Azure.Search.Documents 11.7.0-beta.1

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This is a prerelease version of Azure.Search.Documents.
dotnet add package Azure.Search.Documents --version 11.7.0-beta.1                
NuGet\Install-Package Azure.Search.Documents -Version 11.7.0-beta.1                
This command is intended to be used within the Package Manager Console in Visual Studio, as it uses the NuGet module's version of Install-Package.
<PackageReference Include="Azure.Search.Documents" Version="11.7.0-beta.1" />                
For projects that support PackageReference, copy this XML node into the project file to reference the package.
paket add Azure.Search.Documents --version 11.7.0-beta.1                
#r "nuget: Azure.Search.Documents, 11.7.0-beta.1"                
#r directive can be used in F# Interactive and Polyglot Notebooks. Copy this into the interactive tool or source code of the script to reference the package.
// Install Azure.Search.Documents as a Cake Addin
#addin nuget:?package=Azure.Search.Documents&version=11.7.0-beta.1&prerelease

// Install Azure.Search.Documents as a Cake Tool
#tool nuget:?package=Azure.Search.Documents&version=11.7.0-beta.1&prerelease                

Azure AI Search client library for .NET

Azure AI Search (formerly known as "Azure Cognitive Search") is an AI-powered information retrieval platform that helps developers build rich search experiences and generative AI apps that combine large language models with enterprise data.

The Azure AI Search service is well suited for the following application scenarios:

  • Consolidate varied content types into a single searchable index. To populate an index, you can push JSON documents that contain your content, or if your data is already in Azure, create an indexer to pull in data automatically.
  • Attach skillsets to an indexer to create searchable content from images and unstructured documents. A skillset leverages APIs from Azure AI Services for built-in OCR, entity recognition, key phrase extraction, language detection, text translation, and sentiment analysis. You can also add custom skills to integrate external processing of your content during data ingestion.
  • In a search client application, implement query logic and user experiences similar to commercial web search engines and chat-style apps.

Use the Azure.Search.Documents client library to:

  • Submit queries using vector, keyword, and hybrid query forms.
  • Implement filtered queries for metadata, geospatial search, faceted navigation, or to narrow results based on filter criteria.
  • Create and manage search indexes.
  • Upload and update documents in the search index.
  • Create and manage indexers that pull data from Azure into an index.
  • Create and manage skillsets that add AI enrichment to data ingestion.
  • Create and manage analyzers for advanced text analysis or multi-lingual content.
  • Optimize results through semantic ranking and scoring profiles to factor in business logic or freshness.

Source code | Package (NuGet) | API reference documentation | REST API documentation | Product documentation | Samples

Getting started

Install the package

Install the Azure AI Search client library for .NET with NuGet:

dotnet add package Azure.Search.Documents

Prerequisites

You need an Azure subscription and a search service to use this package.

To create a new search service, you can use the Azure portal, Azure PowerShell, or the Azure CLI. Here's an example using the Azure CLI to create a free instance for getting started:

az search service create --name <mysearch> --resource-group <mysearch-rg> --sku free --location westus

See choosing a pricing tier for more information about available options.

Authenticate the client

To interact with the search service, you'll need to create an instance of the appropriate client class: SearchClient for searching indexed documents, SearchIndexClient for managing indexes, or SearchIndexerClient for crawling data sources and loading search documents into an index. To instantiate a client object, you'll need an endpoint and Azure roles or an API key. You can refer to the documentation for more information on supported authenticating approaches with the search service.

Get an API Key

An API key can be an easier approach to start with because it doesn't require pre-existing role assignments.

You can get the endpoint and an API key from the search service in the Azure portal. Please refer the documentation for instructions on how to get an API key.

Alternatively, you can use the following Azure CLI command to retrieve the API key from the search service:

az search admin-key show --service-name <mysearch> --resource-group <mysearch-rg>

There are two types of keys used to access your search service: admin (read-write) and query (read-only) keys. Restricting access and operations in client apps is essential to safeguarding the search assets on your service. Always use a query key rather than an admin key for any query originating from a client app.

