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haimantika mitra for Appwrite

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Building An Open Source Search App With Appwrite And Meilisearch

Imagine you are building an inventory or an ecommerce website or a social media of your own, what are the two major things you will have to deal with? A. Database B. Search engine

This article deals with building a simple app where we search for movies, to achieve this we use:
1. Meilisearch- for building the search and
2. Appwrite - for the backend to store data and run functions to automate the search


What is Appwrite?

Appwrite is a self-hosted backend-as-a-service platform that provides developers with all the core APIs required to build any application. Appwrite provides you with a set of APIs, tools, and a management console UI to help you build your apps a lot faster and in a much more secure way. Appwrite takes the heavy lifting for developers and handles user authentication and authorization, databases, file storage, cloud functions, webhooks, and much more!


What is Meilisearch?

Meilisearch is a powerful, fast, open-source, easy to use and deploy search engine. Both searching and indexing are highly customizable. Features such as typo-tolerance, filters, and synonyms are provided out-of-the-box. For more information about features go to our documentation


Prerequisites

Now that you have been introduced to Appwrite and Meilisearch, let’s start building with it. Before that, let’s make sure you have everything we need. Here’s the prerequisites:

  1. An IDE of your choice
  2. Latest version of Node.js
  3. Docker
  4. Appwrite installed
  5. Meilisearch installed

Building The Application

Let's get started building! Are you ready?

Getting Started With Meilisearch

For this demo, we used the meilisearch quickstart tutorial as a reference.

To install Meilisearch on your machine you can do it using Docker or a package manager depending on your OS.

Alternatively, you can also deploy Meillisearch on a cloud service

Note: Since I am on a Mac machine I used homebrew to install Meilisearch with the following command:



brew update && brew install meilisearch


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Getting Started With Appwrite

To install Appwrite you need to have Docker installed and then run the following command to install:



docker run -it --rm \ --volume /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock \ --volume "$(pwd)"/appwrite:/usr/src/code/appwrite:rw \ --entrypoint="install" \ appwrite/appwrite:0.15.3


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Alternatively, you can also go for one-click setups using Gitpod or Digital Ocean.


Creating a Project

  • After installing, Appwrite will be running on localhost and you should see a screen like this:
    Image description

  • Clicking on Create Project, enter Demo as the name and click on Create.

This is how your Appwrite console will look:
Image description

Next, let's set up the database and collection for the search application.


Creating a Database and Collection

A database in Appwrite is a group of collections for managing data. To create a database, visit the Database section:

  • Click on Create Database
  • Enter Movies as the name
  • Click Create Image description

For the collection:

  • Click on Create Collection
  • Enter Movie details as the name
  • Click Create

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We also want to configure permissions for the collection for read/write access. For Movie details, you’ll choose Document Level permissions. You can choose more granular permissions depending on your use case. The permissions page has more details on permissions so the user keeps ownership of their data.
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Creating Document Attributes

Attributes can be defined as strings, numbers, emails, and more.
To create an attribute:

  • Click on Create Attribute.
  • Select the type of Attribute to create.
  • Use the table below to create the necessary attributes for chat.
Attribute id Size
title 255
id 255
overview 10000
genres 255

Note- The attribute type will be string for all the attributes


Uploading Data to Appwrite

The movie data that we will use for this example is movies.json.

To upload it in Appwrite database we will be using a script.

Make a new dataWriter.js file and paste the following code:



const { Client, Databases } = require("node-appwrite");
const fs = require("fs");
const movies = require("./movies.json");
const dotenv = require('dotenv');

// Init SDK
let client = new Client();
dotenv.config();

client
 .setEndpoint(process.env.APPWRITE_ENDPOINT) // Your API Endpoint
 .setProject(process.env.APPWRITE_PROJECTID) // Your project ID
 .setKey(process.env.APPWRITE_KEY) // Your secret API key
 .setSelfSigned(); // Use only on dev mode with a self-signed SSL cert

let databases = new Databases(client, "YOUR_DATABASE_ID");

//let promise = database.getDocument('627e9b5e008ffd8382ff', '6283ccb7773a9474319d')
// Run this until you are happy with the number of documents
const movieWrite = async () => {
 console.log('starting addition of documents to db')

 for (const movie of movies) {
   const response = await databases.createDocument("YOUR_COLLECTION_ID", String(Math.random()), {
     title: String(movie.title || Math.random()),
     id: String(movie.id || Math.random()),
     overview: String(movie.overview || Math.random()),
     genres: String(movie.genres || Math.random()),
   })
   console.log(`Added ${movie.title}`, response);
   await new Promise(resolve => setTimeout(resolve, 100));
 }
}

movieWrite();


