previous attempt was flawed (but maked by Reset() method)
new approach is to do this work in the Reset() method itself,
logically this is where it belongs.
but further we acknowledge that IndexInternalID []byte lifetime
lives beyond the TermFieldDoc, so another copy is made into
the DocumentMatch. Although this introduces yet another copy
the theory being tested is that it allows each of these
structuress to reuse memory without additional allocation.
instead of separate DocumentMatch/DocumentMatchInternal
rules are simple, everything operates on the IndexInternalID field
until the results are returned, then ID is set correctly
the IndexInternalID field is not exported to JSON
IndexInternalID is now []byte
this is still opaque, and should still work for any future
index implementations as it is a least common denominator
choice, all implementations must internally represent the
id as []byte at some point for storage to disk
index id's are now opaque (until finally returned to top-level user)
- the TermFieldDoc's returned by TermFieldReader no longer contain doc id
- instead they return an opaque IndexInternalID
- items returned are still in the "natural index order"
- but that is no longer guaranteed to be "doc id order"
- correct behavior requires that they all follow the same order
- but not any particular order
- new API FinalizeDocID which converts index internal ID's to public string ID
- APIs used internally which previously took doc id now take IndexInternalID
- that is DocumentFieldTerms() and DocumentFieldTermsForFields()
- however, APIs that are used externally do not reflect this change
- that is Document()
- DocumentIDReader follows the same changes, but this is less obvious
- behavior clarified, used to iterate doc ids, BUT NOT in doc id order
- method STILL available to iterate doc ids in range
- but again, you won't get them in any meaningful order
- new method to iterate actual doc ids from list of possible ids
- this was introduced to make the DocIDSearcher continue working
searchers now work with the new opaque index internal doc ids
- they return new DocumentMatchInternal (which does not have string ID)
scorerers also work with these opaque index internal doc ids
- they return DocumentMatchInternal (which does not have string ID)
collectors now also perform a final step of converting the final result
- they STILL return traditional DocumentMatch (with string ID)
- but they now also require an IndexReader (so that they can do the conversion)
This optimization changes the search.Search.Next() interface API,
adding an optional, pre-allocated *DocumentMatch parameter.
When it's non-nil, the TermSearcher and TermQueryScorer will use that
pre-allocated *DocumentMatch, instead of allocating a brand new
DocumentMatch instance.
this started initially to relocate highlighting into
a self contained package, which would then also use
the registry
however, it turned into a much larger refactor in
order to avoid cyclic imports
now facets, searchers, scorers and collectors
are also broken out into subpackages of search