Note: The example Azure CLI snippet above retrieves an admin key so it's easier to get started exploring APIs, but it should be managed carefully.

Create a SearchClient

To instantiate the SearchClient, you'll need the endpoint, API key and index name:

string indexName = "nycjobs";

// Get the service endpoint and API key from the environment
Uri endpoint = new Uri(Environment.GetEnvironmentVariable("SEARCH_ENDPOINT"));
string key = Environment.GetEnvironmentVariable("SEARCH_API_KEY");

// Create a client
AzureKeyCredential credential = new AzureKeyCredential(key);
SearchClient client = new SearchClient(endpoint, indexName, credential);
Create a client using Microsoft Entra ID authentication

You can also create a SearchClient, SearchIndexClient, or SearchIndexerClient using Microsoft Entra ID authentication. Your user or service principal must be assigned the "Search Index Data Reader" role. Using the DefaultAzureCredential you can authenticate a service using Managed Identity or a service principal, authenticate as a developer working on an application, and more all without changing code. Please refer the documentation for instructions on how to connect to Azure AI Search using Azure role-based access control (Azure RBAC).

Before you can use the DefaultAzureCredential, or any credential type from Azure.Identity, you'll first need to install the Azure.Identity package.

To use DefaultAzureCredential with a client ID and secret, you'll need to set the AZURE_TENANT_ID, AZURE_CLIENT_ID, and AZURE_CLIENT_SECRET environment variables; alternatively, you can pass those values to the ClientSecretCredential also in Azure.Identity.

Make sure you use the right namespace for DefaultAzureCredential at the top of your source file:

using Azure.Identity;

Then you can create an instance of DefaultAzureCredential and pass it to a new instance of your client:

string indexName = "nycjobs";

// Get the service endpoint from the environment
Uri endpoint = new Uri(Environment.GetEnvironmentVariable("SEARCH_ENDPOINT"));
DefaultAzureCredential credential = new DefaultAzureCredential();

// Create a client
SearchClient client = new SearchClient(endpoint, indexName, credential);

ASP.NET Core

To inject SearchClient as a dependency in an ASP.NET Core app, first install the package Microsoft.Extensions.Azure. Then register the client in the Startup.ConfigureServices method:

public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services)
{
    services.AddAzureClients(builder =>
    {
        builder.AddSearchClient(Configuration.GetSection("SearchClient"));
    });

    services.AddControllers();
}

To use the preceding code, add this to your configuration:

{
    "SearchClient": {
      "endpoint": "https://<resource-name>.search.windows.net",
      "indexname": "nycjobs"
    }
}

You'll also need to provide your resource key to authenticate the client, but you shouldn't be putting that information in the configuration. Instead, when in development, use User-Secrets. Add the following to secrets.json:

{
    "SearchClient": {
      "credential": { "key": "<you resource key>" }
    }
}

When running in production, it's preferable to use environment variables:

SEARCH__CREDENTIAL__KEY="..."

Or use other secure ways of storing secrets like Azure Key Vault.

For more details about Dependency Injection in ASP.NET Core apps, see Dependency injection with the Azure SDK for .NET.

Key concepts

An Azure AI Search service contains one or more indexes that provide persistent storage of searchable data in the form of JSON documents. (If you're brand new to search, you can make a very rough analogy between indexes and database tables.) The Azure.Search.Documents client library exposes operations on these resources through three main client types.

Azure AI Search provides two powerful features:

Semantic ranking

Semantic ranking enhances the quality of search results for text-based queries. By enabling semantic ranking on your search service, you can improve the relevance of search results in two ways:

  • It applies secondary ranking to the initial result set, promoting the most semantically relevant results to the top.
  • It extracts and returns captions and answers in the response, which can be displayed on a search page to enhance the user's search experience.

