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If the input word exceeds 1000 bytes, don't pass it to the stemmer; just return it as-is after case folding. Such an input is surely not a word in any human language, so whatever the stemmer might do to it would be pretty dubious in the first place. Adding this restriction protects us against a known recursion-to-stack-overflow problem in the Turkish stemmer, and it seems like good insurance against any other safety or performance issues that may exist in the Snowball stemmers. (I note, for example, that they contain no CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS calls, so we really don't want them running for a long time.) The threshold of 1000 bytes is arbitrary. An alternative definition could have been to treat such words as stopwords, but that seems like a bigger break from the old behavior. Per report from Egor Chindyaskin and Alexander Lakhin. Thanks to Olly Betts for the recommendation to fix it this way. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1661334672.728714027@f473.i.mail.ru
src/backend/snowball/README
Snowball-Based Stemming
=======================
This module uses the word stemming code developed by the Snowball project,
http://snowballstem.org (formerly http://snowball.tartarus.org)
which is released by them under a BSD-style license.
The Snowball project does not often make formal releases; it's best
to pull from their git repository
git clone https://github.com/snowballstem/snowball.git
and then building the derived files is as simple as
cd snowball
make
At least on Linux, no platform-specific adjustment is needed.
Postgres' files under src/backend/snowball/libstemmer/ and
src/include/snowball/libstemmer/ are taken directly from the Snowball
files, with only some minor adjustments of file inclusions. Note
that most of these files are in fact derived files, not original source.
The original sources are in the Snowball language, and are built using
the Snowball-to-C compiler that is also part of the Snowball project.
We choose to include the derived files in the PostgreSQL distribution
because most installations will not have the Snowball compiler available.
We are currently synced with the Snowball git commit
48a67a2831005f49c48ec29a5837640e23e54e6b (tag v2.2.0)
of 2021-11-10.
To update the PostgreSQL sources from a new Snowball version:
0. If you didn't do it already, "make -C snowball".
1. Copy the *.c files in snowball/src_c/ to src/backend/snowball/libstemmer
with replacement of "../runtime/header.h" by "header.h", for example
for f in .../snowball/src_c/*.c
do
sed 's|\.\./runtime/header\.h|header.h|' $f >libstemmer/`basename $f`
done
Do not copy stemmers that are listed in libstemmer/modules.txt as
nonstandard, such as "german2" or "lovins".
2. Copy the *.c files in snowball/runtime/ to
src/backend/snowball/libstemmer, and edit them to remove direct inclusions
of system headers such as <stdio.h> --- they should only include "header.h".
(This removal avoids portability problems on some platforms where <stdio.h>
is sensitive to largefile compilation options.)
3. Copy the *.h files in snowball/src_c/ and snowball/runtime/
to src/include/snowball/libstemmer. At this writing the header files
do not require any changes.
4. Check whether any stemmer modules have been added or removed. If so, edit
the OBJS list in Makefile, the list of #include's in dict_snowball.c, and the
stemmer_modules[] table in dict_snowball.c, as well as the list in the
documentation in textsearch.sgml. You might also need to change
the LANGUAGES list in Makefile and tsearch_config_languages in initdb.c.
5. The various stopword files in stopwords/ must be downloaded
individually from pages on the snowballstem.org website.
Be careful that these files must be stored in UTF-8 encoding.