Edit file File name : dump_index Content :#!/usr/bin/perl =head1 NAME dump_index - dump the contents of an index =head1 SYNOPSIS perl -w dump_index $DIR =head1 DESCRIPTION This will dump out an index in human readable form. It can be used when debugging to compare indexes create with Plucene to those created with Lucene. =cut use strict; use warnings; use Plucene::Index::Reader; my $where = shift @ARGV; my $r = Plucene::Index::Reader->open($where); no strict 'refs'; my @readers = (@{ $r->{readers} } ? @{ $r->{readers} } : $r); print "We have " . @readers . " readers\n"; if (@readers == 1 and $r->isa("Plucene::Index::SegmentsReader")) { die "But no segments\n"; } print "\n\nDocuments:\n"; for my $reader (@readers) { print "Segment " . $reader->{segment} . " has " . $reader->max_doc . " docs\n"; my @terms = $reader->terms; print "Fields:\n"; for my $field ($reader->field_infos->fields) { print "\t" . $field->number . ": " . $field->name; print " [indexed]" if $field->is_indexed; print "\n"; } print "Terms: \n"; my $td = $reader->term_docs; for my $t (@terms) { while ($t->next) { my $term = $t->term; print $term->field . ": " . $term->text . "\n"; $td->seek($term); my ($docs, $freqs) = $td->read; for (0 .. $#$docs) { print "\t Doc " . $docs->[$_] . " (" . $freqs->[$_] . " occurrences)\n"; } } } } print "Total documents: " . $r->max_doc . " in " . @readers . " segments\n"; Save