To learn more about Semantic Search, you can refer to the sample.

Additionally, for more comprehensive information about Semantic Search, including its concepts and usage, you can refer to the documentation. The documentation provides in-depth explanations and guidance on leveraging the power of Semantic Search in Azure Cognitive Search.

Vector search is an information retrieval technique that uses numeric representations of searchable documents and query strings. By searching for numeric representations of content that are most similar to the numeric query, vector search can find relevant matches, even if the exact terms of the query are not present in the index. Moreover, vector search can be applied to various types of content, including images and videos and translated text, not just same-language text.

To learn how to index vector fields and perform vector search, you can refer to the sample. This sample provides detailed guidance on indexing vector fields and demonstrates how to perform vector search.

Additionally, for more comprehensive information about vector search, including its concepts and usage, you can refer to the documentation. The documentation provides in-depth explanations and guidance on leveraging the power of vector search in Azure AI Search.

The Azure.Search.Documents client library (v11) provides APIs for data plane operations. The previous Microsoft.Azure.Search client library (v10) is now retired. It has many similar looking APIs, so please be careful to avoid confusion when exploring online resources. A good rule of thumb is to check for the namespace using Azure.Search.Documents; when you're looking for API reference.

Thread safety

We guarantee that all client instance methods are thread-safe and independent of each other (guideline). This ensures that the recommendation of reusing client instances is always safe, even across threads.

Additional concepts

Client options | Accessing the response | Long-running operations | Handling failures | Diagnostics | Mocking | Client lifetime

Examples

The following examples all use a simple Hotel data set that you can import into your own index from the Azure portal. These are just a few of the basics - please check out our Samples for much more.

Advanced authentication

Querying

Let's start by importing our namespaces.

using Azure.Search.Documents;
using Azure.Search.Documents.Indexes;
using Azure.Core.GeoJson;

We'll then create a SearchClient to access our hotels search index.

// Get the service endpoint and API key from the environment
Uri endpoint = new Uri(Environment.GetEnvironmentVariable("SEARCH_ENDPOINT"));
string key = Environment.GetEnvironmentVariable("SEARCH_API_KEY");
string indexName = "hotels";

// Create a client
AzureKeyCredential credential = new AzureKeyCredential(key);
SearchClient client = new SearchClient(endpoint, indexName, credential);

There are two ways to interact with the data returned from a search query. Let's explore them with a search for a "luxury" hotel.

Use C# types for search results

We can decorate our own C# types with attributes from System.Text.Json:

public class Hotel
{
    [JsonPropertyName("HotelId")]
    [SimpleField(IsKey = true, IsFilterable = true, IsSortable = true)]
    public string Id { get; set; }

    [JsonPropertyName("HotelName")]
    [SearchableField(IsFilterable = true, IsSortable = true)]
    public string Name { get; set; }

    [SimpleField(IsFilterable = true, IsSortable = true)]
    public GeoPoint GeoLocation { get; set; }

    // Complex fields are included automatically in an index if not ignored.
    public HotelAddress Address { get; set; }
}

public class HotelAddress
{
    public string StreetAddress { get; set; }

    [SimpleField(IsFilterable = true, IsSortable = true, IsFacetable = true)]
    public string City { get; set; }

    [SimpleField(IsFilterable = true, IsSortable = true, IsFacetable = true)]
    public string StateProvince { get; set; }

    [SimpleField(IsFilterable = true, IsSortable = true, IsFacetable = true)]
    public string Country { get; set; }

    [SimpleField(IsFilterable = true, IsSortable = true, IsFacetable = true)]
    public string PostalCode { get; set; }
}

Then we use them as the type parameter when querying to return strongly-typed search results:

SearchResults<Hotel> response = client.Search<Hotel>("luxury");
foreach (SearchResult<Hotel> result in response.GetResults())
{
    Hotel doc = result.Document;
    Console.WriteLine($"{doc.Id}: {doc.Name}");
}

If you're working with a search index and know the schema, creating C# types is recommended.

