Enables two new parameters when building indices:
* `name`: Allows explicitly setting a name on the index. Default is
`{col_name}_idx`.
* `train` (default `True`): When set to `False`, an empty index will be
immediately created.
The upgrade of Lance means there are also additional behaviors from
cd76a993b8:
* When a scalar index is created on a Table, it will be kept around even
if all rows are deleted or updated.
* Scalar indices can be created on empty tables. They will default to
`train=False` if the table is empty.
---------
Co-authored-by: Weston Pace <weston.pace@gmail.com>
These operations have existed in lance for a long while and many users
need to drop down to lance for this capability. This PR adds the API and
implements it using filters (e.g. `_rowid IN (...)`) so that in doesn't
currently add any load to `BaseTable`. I'm not sure that is sustainable
as base table implementations may want to specialize how they handle
this method. However, I figure it is a good starting point.
In addition, unlike Lance, this API does not currently guarantee
anything about the order of the take results. This is necessary for the
fallback filter approach to work (SQL filters cannot guarantee result
order)
Thanks for all your work.
The docstring for `OptimizeOptions ` seems to reference a non-existent
method on `Table`. I believe this is the correct example for
`cleanupOlderThan`.
This also appears in the generated docs, but I assume they live
downstream from this code?
return version info for all write operations (add, update, merge_insert
and column modification operations)
<!-- This is an auto-generated comment: release notes by coderabbit.ai
-->
## Summary by CodeRabbit
- **New Features**
- Table modification operations (add, update, delete, merge,
add/alter/drop columns) now return detailed result objects including
version numbers and operation statistics.
- Result objects provide clearer feedback such as rows affected and new
table version after each operation.
- **Documentation**
- Updated documentation to describe new result objects and their fields
for all relevant table operations.
- Added documentation for new result interfaces and updated method
return types in Node.js and Python APIs.
- **Tests**
- Enhanced test coverage to assert correctness of returned versioning
and operation metadata after table modifications.
<!-- end of auto-generated comment: release notes by coderabbit.ai -->
* Add a new "table stats" API to expose basic table and fragment
statistics with local and remote table implementations
### Questions
* This is using `calculate_data_stats` to determine total bytes in the
table. This seems like a potentially expensive operation - are there any
concerns about performance for large datasets?
### Notes
* bytes_on_disk seems to be stored at the column level but there does
not seem to be a way to easily calculate total bytes per fragment. This
may need to be added in lance before we can support fragment size
(bytes) statistics.
<!-- This is an auto-generated comment: release notes by coderabbit.ai
-->
## Summary by CodeRabbit
- **New Features**
- Added a method to retrieve comprehensive table statistics, including
total rows, index counts, storage size, and detailed fragment size
metrics such as minimum, maximum, mean, and percentiles.
- Enabled fetching of table statistics from remote sources through
asynchronous requests.
- Extended table interfaces across Python, Rust, and Node.js to support
synchronous and asynchronous retrieval of table statistics.
- **Tests**
- Introduced tests to verify the accuracy of the new table statistics
feature for both populated and empty tables.
<!-- end of auto-generated comment: release notes by coderabbit.ai -->
add the tag related API to list existing tags, attach tag to a version,
update the tag version, delete tag, get the version of the tag, and
checkout the version that the tag bounded to.
<!-- This is an auto-generated comment: release notes by coderabbit.ai
-->
## Summary by CodeRabbit
- **New Features**
- Introduced table version tagging, allowing users to create, update,
delete, and list human-readable tags for specific table versions.
- Enabled checking out a table by either version number or tag name.
- Added new interfaces for tag management in both Python and Node.js
APIs, supporting synchronous and asynchronous workflows.
- **Bug Fixes**
- None.
- **Documentation**
- Updated documentation to describe the new tagging features, including
usage examples.
- **Tests**
- Added comprehensive tests for tag creation, updating, deletion,
listing, and version checkout by tag in both Python and Node.js
environments.
