indxbib - make inverted index for bibliographic databases
indxbib |
[-w] [-c common-words-file]
[-d dir] [-f list-file]
[-h min-hash-table-size]
[-i excluded-fields]
[-k max-keys-per-record]
[-l min-key-length]
[-n threshold] [-o file]
[-t max-key-length] [file ...] |
indxbib makes an inverted index for the bibliographic
databases in each file for use with refer(1),
lookbib(1), and lkbib(1). Each created index is named
file.i; writing is done to a temporary file which is then renamed to
this. If no file operands are given on the command line because the
-f option has been used, and no -o option is given, the index
will be named Ind.i.
Bibliographic databases are divided into records by blank lines.
Within a record, each field starts with a % character at the
beginning of a line. Fields have a one letter name that follows the %
character.
The values set by the -c, -l, -n, and
-t options are stored in the index: when the index is searched, keys
will be discarded and truncated in a manner appropriate to these options;
the original keys will be used for verifying that any record found using the
index actually contains the keys. This means that a user of an index need
not know whether these options were used in the creation of the index,
provided that not all the keys to be searched for would have been discarded
during indexing and that the user supplies at least the part of each key
that would have remained after being truncated during indexing. The value
set by the -i option is also stored in the index and will be used in
verifying records found using the index.
--help displays a usage message, while -v and
--version show version information; all exit afterward.
- -c common-words-file
- Read the list of common words from common-words-file instead of
/usr/local/share/groff/1.23.0/eign.
- -d dir
- Use dir as the name of the directory to store in the index, instead
of that returned by getcwd(2). Typically, dir will be a
symbolic link whose target is the current working directory.
- -f list-file
- Read the files to be indexed from list-file. If list-file is
-, files will be read from the standard input stream. The -f
option can be given at most once.
- -h min-hash-table-size
- Use the first prime number greater than or equal to the argument for the
size of the hash table. Larger values will usually make searching faster,
but will make the index file larger and cause indxbib to use more
memory. The default hash table size is 997.
- -i excluded-fields
- Don't index the contents of fields whose names are in
excluded-fields. Field names are one character each. If this option
is not present, indxbib excludes fields X, Y, and
Z.
- -k max-keys-per-record
- Use no more keys per input record than specified in the argument. If this
option is not present, the maximum is 100.
- -l min-key-length
- Discard any key whose length in characters is shorter than the value of
the argument. If this option is not present, the minimum key length is
3.
- -n threshold
- Discard the threshold most common words from the common words file.
If this option is not present, the 100 most common words are
discarded.
- -o basename
- Name the index basename.i.
- -t max-key-length
- Truncate keys to max-key-length in characters. If this option is
not present, keys are truncated to 6 characters.
- -w
- Index whole files. Each file is a separate record.
- file.i
- index for file
- Ind.i
- default index name
- /usr/local/share/groff/1.23.0/eign
- contains the list of common words. The traditional name,
“eign”, is an abbreviation of “English ignored
[word list]”.
- indxbibXXXXXX
- temporary file
“Some Applications of Inverted Indexes on the Unix
System”, by M. E. Lesk, 1978, AT&T Bell Laboratories Computing
Science Technical Report No. 69.
refer(1), lkbib(1), lookbib(1)