Use SearchDocument like a dictionary for search results

If you don't have your own type for search results, SearchDocument can be used instead. Here we perform the search, enumerate over the results, and extract data using SearchDocument's dictionary indexer.

SearchResults<SearchDocument> response = client.Search<SearchDocument>("luxury");
foreach (SearchResult<SearchDocument> result in response.GetResults())
{
    SearchDocument doc = result.Document;
    string id = (string)doc["HotelId"];
    string name = (string)doc["HotelName"];
    Console.WriteLine($"{id}: {name}");
}
SearchOptions

The SearchOptions provide powerful control over the behavior of our queries. Let's search for the top 5 luxury hotels with a good rating.

int stars = 4;
SearchOptions options = new SearchOptions
{
    // Filter to only Rating greater than or equal our preference
    Filter = SearchFilter.Create($"Rating ge {stars}"),
    Size = 5, // Take only 5 results
    OrderBy = { "Rating desc" } // Sort by Rating from high to low
};
SearchResults<Hotel> response = client.Search<Hotel>("luxury", options);
// ...

Creating an index

You can use the SearchIndexClient to create a search index. Fields can be defined from a model class using FieldBuilder. Indexes can also define suggesters, lexical analyzers, and more.

Using the Hotel sample above, which defines both simple and complex fields:

Uri endpoint = new Uri(Environment.GetEnvironmentVariable("SEARCH_ENDPOINT"));
string key = Environment.GetEnvironmentVariable("SEARCH_API_KEY");

// Create a service client
AzureKeyCredential credential = new AzureKeyCredential(key);
SearchIndexClient client = new SearchIndexClient(endpoint, credential);

// Create the index using FieldBuilder.
SearchIndex index = new SearchIndex("hotels")
{
    Fields = new FieldBuilder().Build(typeof(Hotel)),
    Suggesters =
    {
        // Suggest query terms from the HotelName field.
        new SearchSuggester("sg", "HotelName")
    }
};

client.CreateIndex(index);

In scenarios when the model is not known or cannot be modified, you can also create fields explicitly using convenient SimpleField, SearchableField, or ComplexField classes:

// Create the index using field definitions.
SearchIndex index = new SearchIndex("hotels")
{
    Fields =
    {
        new SimpleField("HotelId", SearchFieldDataType.String) { IsKey = true, IsFilterable = true, IsSortable = true },
        new SearchableField("HotelName") { IsFilterable = true, IsSortable = true },
        new SearchableField("Description") { AnalyzerName = LexicalAnalyzerName.EnLucene },
        new SearchableField("Tags", collection: true) { IsFilterable = true, IsFacetable = true },
        new ComplexField("Address")
        {
            Fields =
            {
                new SearchableField("StreetAddress"),
                new SearchableField("City") { IsFilterable = true, IsSortable = true, IsFacetable = true },
                new SearchableField("StateProvince") { IsFilterable = true, IsSortable = true, IsFacetable = true },
                new SearchableField("Country") { IsFilterable = true, IsSortable = true, IsFacetable = true },
                new SearchableField("PostalCode") { IsFilterable = true, IsSortable = true, IsFacetable = true }
            }
        }
    },
    Suggesters =
    {
        // Suggest query terms from the hotelName field.
        new SearchSuggester("sg", "HotelName")
    }
};

client.CreateIndex(index);

Adding documents to your index

You can Upload, Merge, MergeOrUpload, and Delete multiple documents from an index in a single batched request. There are a few special rules for merging to be aware of.

IndexDocumentsBatch<Hotel> batch = IndexDocumentsBatch.Create(
    IndexDocumentsAction.Upload(new Hotel { Id = "783", Name = "Upload Inn" }),
    IndexDocumentsAction.Merge(new Hotel { Id = "12", Name = "Renovated Ranch" }));

IndexDocumentsOptions options = new IndexDocumentsOptions { ThrowOnAnyError = true };
client.IndexDocuments(batch, options);

The request will succeed even if any of the individual actions fail and return an IndexDocumentsResult for inspection. There's also a ThrowOnAnyError option if you only care about success or failure of the whole batch.