<!-- end of auto-generated comment: release notes by coderabbit.ai -->
* Add new wait_for_index() table operation that polls until indices are
created/fully indexed
* Add an optional wait timeout parameter to all create_index operations
* Python and NodeJS interfaces
<!-- This is an auto-generated comment: release notes by coderabbit.ai
-->
## Summary by CodeRabbit
## Summary by CodeRabbit
- **New Features**
- Added optional waiting for index creation completion with configurable
timeout.
- Introduced methods to poll and wait for indices to be fully built
across sync and async tables.
- Extended index creation APIs to accept a wait timeout parameter.
- **Bug Fixes**
- Added a new timeout error variant for improved error reporting on
index operations.
- **Tests**
- Added tests covering successful index readiness waiting, timeout
scenarios, and missing index cases.
<!-- end of auto-generated comment: release notes by coderabbit.ai -->
<!-- This is an auto-generated comment: release notes by coderabbit.ai
-->
## Summary by CodeRabbit
- **New Features**
- Added the ability to prewarm (load into memory) table indexes via new
methods in Python, Node.js, and Rust APIs, potentially reducing
cold-start query latency.
- **Bug Fixes**
- Ensured prewarming an index does not interfere with subsequent search
operations.
- **Tests**
- Introduced new test cases to verify full-text search index creation,
prewarming, and search functionalities in both Python and Node.js.
- **Chores**
- Updated dependencies for improved compatibility and performance.
<!-- end of auto-generated comment: release notes by coderabbit.ai -->
---------
Co-authored-by: Lu Qiu <luqiujob@gmail.com>
<!-- This is an auto-generated comment: release notes by coderabbit.ai
-->
## Summary by CodeRabbit
- **New Features**
- Enhanced full-text search capabilities with support for phrase
queries, fuzzy matching, boosting, and multi-column matching.
- Search methods now accept full-text query objects directly, improving
query flexibility and precision.
- Python and JavaScript SDKs updated to handle full-text queries
seamlessly, including async search support.
- **Tests**
- Added comprehensive tests covering fuzzy search, phrase search, and
boosted queries to ensure robust full-text search functionality.
- **Documentation**
- Updated query class documentation to reflect new constructor options
and removal of deprecated methods for clarity and simplicity.
<!-- end of auto-generated comment: release notes by coderabbit.ai -->
---------
Signed-off-by: BubbleCal <bubble-cal@outlook.com>
Previously, users could only specify new data types in `alterColumns` as
strings:
```ts
await tbl.alterColumns([
path: "price",
dataType: "float"
]);
```
But this has some problems:
1. It wasn't clear what were valid types
2. It was impossible to specify nested types, like lists and vector
columns.
This PR changes it to take an Arrow data type, similar to how the Python
API works. This allows casting vector types:
```ts
await tbl.alterColumns([
{
path: "vector",
dataType: new arrow.FixedSizeList(
2,
new arrow.Field("item", new arrow.Float16(), false),
),
},
]);
```
Closes#2185
* Make `npm run docs` fail if there are any warnings. This will catch
items missing from the API reference.
* Add a check in our CI to make sure `npm run dos` runs without warnings
and doesn't generate any new files (indicating it might be out-of-date.
* Hide constructors that aren't user facing.
* Remove unused enum `WriteMode`.
Closes#2068
* `createTable()` now saves embeddings in the schema metadata.
Previously, it would drop them. (`createEmptyTable()` was already tested
and worked.)
* `mergeInsert()` now uses embeddings.
Fixes#2066
The new V2 manifest path scheme makes discovering the latest version of
a table constant time on object stores, regardless of the number of
versions in the table. See benchmarks in the PR here:
https://github.com/lancedb/lance/pull/2798Closes#1583
Lance now supports FTS, so add it into lancedb Python, TypeScript and
Rust SDKs.
For Python, we still use tantivy based FTS by default because the lance
FTS index now misses some features of tantivy.
For Python:
- Support to create lance based FTS index
- Support to specify columns for full text search (only available for
lance based FTS index)
For TypeScript:
- Change the search method so that it can accept both string and vector
- Support full text search
For Rust
- Support full text search
The others:
- Update the FTS doc
BREAKING CHANGE:
- for Python, this renames the attached score column of FTS from "score"
to "_score", this could be a breaking change for users that rely the
scores
---------
Signed-off-by: BubbleCal <bubble-cal@outlook.com>
so this was annoying me when writing the docs.
for a `search` query, one needed to chain `async` calls.
