI, etc.
Assuming you have a suitable version of PHP7 installed, running configure will automatically enable the PHP7 bindings, and make install will install the extension shared library in the location reported by php-config --extension-dir.
Check that php.ini has a line like extension_dir = "<location reported by php-config --extension-dir>".
Then add this line to php.ini: extension = xapian.so (or whatever the library is called - not all UNIX systems use .so as the extension, and MS Windows uses .dll).
If you're using PHP as a webserver module (e.g. mod_php with Apache), you may need to restart the webserver for this change to take effect.
You also need to add include "xapian.php" to your PHP scripts which use Xapian in order to get the PHP class wrappers.
Exceptions thrown by Xapian are translated into PHP Exception objects which are thrown into the PHP script.
These PHP bindings use a PHP object oriented style.
To construct an object, use $object = new XapianClassName(...);. Objects are destroyed when they go out of scope - to explicitly destroy an object you can use unset($object); or $object = Null;
You invoke a method on an object using $object->method_name().
The Xapian::Stem, Xapian::QueryParser, and Xapian::TermGenerator classes all assume text is in UTF-8. If you want to index strings in a different encoding, use the PHP iconv function to convert them to UTF-8 before passing them to Xapian, and when reading values back from Xapian.
Xapian's iterators (except XapianLatLongCoordsIterator) are wrapped as PHP iterators, so can be used in foreach.
There's one important thing to beware of currently - the rewind() method on XapianPositionIterator, XapianPostingIterator, XapianTermIterator and XapianValueIterator currently does nothing. We can't make it simply throw an exception, as foreach calls rewind() before iteration starts - each iterator needs to track if next() has been called yet, and we've not yet implemented machinery for that. This doesn't affect the standard pattern of iterating once with foreach, but if you want to iterate a second time, you can't reuse the iterator (but it will currently fail quietly).
You can safely call rewind() on XapianESetIterator and XapianMSetIterator.
The current() method returns the result of dereferencing the iterator in C++ (e.g. for a TermIterator, it returns the term as a string - see the section below for more details) and the key() method returns the iterator object, which you can call other methods on, for example:
foreach ($db->allterms_begin() as $k => $term) { print "{$k->get_termfreq()}\t$term\n"; }
As well as the standard PHP iterator methods, MSetIterator and ESetIterator also support prev() to go back one place.
C++ iterators are often dereferenced to get information, eg (*it). With PHP these are all mapped to named methods, as follows:
Iterator | Dereferencing method |
---|---|
PositionIterator | get_termpos() |
PostingIterator | get_docid() |
TermIterator | get_term() |
ValueIterator | get_value() |
MSetIterator | get_docid() |
ESetIterator | get_term() |
Other methods, such as MSetIterator::get_document(), are available unchanged.
MSet objects have some additional methods to simplify access (these work using the C++ array dereferencing):
Method name | Explanation |
---|---|
get_hit(index) | returns MSetIterator at index |
get_document_percentage(index) | convert_to_percent(get_hit(index)) |
get_document(index) | get_hit(index)->get_document() |
get_docid(index) | get_hit(index)->get_docid() |
Constants are wrapped as const members of the appropriate class. So Xapian::DB_CREATE_OR_OPEN is available as Xapian::DB_CREATE_OR_OPEN, Xapian::Query::OP_OR is available as XapianQuery::OP_OR, and so on.
Non-class functions are wrapped in the natural way, so the C++ function Xapian::version_string is wrapped under the same name in PHP.
In C++ there's a Xapian::Query constructor which takes a query operator and start/end iterators specifying a number of terms or queries, plus an optional parameter. In PHP, this is wrapped to accept an array listing the terms and/or queries (you can specify a mixture of terms and queries if you wish) For example:
$subq = new XapianQuery(XapianQuery::OP_AND, "hello", "world"); $q = new XapianQuery(XapianQuery::OP_AND, array($subq, "foo", new XapianQuery("bar", 2)));
These are wrapped as static methods XapianQuery::MatchAll() and XapianQuery::MatchNothing().
If you want to be compatible with version 1.2.x of Xapian's PHP5 bindings, you can continue to use new XapianQuery('') for MatchAll and new XapianQuery() for MatchNothing.
There is an additional method get_matching_terms() which takes an MSetIterator and returns a list of terms in the current query which match the document given by that iterator. You may find this more convenient than using the TermIterator directly.