This repository contains the OpenSearch plugin for the User Behavior Insights (UBI) capability. This plugin facilitates persisting client-side events (e.g. item clicks, scroll depth) and OpenSearch queries for the purpose of analyzing the data to improve search relevance and user experience.
UBI and this plugin project was originally proposed in the OpenSearch UBI RFC.
Please note that this repository is the implementation of the UBI plugin for OpenSearch.
Important
This release targets to the 1.3.0 version of the UBI Specification.
For details on the JSON Schema used by UBI to send and receive queries and events please see the UBI repository and the links below.
Visit https://ubisearch.dev to learn more about UBI.
The UBI plugin can store UBI query data in one of three ways:
- By directly indexing the UBI query data in the
ubi_queriesindex in the same OpenSearch cluster as the plugin. - By sending the UBI query data as JSON to a Data Prepper http source. The Data Prepper endpoint is provided via the
ubi.dataprepper.urlsetting. - By sending the UBI query data as Open Telemetry traces. This utilizes the native OpenSearch OTel capabilities which are exposed via the
TelemetryAwarePlugininterface. As UBI queries are received, trace events will be generated. OpenSearch must be configured as described in Distributed tracing for the events to be sent.
- Start with the Documentation site to how to use this plugin.
- For questions or help getting started, please find us in the OpenSearch Slack in the
#pluginschannel. - For bugs or feature requests, please create a new issue.
The src/test/scripts/ directory contains example UBI requests for common use cases.
To get started, download the plugin zip file from the releases. Next, install the plugin into OpenSearch with the following command:
bin/opensearch-plugin install file:/opensearch-ubi-3.2.0.0.zip
You will be prompted while installing the plugin because the plugin defines additional security permissions. These permissions allow the plugin to serialize query requests to JSON for storing and to allow the plugin to send query requests to Data Prepper. You can skip the prompt by adding the --batch argument to the above command.
To create the UBI indexes ubi_queries and ubi_events, send a request to initialize the plugin:
curl -s -X POST http://localhost:9200/_plugins/ubi/initialize
This will create the ubi_queries and ubi_events indexes with the appropriate mappings.
Queries sent to OpenSearch containing a ubi section in the ext block will be captured by the plugin and stored in the ubi_queries index. For example:
curl -s http://localhost:9200/your-index/_search -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d'
{
"ext": {
"ubi": {
"query_id": "12300d16cb-b6f1-4012-93ebcc49cac90426"
}
},
"query": {
"match": {
"name": "toner"
}
}
}'
As shown in the query above, the presence of the ubi block in the ext section causes the UBI plugin to capture the query and store it in the ubi_queries index.
The ubi block can contain the following parameters. All parameters are optional.
query_id- A unique identifier for the query. If not provided, the plugin will generate a random UUID for the query and return the UUID in the query response. Thequery_idcan be in any format but we use UUIDs in the examples.user_query- The user-entered query. This is meant to be the actual text the user provided to initiate the search.client_id- A unique identifier for the originator of the query. The client may be a user, an application, or any other originator of the query. Theclient_idcan be in any format but we use UUIDs in the examples.object_id_field- The name of a field in the index that contains a unique identifier for each result. If not provided, the_idfield is used.query_attributes- A map of arbitrary key/value pairs that will be indexed along with the query. This can be used to capture additional information about the query, such as an experiment ID or other details.
Following is an example query that provides the parameters:
curl -s http://localhost:9200/your-index/_search -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d'
{
"ext": {
"ubi": {
"query_id": "12300d16cb-b6f1-4012-93ebcc49cac90426",
"user_query": "Toner",
"client_id": "c4af7ca2-d6d2-4326-a41f-e616ebdd3d7b",
"object_id_field": "product_name",
"query_attributes": {
"experiment_id": "12345"
}
}
},
"query": {
"match": {
"name": "toner"
}
}
}'
Similar to a query request, query responses will also include a ubi section in the ext block.
{
"took": 3,
"timed_out": false,
"_shards": {
"total": 1,
"successful": 1,
"skipped": 0,
"failed": 0
},
"hits": {
"total": {
"value": 1,
"relation": "eq"
},
"max_score": 2.2413535,
"hits": [
{
"_index": "ecommerce",
"_id": "968447",
"_score": 2.2413535,
"_source": {
"id": "968447",
"name": "Cyan Toner Cartridge"
}
}
]
},
"ext": {
"ubi": {
"query_id": "12300d16cb-b6f1-4012-93ebcc49cac90426"
}
}
}
The only field present in the query response will be the query_id. The value of the query_id is the same as the query_id provided in the query, or, if not provided, a random UUID.
Queries can be either indexed in the local OpenSearch in the ubi_queries index, or queries can be sent to a Data Prepper http_source endpoint.
