Sign Up

Sign Up to our social questions and Answers Engine to ask questions, answer people’s questions, and connect with other people.

Have an account? Sign In

Have an account? Sign In Now

Sign In

Login to our social questions & Answers Engine to ask questions answer people’s questions & connect with other people.

Sign Up Here

Forgot Password?

Don't have account, Sign Up Here

Forgot Password

Lost your password? Please enter your email address. You will receive a link and will create a new password via email.

Have an account? Sign In Now

You must login to ask a question.

Forgot Password?

Need An Account, Sign Up Here

Please briefly explain why you feel this question should be reported.

Please briefly explain why you feel this answer should be reported.

Please briefly explain why you feel this user should be reported.

Sign InSign Up

The Archive Base

The Archive Base Logo The Archive Base Logo

The Archive Base Navigation

  • SEARCH
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Blog
  • Contact Us
Search
Ask A Question

Mobile menu

Close
Ask a Question
  • Home
  • Add group
  • Groups page
  • Feed
  • User Profile
  • Communities
  • Questions
    • New Questions
    • Trending Questions
    • Must read Questions
    • Hot Questions
  • Polls
  • Tags
  • Badges
  • Buy Points
  • Users
  • Help
  • Buy Theme
  • SEARCH
Home/ Questions/Q 3281976
In Process

The Archive Base Latest Questions

Editorial Team
  • 0
Editorial Team
Asked: May 17, 20262026-05-17T19:52:33+00:00 2026-05-17T19:52:33+00:00

I’m working on a system that performs matching on large sets of records based

  • 0

I’m working on a system that performs matching on large sets of records based on strings and numeric ranges, and date ranges. The String matches are mostly exact matches as far as I can tell, as opposed to less exact full text search type results that I understand lucene is generally designed for. Numeric precision is important as the data concerns prices.

I noticed that Lucene recently added some support for numeric range searching but it’s not something it’s originally designed for.

Currently the system uses procedural SQL to do the matching and the limits are being reached as to the scalability of the system. I’m researching ways to scale the system horizontally and using search engine technology seems like a possibility, given that there are technologies that can scale to very large data sets while performing very fast search results. I’d like to investigate if it’s possible to take a lot of load off the database by doing the matching with the lucene generated metadata without hitting the database for the full records until the matching rules have determined what should be retrieved. I would like to aim eventually for near real time results although we are a long way from that at this point.

My question is as follows: Is it likely that Lucene would perform many times faster and scale to greater data sets more cheaply than an RDBMS for this type of indexing and searching?

  • 1 1 Answer
  • 0 Views
  • 0 Followers
  • 0
Share
  • Facebook
  • Report

Leave an answer
Cancel reply

You must login to add an answer.

Forgot Password?

Need An Account, Sign Up Here

1 Answer

  • Voted
  • Oldest
  • Recent
  • Random
  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-17T19:52:33+00:00Added an answer on May 17, 2026 at 7:52 pm
    1. Lucene stores its numeric stuff as a trie; a SQL implementation will probably store it as a b-tree or an r-tree. The way Lucene stores its trie and SQL uses an R-tree are pretty similar, and I would be surprised if you saw a huge difference (unless you leveraged some of the scalability that comes from Solr).
    2. As a general question of the performance of Lucene vs. SQL fulltext, a good study I’ve found is: Jing, Y., C. Zhang, and X. Wang. “An Empirical Study on Performance Comparison of Lucene and Relational Database.” In Communication Software and Networks, 2009. ICCSN’09. International Conference on, 336-340. IEEE, 2009.

    First, when executing
    exact query, the performance of Lucene is much better than
    that of unindexed-RDB, while is almost same as that of
    indexed-RDB. Second, when the wildcard query is a prefix
    query, then the indexed-RDB and Lucene both perform very
    well still by leveraging the index… Third, for combinational query, Lucene performs
    smoothly and usually costs little time, while the query time
    of RDB is related to the combinational search conditions and
    the number of indexed fields. If some fields in the
    combinational condition haven’t been indexed, search will
    cost much more time. Fourth, the query time of Lucene and
    unindexed-RDB has relations with the record complexity,
    but the indexed-RDB is nearly independent of it.

    In short, if you are doing a search like “select * where x = y”, it doesn’t matter which you use. The more clauses you add in (x = y OR (x = z AND y = x)…) the better Lucene becomes.

    They don’t really mention this, but a huge advantage of Lucene is all the built-in functionality: stemming, query parsing etc.

    • 0
    • Reply
    • Share
      Share
      • Share on Facebook
      • Share on Twitter
      • Share on LinkedIn
      • Share on WhatsApp
      • Report

Sidebar

Related Questions

I'm working with an upstream system that sometimes sends me text destined for HTML/XML
I have a string like this: La Torre Eiffel paragonata all’Everest What PHP function
I've got a string that has curly quotes in it. I'd like to replace
I'm parsing an RSS feed that has an ’ in it. SimpleXML turns this
I need a function that will clean a strings' special characters. I do NOT
link Im having trouble converting the html entites into html characters, (&# 8217;) i
That's pretty much it. I'm using Nokogiri to scrape a web page what has
I want to count how many characters a certain string has in PHP, but
I would like to count the length of a string with PHP. The string
For some reason, after submitting a string like this Jack’s Spindle from a text

Explore

  • Home
  • Add group
  • Groups page
  • Communities
  • Questions
    • New Questions
    • Trending Questions
    • Must read Questions
    • Hot Questions
  • Polls
  • Tags
  • Badges
  • Users
  • Help
  • SEARCH

Footer

© 2021 The Archive Base. All Rights Reserved
With Love by The Archive Base

Insert/edit link

Enter the destination URL

Or link to existing content

    No search term specified. Showing recent items. Search or use up and down arrow keys to select an item.