If you are looking for an alternative to Elasticsearch or Apache Solr, check out Quickwit, our distributed search engine built on top of Tantivy.
Tantivy is closer to Apache Lucene than to Elasticsearch or Apache Solr in the sense it is not an off-the-shelf search engine server, but rather a crate that can be used to build such a search engine.
Tantivy is, in fact, strongly inspired by Lucene's design.
The following benchmark breaks down the performance for different types of queries/collections.
Your mileage WILL vary depending on the nature of queries and their load.
Details about the benchmark can be found at this repository.
- Full-text search
- Configurable tokenizer (stemming available for 17 Latin languages) with third party support for Chinese (tantivy-jieba and cang-jie), Japanese (lindera, Vaporetto, and tantivy-tokenizer-tiny-segmenter) and Korean (lindera + lindera-ko-dic-builder)
- Fast (check out the 🐎 ✨ benchmark ✨ 🐎)
- Tiny startup time (<10ms), perfect for command-line tools
- BM25 scoring (the same as Lucene)
- Natural query language (e.g.
(michael AND jackson) OR "king of pop"
) - Phrase queries search (e.g.
"michael jackson"
) - Incremental indexing
- Multithreaded indexing (indexing English Wikipedia takes < 3 minutes on my desktop)
- Mmap directory
- SIMD integer compression when the platform/CPU includes the SSE2 instruction set
- Single valued and multivalued u64, i64, and f64 fast fields (equivalent of doc values in Lucene)
&[u8]
fast fields- Text, i64, u64, f64, dates, ip, bool, and hierarchical facet fields
- Compressed document store (LZ4, Zstd, None)
- Range queries
- Faceted search
- Configurable indexing (optional term frequency and position indexing)
- JSON Field
- Aggregation Collector: histogram, range buckets, average, and stats metrics
- LogMergePolicy with deletes
- Searcher Warmer API
- Cheesy logo with a horse
Distributed search is out of the scope of Tantivy, but if you are looking for this feature, check out Quickwit.
Tantivy works on stable Rust and supports Linux, macOS, and Windows.
- Tantivy's simple search example
- tantivy-cli and its tutorial -
tantivy-cli
is an actual command-line interface that makes it easy for you to create a search engine, index documents, and search via the CLI or a small server with a REST API. It walks you through getting a Wikipedia search engine up and running in a few minutes. - Reference doc for the last released version
There are many ways to support this project.
- Use Tantivy and tell us about your experience on Discord or by email ([email protected])
- Report bugs
- Write a blog post
- Help with documentation by asking questions or submitting PRs
- Contribute code (you can join our Discord server)
- Talk about Tantivy around you
We use the GitHub Pull Request workflow: reference a GitHub ticket and/or include a comprehensive commit message when opening a PR. Feel free to update CHANGELOG.md with your contribution.
When implementing a tokenizer for tantivy depend on the tantivy-tokenizer-api
crate.
Tantivy compiles on stable Rust. To check out and run tests, you can simply run:
git clone https://github.com/quickwit-oss/tantivy.git
cd tantivy
cargo test
- Python → tantivy-py
- Ruby → tantiny
You can also find other bindings on GitHub but they may be less maintained.
- seshat: A matrix message database/indexer
- tantiny: Tiny full-text search for Ruby
- lnx: adaptable, typo tolerant search engine with a REST API
- and more!
- According to our search latency benchmark, Tantivy is approximately 2x faster than Lucene.
- Yes.
- Data in tantivy is immutable. To edit a document, the document needs to be deleted and reindexed.
- Documents will be searchable after a
commit
is called on anIndexWriter
. ExistingIndexReader
s will also need to be reloaded in order to reflect the changes. Finally, changes are only visible to newly acquiredSearcher
.