By default, queries are written to the local OpenSearch ubi_queries index as they are received. To see how the query is indexed, you can search the ubi_queries index:
curl -s http://localhost:9200/ubi_queries/_search -H "Content-Type: application/json" | jq
{
"took": 3,
"timed_out": false,
"_shards": {
"total": 1,
"successful": 1,
"skipped": 0,
"failed": 0
},
"hits": {
"total": {
"value": 1,
"relation": "eq"
},
"max_score": 1,
"hits": [
{
"_index": "ubi_queries",
"_id": "6CrooY8BzxoaOvIPKtWj",
"_score": 1,
"_source": {
"query_response_id": "e4bdd289-0875-421f-bc34-aa71eb8e1cb3",
"user_query": "toner",
"query_id": "12300d16cb-b6f1-4012-93ebcc49cac90426",
"query_response_object_ids": [
"9"
],
"client_id": null,
"query": "{\"query\":{\"match\":{\"name\":{\"query\":\"toner\",\"operator\":\"OR\",\"prefix_length\":0,\"max_expansions\":50,\"fuzzy_transpositions\":true,\"lenient\":false,\"zero_terms_query\":\"NONE\",\"auto_generate_synonyms_phrase_query\":true,\"boost\":1.0}}},\"ext\":{\"query_id\":\"12300d16cb-b6f1-4012-93ebcc49cac90426\",\"user_query\":\"toner\",\"client_id\":null,\"object_id_field\":null,\"query_attributes\":{\"system\":\"my_system\",\"experiment\":\"exp_1\"}}}",
"timestamp": 1716408298072
}
}
]
}
Each indexed query will have the following fields:
query_response_id- A unique identifier for the query response.user_query- Corresponds to theuser_queryin the query request.query_id- Corresponds to thequery_idin the query request, or a random UUID if aquery_idwas not provided in the query request.query_response_object_ids- A list of the values of theobject_id_fieldfield in the document.client_id- Corresponds to theclient_idin the query request.query- The raw query that was provided to OpenSearch.timestamp- The Unix timestamp when the query was indexed.
To send queries to Data Prepper, configure the following properties in OpenSearch:
| Property | Description | Example Value |
|---|---|---|
| ubi.dataprepper.url | Data Prepper's http_source endpoint |
http://localhost:2021/log/ingest |
With these properties set, queries will no longer be indexed into the local OpenSearch. The ubi_queries index can be deleted. Queries will be sent to Data Prepper as they are received by OpenSearch.
The UBI plugin does not provide a way to capture client-side events. Sending client-side events requires action on the client to send the events to OpenSearch for indexing.
The following is an example of a client-side event. Additional examples are available.
curl -s -X POST http://localhost:9200/ubi_events/_doc/ -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d'
{
"action_name": "page_exit",
"user_id": "1821196507152684",
"query_id": "00112233-4455-6677-8899-aabbccddeeff",
"session_id": "c3d22be7-6bdc-4250-91e1-fc8a92a9b1f9",
"page_id": "/docs/latest/",
"timestamp": "2024-05-16T12:34:56.789Z",
"message_type": "INFO",
"message": "On page /docs/latest/ for 3.35 seconds",
"event_attributes": {
"position":{},
"object": {
"idleTimeoutMs": 5000,
"currentIdleTimeMs": 250,
"checkIdleStateRateMs": 250,
"isUserCurrentlyOnPage": true,
"isUserCurrentlyIdle": false,
"currentPageName": "http://localhost:4000/docs/latest/",
"timeElapsedCallbacks": [],
"userLeftCallbacks": [],
"userReturnCallbacks": [],
"visibilityChangeEventName": "visibilitychange",
"hiddenPropName": "hidden"
}
}
}'
With the queries and client-side events we can use OpenSearch's SQL capability to analyze the data.
We can identify queries with zero results by querying either the ubi_queries or ubi_events indexes as shown below. Both queries should return the same value.
select
count(0)
from ubi_queries
where query_response_object_ids is nullselect
count(0)
from ubi_events
where action_name='on_search' and event_attributes.data.data_detail.query_data.query_response_object_ids is null
order by timestampFind the most common client-side events:
select
action_name, count(0) Total
from ubi_events
group by action_name
order by Total desc| action_name | Total |
|---|---|
| on_search | 3199 |
| brand_filter | 3112 |
| button_click | 3150 |
| type_filter | 3149 |
| product_hover | 3132 |
| product_sort | 3115 |
| login | 2458 |
| logout | 1499 |
| new_user_entry | 208 |
All client-side events that are associated with a query should have the same query_id.
select
action_name, count(0) Total
from ubi_events
where query_id is not null
group by action_name
order by Total desc| action_name | Total |
|---|---|
| on_search | 1329 |
| brand_filter | 669 |
| button_click | 648 |
| product_hover | 639 |
| product_sort | 625 |
| type_filter | 613 |
| logout | 408 |
If you find bugs or want to request a feature, please create a new issue. For questions or to discuss how UBI works, please find us in the OpenSearch Slack in the #plugins channel.
The plugin provides an implementation of an ActionFilter plugin that can capture and index queries, a SearchExtBuilder that provides the UBI parameters, and the object classes used to index the queries. Testing is done by YAML rest tests and unit tests.
The plugin can be built using Gradle:
./gradlew build
To test and debug, build the OpenSearch docker image that contains the built plugin and then start the containers:
docker compose build && docker compose up
Or to start a three-node OpenSearch cluster:
docker compose build
docker compose -f docker-compose-cluster.yaml up
See CONTRIBUTING for more information.
This code is licensed under the Apache 2.0 License. See LICENSE.
Copyright OpenSearch Contributors. See NOTICE for details.