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The Anatomy of a Large-Scale Hypertextual Web Search Engine By Sergey Brin and Lawrence Page Presented by Joshua Haley Zeyad Zainal Michael Lopez Michael Galletti Britt Phillips Jeff Masson
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Searching in the 90’s Search Engine Technology had to deal with huge growths.
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Google will Scale They wanted a search engine that: – Has fast crawling capabilities – Use Storage Space Efficiently – Process Indexes fast – Handles Queries fast They Had to Deal with Scaling Difficulties – Disk Speeds and OS robustness not scaling as well as hardware performance and cost
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The Google Goals Improve Search Quality – Remove Junk Results (Prioritizing of Results) Academic Search Engine Research – Create Literature on the subject of Databases Gather Usage Data – Data bases can support research Support Novel Research Activities on Web Data
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System Features Two important features that help it produce high precision results: – PageRank – Anchor Text
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PageRank Graph structure of hyperlinks hadn’t been used by other search engines Graph of 518 million hyperlinks Text matching using page titles performs well after pages are prioritized Similar results when looking at entire pages
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PageRank Formula Not all pages linking to others are counted equally PR(A) = (1-d) + d (PR(T1)/C(T1) +... + PR(Tn)/C(Tn)) – A: page – T1…Tn: pages linking to it – C(A): pages linking out of it – d: “damping factor” PageRank for 26m pages can be calculated in a few hours
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Intuitive Justification A page can have a high PageRank if many pages link to it Or if a high PageRank’d page links to it (eg: Yahoo News) – The page wouldn’t be linked to if it wasn’t high quality, or it had a broken link PageRank handles these cases by propagating the weights of different pages
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Anchor Text Anchors provide more accurate descriptions than the page itself. Anchors exist for documents that aren’t text- based (eg. Images, videos, etc) Google indexed more than 259m anchors from just 24m pages.
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Other Features Larger font sizes or bold fonts carry more weight than other words
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Related Work
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Early Search Engines The World Wide Web Worm (WWWW) – One of the first web search engines (Developed 1994) – Had a database of 300,000 multimedia objects Some early search engines retrieved results by post-processing the results of other search engines.
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Information Retrieval The science of searching for documents or information within documents and for metadata about documents. Most research is on small collections of scientific papers or news stories on a related topic. Text Retrieval Conference is the primary benchmark for information retrieval – Uses the “Very Large Corpus”, a small and well controlled collection for their benchmarks – Very Large Corpus benchmark is only 20GB
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Information Retrieval The Text Retrieval Conference doesn’t produce good results on the web – EX: A search of “Bill Clinton” would return a page that only says “Bill Clinton Sucks” and have a picture of him. Brin and Page believe that for a search of “Bill Clinton” you should receive reasonable results because there is so much information on the topic. The standard information retreival work needs to be extended to deal effectively with the web
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Differences Between the Web and Well Controlled Collections Documents differ internally in their language, vocabulary, type or format, and may even be machine generated. External meta information is information that can be inferred about a document but is not contained within it. – Ex: reputation of the source, update frequency, quality, popularity, etc. A page like Yahoo needs to be treated differently than an article or web page that receives one view every ten years.
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Differences Between the Web and Well Controlled Collections There is no control over what people can put on the web Some companies manipulate search engines to route traffic for profit Metadata efforts have largely failed with web search engines because a user can be returned a web page that has nothing to do with the query due to the search engine being manipulated.
