Search, make inferences in and organize vectors, tensors, text and structured data, at serving time and any scale.
This repository contains all the code required to build and run all of Vespa yourself, and where you can see all development as it happens. All the content in this repository is licensed under the Apache 2.0 license.
A new release of Vespa is made from this repository's master branch every morning CET Monday through Thursday.
- Home page: https://vespa.ai
- Documentation: https://docs.vespa.ai
- Continuous build: https://factory.vespa.ai
- Run applications in the cloud for free: https://cloud.vespa.ai
Use cases such as search, recommendation and personalization need to select a subset of data in a large corpus, evaluate machine-learned models over the selected data, organize and aggregate it and return it, typically in less than 100 milliseconds, all while the data corpus is continuously changing.
This is hard to do, especially with large data sets that need to be distributed over multiple nodes and evaluated in parallel. Vespa is a platform that performs these operations for you with high availability and performance. It has been in development for many years and is used on several large internet services and apps which serve hundreds of thousands of queries from Vespa per second.
Deploy your Vespa applications to the cloud service: https://cloud.vespa.ai, or run your own Vespa instance: https://docs.vespa.ai/en/getting-started.html
- The application created in the getting started guides linked above is fully functional and production-ready, but you may want to add more nodes for redundancy.
- See developing applications on adding your own Java components to your Vespa application.
- Vespa APIs is useful to understand how to interface with Vespa
- Explore the sample applications
- Follow the Vespa Blog for feature updates / use cases
Full documentation is at https://docs.vespa.ai.
We welcome contributions! See CONTRIBUTING.md to learn how to contribute.
If you want to contribute to the documentation, see https://github.com/vespa-engine/documentation
You do not need to build Vespa to use it, but if you want to contribute you need to be able to build the code. This section explains how to build and test Vespa. To understand where to make changes, see Code-map.md. Some suggested improvements with pointers to code are in TODO.md.
C++ and Java building is supported on AlmaLinux 8. The Java source can also be built on any platform having Java 17 and Maven 3.8+ installed. Use the following guide to set up a complete development environment using Docker for building Vespa, running unit tests and running system tests: Vespa development on AlmaLinux 8.
- Install JDK17, Maven Version Manager and jEnv through Homebrew.
brew install jenv mvnvm openjdk@17
- For the system Java wrappers to find this JDK, symlink it with
sudo ln -sfn /opt/homebrew/opt/openjdk@17/libexec/openjdk.jdk /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/openjdk-17.jdk
- Follow "Configure your shell" in https://www.jenv.be. Configuration is shell specific. For
zsh
use the below commands:
echo 'export PATH="$HOME/.jenv/bin:$PATH"' >> ~/.zshrc
echo 'eval "$(jenv init -)"' >> ~/.zshrc
eval "$(jenv init -)"
jenv enable-plugin export
exec $SHELL -l
- Add JDK17 to jEnv
jenv add $(/usr/libexec/java_home -v 17)
- Verify configuration with Maven by executing below command in the root of the source code. Output should refer to the JDK and Maven version specified in the .java-version and mvnvm.properties.
mvn -v
export MAVEN_OPTS="-Xms128m -Xmx1024m"
./bootstrap.sh java
mvn install --threads 1C
Use this if you only need to build the Java modules, otherwise follow the complete development guide above.
Code licensed under the Apache 2.0 license. See LICENSE for terms.