Retrieving a specific document from your index

In addition to querying for documents using keywords and optional filters, you can retrieve a specific document from your index if you already know the key. You could get the key from a query, for example, and want to show more information about it or navigate your customer to that document.

Hotel doc = client.GetDocument<Hotel>("1");
Console.WriteLine($"{doc.Id}: {doc.Name}");

Async APIs

All of the examples so far have been using synchronous APIs, but we provide full support for async APIs as well. You'll generally just add an Async suffix to the name of the method and await it.

SearchResults<Hotel> searchResponse = await client.SearchAsync<Hotel>("luxury");
await foreach (SearchResult<Hotel> result in searchResponse.GetResultsAsync())
{
    Hotel doc = result.Document;
    Console.WriteLine($"{doc.Id}: {doc.Name}");
}

Authenticate in a National Cloud

To authenticate in a National Cloud, you will need to make the following additions to your client configuration:

  • Set the AuthorityHost in the credential options or via the AZURE_AUTHORITY_HOST environment variable
  • Set the Audience in SearchClientOptions
// Create a SearchClient that will authenticate through AAD in the China national cloud
string indexName = "nycjobs";
Uri endpoint = new Uri(Environment.GetEnvironmentVariable("SEARCH_ENDPOINT"));
SearchClient client = new SearchClient(endpoint, indexName,
    new DefaultAzureCredential(
        new DefaultAzureCredentialOptions()
        {
            AuthorityHost = AzureAuthorityHosts.AzureChina
        }),
    new SearchClientOptions()
    {
        Audience = SearchAudience.AzureChina
    });

Troubleshooting

Any Azure.Search.Documents operation that fails will throw a RequestFailedException with helpful Status codes. Many of these errors are recoverable.

try
{
    return client.GetDocument<Hotel>("12345");
}
catch (RequestFailedException ex) when (ex.Status == 404)
{
    Console.WriteLine("We couldn't find the hotel you are looking for!");
    Console.WriteLine("Please try selecting another.");
    return null;
}

You can also easily enable console logging if you want to dig deeper into the requests you're making against the service.

See our troubleshooting guide for details on how to diagnose various failure scenarios.

Next steps

Contributing

See our Search CONTRIBUTING.md for details on building, testing, and contributing to this library.

This project welcomes contributions and suggestions. Most contributions require you to agree to a Contributor License Agreement (CLA) declaring that you have the right to, and actually do, grant us the rights to use your contribution. For details, visit cla.microsoft.com.

This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact opencode@microsoft.com with any additional questions or comments.

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NuGet packages (51)

Showing the top 5 NuGet packages that depend on Azure.Search.Documents:

Package Downloads
Hilma.Common

Shared entities and contracts for Hilma Domain

Indigina.Data

This NuGet package contains Data Access Layer for Indigina projects.

OrchardCore.Application.Cms.Core.Targets

Orchard Core CMS is a Web Content Management System (CMS) built on top of the Orchard Core Framework. Converts the application into a modular OrchardCore CMS application with TheAdmin theme but without any front-end Themes.

Microsoft.KernelMemory.MemoryDb.AzureAISearch

Azure AI Search connector for Microsoft Kernel Memory, to store and search memory using Azure AI Search vector indexing and semantic features.

OrchardCore.Application.Cms.Targets

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Showing the top 5 popular GitHub repositories that depend on Azure.Search.Documents:

Repository Stars
microsoft/semantic-kernel
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This repository is for active development of the Azure SDK for .NET. For consumers of the SDK we recommend visiting our public developer docs at https://learn.microsoft.com/dotnet/azure/ or our versioned developer docs at https://azure.github.io/azure-sdk-for-net.
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