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Java implementation of the Aho-Corasick algorithm for efficient string matching

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Aho-Corasick

Build Status Codacy Badge Codecov Maven Central Javadoc Apache 2

Dependency

Include this dependency in your POM. Be sure to check for the latest version in Maven Central.

    <dependency>
        <groupId>org.ahocorasick</groupId>
        <artifactId>ahocorasick</artifactId>
        <version>0.4.0</version>
    </dependency>

Introduction

Nowadays most free-text searching is based on Lucene-like approaches, where the search text is parsed into its various components. For every keyword a lookup is done to see where it occurs. When looking for a couple of keywords this approach is great. But what about it if you are not looking for just a couple of keywords, but a 100,000 of them? Like, for example, checking against a dictionary?

This is where the Aho-Corasick algorithm shines. Instead of chopping up the search text, it uses all the keywords to build up a construct called a Trie. There are three crucial components to Aho-Corasick:

  • goto
  • fail
  • output

Every character encountered is presented to a state object within the goto structure. If there is a matching state, that will be elevated to the new current state.

However, if there is no matching state, the algorithm will signal a fail and fall back to states with less depth (ie, a match less long) and proceed from there, until it found a matching state, or it has reached the root state.

Whenever a state is reached that matches an entire keyword, it is emitted to an output set which can be read after the entire scan has completed.

The beauty of the algorithm is that it is O(n). No matter how many keywords you have, or how big the search text is, the performance will decline in a linear way.

Some examples you could use the Aho-Corasick algorithm for:

  • looking for certain words in texts in order to URL link or emphasize them
  • adding semantics to plain text
  • checking against a dictionary to see if syntactic errors were made

This library is the Java implementation of the afore-mentioned Aho-Corasick algorithm for efficient string matching. The algorithm is explained in great detail in the white paper written by Aho and Corasick: http://cr.yp.to/bib/1975/aho.pdf

Usage

Setting up the Trie is a piece of cake:

    Trie trie = Trie.builder()
        .addKeyword("hers")
        .addKeyword("his")
        .addKeyword("she")
        .addKeyword("he")
        .build();
    Collection<Emit> emits = trie.parseText("ushers");

You can now read the set. In this case it will find the following:

  • "she" starting at position 1, ending at position 3
  • "he" starting at position 2, ending at position 3
  • "hers" starting at position 2, ending at position 5

In normal situations you probably want to remove overlapping instances, retaining the longest and left-most matches.

    Trie trie = Trie.builder()
        .ignoreOverlaps()
        .addKeyword("hot")
        .addKeyword("hot chocolate")
        .build();
    Collection<Emit> emits = trie.parseText("hot chocolate");

The ignoreOverlaps method tells the Trie to remove all overlapping matches. For this it relies on the following conflict resolution rules: 1) longer matches prevail over shorter matches, 2) left-most prevails over right-most. There is only one result now:

  • "hot chocolate" starting at position 0, ending at position 12

If you want the algorithm to only check for whole words, you can tell the Trie to do so:

    Trie trie = Trie.builder()
        .onlyWholeWords()
        .addKeyword("sugar")
        .build();
    Collection<Emit> emits = trie.parseText("sugarcane sugarcane sugar canesugar");

In this case, it will only find one match, whereas it would normally find four. The sugarcane/canesugar words are discarded because they are partial matches.

Some text is WrItTeN in a combination of lowercase and uppercase and therefore hard to identify. You can instruct the Trie to lowercase the entire searchtext to ease the matching process. The lower-casing extends to keywords as well.

    Trie trie = Trie.builder()
        .ignoreCase()
        .addKeyword("casing")
        .build();
    Collection<Emit> emits = trie.parseText("CaSiNg");

Normally, this match would not be found. With the ignoreCase settings the entire search text is lowercased before the matching begins. Therefore it will find exactly one match. Since you still have control of the original search text and you will know exactly where the match was, you can still utilize the original casing.

It is also possible to just ask whether the text matches any of the keywords, or just to return the first match it finds.

    Trie trie = Trie.builder().ignoreOverlaps()
            .addKeyword("ab")
            .addKeyword("cba")
            .addKeyword("ababc")
            .build();
    Emit firstMatch = trie.firstMatch("ababcbab");

The firstMatch will now be "ababc" found at position 0. containsMatch just checks if there is a firstMatch and returns true if that is the case.

If you just want the barebones Aho-Corasick algorithm (ie, no dealing with case insensitivity, overlaps and whole words) and you prefer to add your own handler to the mix, that is also possible.

    Trie trie = Trie.builder()
            .addKeyword("hers")
            .addKeyword("his")
            .addKeyword("she")
            .addKeyword("he")
            .build();

    final List<Emit> emits = new ArrayList<>();
    EmitHandler emitHandler = new EmitHandler() {

        @Override
        public void emit(Emit emit) {
            emits.add(emit);
        }
    };

In many cases you may want to do useful stuff with both the non-matching and the matching text. In this case, you might be better served by using the Trie.tokenize(). It allows you to loop over the entire text and deal with matches as soon as you encounter them. Let's look at an example where we want to highlight words from HGttG in HTML:

    String speech = "The Answer to the Great Question... Of Life, " +
            "the Universe and Everything... Is... Forty-two,' said " +
            "Deep Thought, with infinite majesty and calm.";
    Trie trie = Trie.builder().ignoreOverlaps().onlyWholeWords().ignoreCase()
        .addKeyword("great question")
        .addKeyword("forty-two")
        .addKeyword("deep thought")
        .build();
    Collection<Token> tokens = trie.tokenize(speech);
    StringBuffer html = new StringBuffer();
    html.append("<html><body><p>");
    for (Token token : tokens) {
        if (token.isMatch()) {
            html.append("<i>");
        }
        html.append(token.getFragment());
        if (token.isMatch()) {
            html.append("</i>");
        }
    }
    html.append("</p></body></html>");
    System.out.println(html);

Releases

Information on the aho-corasick releases.

License

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at

http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.

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Java implementation of the Aho-Corasick algorithm for efficient string matching

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