```ts
const res = await (await tbl.search("greetings")).toArray()
```
now the promise will be deferred until the query is collected, leading
to a more functional API
```ts
const res = await tbl.search("greetings").toArray()
```
while adding some more docs & examples for the new js sdk, i ran across
a few compatibility issues when using different arrow versions. This
should fix those issues.
The optimize function is pretty crucial for getting good performance
when building a large scale dataset but it was only exposed in rust
(many sync python users are probably doing this via to_lance today)
This PR adds the optimize function to nodejs and to python.
I left the function marked experimental because I think there will
likely be changes to optimization (e.g. if we add features like
"optimize on write"). I also only exposed the `cleanup_older_than`
configuration parameter since this one is very commonly used and the
rest have sensible defaults and we don't really know why we would
recommend different values for these defaults anyways.
I've been noticing a lot of friction with the current toolchain for
'/nodejs'. Particularly with the usage of eslint and prettier.
[Biome](https://biomejs.dev/) is an all in one formatter & linter that
replaces the need for two different ones that can potentially clash with
one another.
I've been using it in the
[nodejs-polars](https://github.com/pola-rs/nodejs-polars) repo for quite
some time & have found it much more pleasant to work with.
---
One other small change included in this PR:
use [ts-jest](https://www.npmjs.com/package/ts-jest) so we can run our
tests without having to rebuild typescript code first
The eslint rules specify some formatting requirements that are rather
strict and conflict with vscode's default formatter. I was unable to get
auto-formatting to setup correctly. Also, eslint has quite recently
[given up on
formatting](https://eslint.org/blog/2023/10/deprecating-formatting-rules/)
and recommends using a 3rd party formatter.
This PR adds prettier as the formatter. It restores the eslint rules to
their defaults. This does mean we now have the "no explicit any" check
back on. I know that rule is pedantic but it did help me catch a few
corner cases in type testing that weren't covered in the current code.
Leaving in draft as this is dependent on other PRs.
In order to add support for `add` we needed to migrate the rust `Table`
trait to a `Table` struct and `TableInternal` trait (similar to the way
the connection is designed).
While doing this we also cleaned up some inconsistencies between the
SDKs:
* Python and Node are garbage collected languages and it can be
difficult to trigger something to be freed. The convention for these
languages is to have some kind of close method. I added a close method
to both the table and connection which will drop the underlying rust
object.
* We made significant improvements to table creation in
cc5f2136a6
for the `node` SDK. I copied these changes to the `nodejs` SDK.
* The nodejs tables were using fs to create tmp directories and these
were not getting cleaned up. This is mostly harmless but annoying and so
I changed it up a bit to ensure we cleanup tmp directories.
* ~~countRows in the node SDK was returning `bigint`. I changed it to
return `number`~~ (this actually happened in a previous PR)
* Tables and connections now implement `std::fmt::Display` which is
hooked into python's `__repr__`. Node has no concept of a regular "to
string" function and so I added a `display` method.
* Python method signatures are changing so that optional parameters are
always `Optional[foo] = None` instead of something like `foo = False`.
This is because we want those defaults to be in rust whenever possible
(though we still need to mention the default in documentation).
* I changed the python `AsyncConnection/AsyncTable` classes from
abstract classes with a single implementation to just classes because we
no longer have the remote implementation in python.
Note: this does NOT add the `add` function to the remote table. This PR
was already large enough, and the remote implementation is unique
enough, that I am going to do all the remote stuff at a later date (we
should have the structure in place and correct so there shouldn't be any
refactor concerns)
---------
Co-authored-by: Will Jones <willjones127@gmail.com>
This also renames the new experimental node package to lancedb. The
classic node package remains named vectordb.
The goal here is to avoid introducing piecemeal breaking changes to the
vectordb crate. Instead, once the new API is stabilized, we will
officially release the lancedb crate and deprecate the vectordb crate.
The same pattern will eventually happen with the npm package vectordb.