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Storing your Appwrite secrets

Make a .env file as the following and put in your Appwrite secrets there, make sure to git ignore this file while committing :



APPWRITE_ENDPOINT=http://localhost/v1
APPWRITE_PROJECTID=meili-example
APPWRITE_KEY=find-this-in-project-settings


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Note - You will get Appwrite secrets from Settings in the left pane and you need to generate an API KEY from the API Keys option on the left.


Creating an Appwrite Function

To create Appwrite function, we use the Appwrite CLI for easy deployment.

  • Login to your Appwrite account using the command appwrite login
  • Enter your existing Appwrite project using the command appwrite init project and choose the project you want to.
  • Create a new node.js function or fork our repository and use the command appwrite deploy function
  • Choose the add-to-meilisearch function and it will be added to your project

Head on to your Appwrite console and click on Functions, this is what you will see:

Image description


Configuring the Appwrite Function

Now that the function is ready on Appwrite console, to execute it, we need to add some variable.

  • Go to Settings
  • Scroll down to Variables and fill in data according to the below table:
Key Value
APPWRITE_FUNCTION_ENDPOINT http://yourip/v1
APPWRITE_FUNCTION_PROJECT_ID Put in your function id
APPWRITE_FUNCTION_API_KEY Put in your API KEY
APPWRITE_MEILISEARCH_HOST http://yourip:7700
APPWRITE_MEILISEARCH_KEY Put in the ADMIN API KEY that you get from here
  • Once the above variables are set, your function is ready to run

Building The Search App

To build the frontend of the app we use the following code, in an index.html file:



<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
 <head>
   <meta charset="utf-8" />
   <link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/@meilisearch/instant-meilisearch/templates/basic_search.css" />
 </head>
 <body>
   <div class="wrapper">
     <div id="searchbox" focus></div>
     <div id="hits"></div>
   </div>
 </body>
 <script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/@meilisearch/instant-meilisearch@0.8.1/dist/instant-meilisearch.umd.min.js"></script>
 <script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/instantsearch.js@4"></script>
 <script>
   const search = instantsearch({
     indexName: "movie",
     searchClient: instantMeiliSearch(
       "http://206.189.206.205",
       "3ca53aec3885eb48b4d430607dabc5515ea10e4d025319a94eccb6f8d6931823"
     )
     });
     search.addWidgets([
       instantsearch.widgets.searchBox({
         container: "#searchbox"
       }),
       instantsearch.widgets.configure({ hitsPerPage: 8 }),
       instantsearch.widgets.hits({
         container: "#hits",
         templates: {
         item: `
           <div>
           <div class="hit-name">
                 {{#helpers.highlight}}{ "attribute": "title" }{{/helpers.highlight}}
           </div>
           </div>
         `
         }
       })
     ]);
     search.start();
 </script>
</html>


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Fetching Data From Appwrite To MeiliSearch

This the final step of the demo, where we bring in all the bits and pieces from above. So far, we have:

  1. A database up and running in Appwrite - it contains the data that we will use to search the contents
  2. A meilisearch instance running, ready to search
  3. A simple frontend UI
  4. An Appwrite Function running in background which we use to search for movies

In this step, we will trigger the Appwrite function which will fetch data from Appwrite and Meilisearch will use this data to search in our simple application that we built in the above step.

To able able to do that, an additional step will be required in the function:

  • Adding database.create event, and adding it to your json file, so that every new data added shows up in the search result

Image description


Testing the Application

Before testing the application, make sure you have the following things ready:

  1. Appwrite up and running
  2. Meilisearch running
  3. The frontend built using the code in index.html
  4. The dataWrite.js file ready to upload data to Appwrite
  5. An .env file containing all Appwrite secrets
  6. Appwrite function ready

Now you need to run the ‘dataWriter.js` file and the Appwrite function running in the background will be pushing the data, which Meilisearch will use to search.

You should see the result on: http://localhost:7700


Ending Notes

If you want to build your own search app, you can find the entire code here

Liked what we built? Here's some resources:

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