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The Anatomy of a Large-Scale Hypertextual Web Search Engine By Sergey Brin and Lawrence Page Presented by Joshua Haley Zeyad Zainal Michael Lopez Michael Galletti Britt Phillips Jeff Masson
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System Anatomy High-level discussion of architecture Descriptions of data structures – Repository – Lexicon – HitLists – Forward and Inverted Indices Major applications – Crawling – Indexing – Searching
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Google Architecture Overview Implemented in C, C++ – Runs efficiently on Linux, Solaris Many distributed webcrawlers – Receive list of URLs to crawl from URL Server Crawlers send pages to Store Server – Compressed pages sent to Repository – Repository assigns page a docID Indexer – Documents from Repository converted into HitLists – Sends HitLists to Barrels – Sends links to anchor file
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Google Architecture Overview URL Resolver – Reads from anchor file – Converts URLS to docIDs and sends them to Barrels – Pairs of docIDs stored in Links database Sorter – Barrels presorted by docID, Forward Index – Re-sorts by wordID to create Inverted Index – Dumps a list of associated wordIDs to Lexicon Lexicon – Keeps a list of words Searcher – Uses Lexicon, Inverted Index, and Pagerank to answer queries
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Repository BigFiles – Virtual files spanning multiple file systems – Operating systems did not provide enough for system needs Repository access – No additional data structures necessary – Reduces complexity – Can rebuild all data structures from Respository Repository53.5 GB = 147.8 GB Uncompressed SyncLengthCompressed packet SyncLengthCompressed packet Uncompressed Packet docIdecodeurlLenpageLenurlpage Repository – Contains full HTML of every web page – Compression decision Bzip offers 4 : 1 compression Zlib offers 3 : 1, is faster – Opted for speed over ratio
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Document Index and Lexicon Document Index – Stores information about each document – Fixed-width ISAM (Index- Sequential Access Mode) ordered by docID – Information includes: Status Pointer into Repository Checksum Various Statistics – Record fetching Document points to docinfo file with URL and title if previously crawled Otherwise points to URL in URLlist docID Allocation – File of all document checksums paired with docIDs Sorted by checksum – Find docID 1. Checksum of URL is computed 2. Binary search over file – May be done in batches Lexicon – Capable of existing in main memory of a machine – Holds 14 million words Linked-List of words Hash table of pointers
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HitLists and Encoding Hit – Occurrence of a word in a document, given 2 bytes – Fancy and plain hits – Records capitalization, size relative to document, and position HitList – List of Hits for some word in some document – Requires the most space – Many possible encoding schemes Simple Hand-optimized Huffman – Time vs space compromise Bit Allocation for Different Hits [2 Bytes] PlainCap: 1Size: 3Position: 12 FancyCap: 1Size = 7Type: 4Position: 4 AnchorCap: 1Size = 7Type: 4Hash: 4Pos: 4 Anchor Hits – Hash to docID anchor occurs in Storing – Lists stored in barrels – Space-saving Combine length with different ID depending on Forward or Inverted index If list length will not fit in remaining bits, place escape character there and use next two bytes to store list length
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Forward and Inverted Indices Forward Index – 64 barrels Each one corresponds to a range of wordIDs – Words in documents broken up into ranges docID is recorded into appropriate barrel List of wordIDs with HitLists follow wordIDs stored relative to Barrel starting index – Fit in 24 bits, leaving 8 for list length – System requires more storage for duplicate IDs However, coding complexity greatly reduced Inverted Index – Created after Barrels go through Sorter – For each valid wordID there is a pointer from Lexicon into corresponding Barrel – Points to docList of docIDs and matching HitLists Represents every document in which a particular word appears docList Ordering – Sort by docID Quick for multi-word queries – Sort by ranking of occurrence One word queries trivial Multi-word queries likely near start of list Merging is difficult Development is difficult – Compromise! Keep two sets of Barrels
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Crawling The Web
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Crawling Accessing millions of webpages and logging data DNS caching for increased performance Email from web admins Unpredictable bugs Copyright problems Robots.txt
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Indexing The Web Parsing HTML data Handle wide variety of errors Encoding to Barrels Turning words into WordIds Hashing all the data Sorting data recursively – Bucket Sort
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Searching Quality first Limited depth(40k hits) No one factor will have too much impact Titles,Font Size, Distance,Count Creates Relevance score Combines PageRank and IR score
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User Feedback User input vital to improved search results Verified users can evaluate results and send their ratings back Adjust ranking system Verify that old results are still valid
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Results and Performance
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The most important measure of a search engine is the quality of its search results “Our own experience with Google has shown it to produce better results than the major commercial search engines for most searches.” Results are generally high quality pages with minimal broken links
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Storage Requirements Total size of repository is about 53 GB (relatively cheap source of data) Total of all the data use by engine requires about 55 GB With better compression, only 7 GB of drive needed
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System and Search Performance Google’s major operations: Crawling, Indexing, Sorting Indexer > Crawler in terms of speed Indexer runs at 54 pages/second Using four machines, sorting takes 24 hours Most queries answered within 10 s No query caching or subindices on common terms
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Conclusions Google is designed to a be a scalable search engine, providing high quality search results. Future Work: Query caching, smart disk allocation, subindices Smart algorithms to decide what old web pages should be recrawled and which new ones should be crawled Using proxy caches to build search databases and adding boolean operators, negation, and stemming Support user context and result summarization
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High Quality Search: Users want high quality results without being frustrates and wasting time. Google returns higher quality search results than current commercial search engines; Link structure analysis determines quality of pages, link description determines relevance. Scalable Architecture: Google is efficient in both space and time Google has overcome bottleneck in CPU, memory access and capacity, and disk I/O during various operations to prove excellence Crawling, Indexing, Sorting are efficient enough to build 24 million pages in less than a week
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