GSP
Quick Navigator

Search Site

Unix VPS
A - Starter
B - Basic
C - Preferred
D - Commercial
MPS - Dedicated
Previous VPSs
* Sign Up! *

Support
Contact Us
Online Help
Handbooks
Domain Status
Man Pages

FAQ
Virtual Servers
Pricing
Billing
Technical

Network
Facilities
Connectivity
Topology Map

Miscellaneous
Server Agreement
Year 2038
Credits
 

USA Flag

 

 

Man Pages
Paws::CloudSearchDomain(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Paws::CloudSearchDomain(3)

Paws::CloudSearchDomain - Perl Interface to AWS Amazon CloudSearch Domain

  use Paws;

  my $obj = Paws->service('CloudSearchDomain')->new;
  my $res = $obj->Method(
    Arg1 => $val1,
    Arg2 => [ 'V1', 'V2' ],
    # if Arg3 is an object, the HashRef will be used as arguments to the constructor
    # of the arguments type
    Arg3 => { Att1 => 'Val1' },
    # if Arg4 is an array of objects, the HashRefs will be passed as arguments to
    # the constructor of the arguments type
    Arg4 => [ { Att1 => 'Val1'  }, { Att1 => 'Val2' } ],
  );

You use the AmazonCloudSearch2013 API to upload documents to a search domain and search those documents.

The endpoints for submitting "UploadDocuments", "Search", and "Suggest" requests are domain-specific. To get the endpoints for your domain, use the Amazon CloudSearch configuration service "DescribeDomains" action. The domain endpoints are also displayed on the domain dashboard in the Amazon CloudSearch console. You submit suggest requests to the search endpoint.

For more information, see the Amazon CloudSearch Developer Guide.

Each argument is described in detail in: Paws::CloudSearchDomain::Search

Returns: a Paws::CloudSearchDomain::SearchResponse instance

Retrieves a list of documents that match the specified search criteria. How you specify the search criteria depends on which query parser you use. Amazon CloudSearch supports four query parsers:

  • "simple": search all "text" and "text-array" fields for the specified string. Search for phrases, individual terms, and prefixes.
  • "structured": search specific fields, construct compound queries using Boolean operators, and use advanced features such as term boosting and proximity searching.
  • "lucene": specify search criteria using the Apache Lucene query parser syntax.
  • "dismax": specify search criteria using the simplified subset of the Apache Lucene query parser syntax defined by the DisMax query parser.

For more information, see Searching Your Data in the Amazon CloudSearch Developer Guide.

The endpoint for submitting "Search" requests is domain-specific. You submit search requests to a domain's search endpoint. To get the search endpoint for your domain, use the Amazon CloudSearch configuration service "DescribeDomains" action. A domain's endpoints are also displayed on the domain dashboard in the Amazon CloudSearch console.

Each argument is described in detail in: Paws::CloudSearchDomain::Suggest

Returns: a Paws::CloudSearchDomain::SuggestResponse instance

Retrieves autocomplete suggestions for a partial query string. You can use suggestions enable you to display likely matches before users finish typing. In Amazon CloudSearch, suggestions are based on the contents of a particular text field. When you request suggestions, Amazon CloudSearch finds all of the documents whose values in the suggester field start with the specified query string. The beginning of the field must match the query string to be considered a match.

For more information about configuring suggesters and retrieving suggestions, see Getting Suggestions in the Amazon CloudSearch Developer Guide.

The endpoint for submitting "Suggest" requests is domain-specific. You submit suggest requests to a domain's search endpoint. To get the search endpoint for your domain, use the Amazon CloudSearch configuration service "DescribeDomains" action. A domain's endpoints are also displayed on the domain dashboard in the Amazon CloudSearch console.

Each argument is described in detail in: Paws::CloudSearchDomain::UploadDocuments

Returns: a Paws::CloudSearchDomain::UploadDocumentsResponse instance

Posts a batch of documents to a search domain for indexing. A document batch is a collection of add and delete operations that represent the documents you want to add, update, or delete from your domain. Batches can be described in either JSON or XML. Each item that you want Amazon CloudSearch to return as a search result (such as a product) is represented as a document. Every document has a unique ID and one or more fields that contain the data that you want to search and return in results. Individual documents cannot contain more than 1 MB of data. The entire batch cannot exceed 5 MB. To get the best possible upload performance, group add and delete operations in batches that are close the 5 MB limit. Submitting a large volume of single-document batches can overload a domain's document service.

The endpoint for submitting "UploadDocuments" requests is domain-specific. To get the document endpoint for your domain, use the Amazon CloudSearch configuration service "DescribeDomains" action. A domain's endpoints are also displayed on the domain dashboard in the Amazon CloudSearch console.

For more information about formatting your data for Amazon CloudSearch, see Preparing Your Data in the Amazon CloudSearch Developer Guide. For more information about uploading data for indexing, see Uploading Data in the Amazon CloudSearch Developer Guide.

This service class forms part of Paws

The source code is located here: https://github.com/pplu/aws-sdk-perl

Please report bugs to: https://github.com/pplu/aws-sdk-perl/issues

2015-08-06 perl v5.32.1

Search for    or go to Top of page |  Section 3 |  Main Index

Powered by GSP Visit the GSP FreeBSD Man Page Interface.
Output converted with ManDoc.