Filtering
Pre and post-filtering
LanceDB supports filtering of query results based on metadata fields. By default, post-filtering isperformed on the top-k results returned by the vector search. However, pre-filtering is also anoption that performs the filter prior to vector search. This can be useful to narrow downthe search space of a very large dataset to reduce query latency.
Note that both pre-filtering and post-filtering can yield false positives. For pre-filtering, if the filter is too selective, it might eliminate relevant items that the vector search would have otherwise identified as a good match. In this case, increasingnprobes
parameter will help reduce such false positives. It is recommended to callbypass_vector_index()
if you know that the filter is highly selective.
Similarly, a highly selective post-filter can lead to false positives. Increasing bothnprobes
andrefine_factor
can mitigate this issue. When deciding between pre-filtering and post-filtering, pre-filtering is generally the safer choice if you're uncertain.
Note
Creating ascalar index accelerates filtering.
SQL filters
Because it's built on top ofDataFusion, LanceDBembraces the utilization of standard SQL expressions as predicates for filtering operations.SQL can be used during vector search, update, and deletion operations.
LanceDB supports a growing list of SQL expressions:
>
,>=
,<
,<=
,=
AND
,OR
,NOT
IS NULL
,IS NOT NULL
IS TRUE
,IS NOT TRUE
,IS FALSE
,IS NOT FALSE
IN
LIKE
,NOT LIKE
CAST
regexp_match(column, pattern)
- DataFusion Functions
For example, the following filter string is acceptable:
If your column name contains special characters, upper-case characters, or is aSQL Keyword,you can use backtick (`
) to escape it. For nested fields, each segment of thepath must be wrapped in backticks.
Field names containing periods (.
) are not supported.
Literals for dates, timestamps, and decimals can be written by writing the stringvalue after the type name. For example:
For timestamp columns, the precision can be specified as a number in the typeparameter. Microsecond precision (6) is the default.
SQL | Time unit |
---|---|
timestamp(0) | Seconds |
timestamp(3) | Milliseconds |
timestamp(6) | Microseconds |
timestamp(9) | Nanoseconds |
LanceDB internally stores data inApache Arrow format.The mapping from SQL types to Arrow types is:
SQL type | Arrow type |
---|---|
boolean | Boolean |
tinyint /tinyint unsigned | Int8 /UInt8 |
smallint /smallint unsigned | Int16 /UInt16 |
int orinteger /int unsigned orinteger unsigned | Int32 /UInt32 |
bigint /bigint unsigned | Int64 /UInt64 |
float | Float32 |
double | Float64 |
decimal(precision, scale) | Decimal128 |
date | Date32 |
timestamp | Timestamp 1 |
string | Utf8 |
binary | Binary |
Filtering without Vector Search
You can also filter your data without search:
If your table is large, this could potentially return a very large amount of data. Please be sure to use alimit
clause unless you're sure you want to return the whole result set.
See precision mapping in previous table. ↩