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Configuring Managed Properties in MOSS 2007

As I've noted in a previous post, I typically use feature receivers in Microsoft Office SharePoint Server (MOSS) 2007 to automatically configure a "bunch of stuff" that would otherwise be very tedious to perform repeatedly for different environments (e.g. DEV, TEST, and PROD) and whenever I rebuild my local development VM. For example, when you activate one of my "Search" features, I typically create the Search Center, create/configure the various search results pages with a number of different Web Parts, and also programmatically configure managed properties.

For this post, I want to focus on the managed properties. In case you are not familiar with crawled properties and managed properties in MOSS 2007, let me start by providing a little background.

When SharePoint indexes content:

  1. It first starts up a protocol handler for the content source (e.g. SharePoint site, file system, Lotus Notes DB, etc.). The protocol handler is responsible for enumerating content items in the content source.
  2. For each content item, it then loads an IFilter (e.g. HTML, Office doc, PDF, etc). The IFilter is responsible for emitting text and properties from the underlying content item.
  3. These properties (e.g. Author) are then picked up as crawled properties.
  4. For custom columns in SharePoint list items and documents (e.g. Product), the crawled properties are discovered and placed in the Office category (e.g. ows_Product). [If memory serves, "ows" refers to "Office Web Server" (the original moniker for what ultimately became "SharePoint Products and Technologies") -- if that helps you remember this any easier.]
  5. If any managed properties are mapped to the crawled properties, then the property values are stuffed into the SSP Search database (i.e. what used be called the "property store" in SharePoint Portal Server 2003) for each piece of content.

While SharePoint comes with about 110+ managed properties OOTB, customers typically add new ones -- especially when providing any sort of faceted search feature.

So, for example, suppose we want to filter search results on Product. First we must define a managed property.

Once you define a managed property, you must map it to a crawled property (otherwise the managed property values would always be empty). After configuring managed properties, you must perform a full crawl in order to populate the properties.

The problem is that you cannot map a managed property to a crawled property until SharePoint actually knows about the crawled property.

In other words, if you start with a clean MOSS environment and then add a Product managed property, you will find that you cannot map it to ows_Product because SharePoint doesn't yet know about that crawled property.

In order for it to recognize the crawled property, it must first have indexed a piece of content with a value specified in the Product field (column). Then SharePoint will create a crawled property (as mentioned earlier).

I also mentioned earlier that upon activation of my Search features, I automatically configure managed properties (and map them to the corresponding crawled properties). Assuming the crawled properties are defined (i.e. content has previously been crawled with those properties), then all is well. However, if the specified crawled property does not exist, then SharePoint silently ignores the attempt to map the managed property to the (non-existent) crawled property.

Hence, you need to ensure that a piece of content has all custom properties specified, then perform a full crawl (to recognize all of the crawled properties), and then finally deactivate and reactivate my custom Search feature to successfully map the managed properties to the crawled properties. Then you must run another full crawl (in order to actually populate the managed properties).

I often refer to this as "the chicken and the egg" problem with SharePoint managed properties. That's certainly not the official name for this issue, but it seems to help people understand why the managed properties are not mapped after activating the custom Search feature in a freshly rebuilt SharePoint environment.

The "magic" behind automatically configuring managed properties upon feature activation is really not magic at all. It simply uses my "FeatureConfigurator framework" (and even calling this a framework is definitely a stretch) with a little bit of help from my SharePointSearchHelper class:

 namespace Fabrikam.Project1.Search.Configuration
{
    /// <summary>
    /// Exposes static methods for configuring the <b>Fabrikam.Project1.Search</b>
    /// feature. This class cannot be inherited.
    /// </summary>
    /// <remarks>
    /// All methods of the <b>FeatureConfigurator</b> class are static and can
    /// therefore be called without creating an instance of the class.
    /// </remarks>  
    [CLSCompliant(false)]
    [SharePointPermission(SecurityAction.LinkDemand, ObjectModel = true)]
    public sealed class FeatureConfigurator
    {
        ...

        /// <summary>
        /// Configures the various objects used for the Search features,
        /// including custom search scopes and managed properties, as well as a
        /// Search Center (and all of the corresponding pages) on the
        /// specified site.
        /// </summary>
        /// <param name="web">An
        /// <see cref="Microsoft.SharePoint.SPSite"/> object representing the
        /// site collection to configure.</param>
        public static void Configure(
            SPSite site)
        {
            if (site == null)
            {
                throw new ArgumentNullException("site");
            }

            Logger.LogDebug(
                CultureInfo.InvariantCulture,
                "Configuring Fabrikam.Project1.Search on site ({0})...",
                site.Url);

            ConfigureSspSettings(site);

            ConfigureSearchCenter(site);

            Logger.LogInfo(
                CultureInfo.InvariantCulture,
                "Successfully configured Fabrikam.Project1.Search on site ({0}).",
                site.Url);
        }
        
        ...
        
        private static void ConfigureManagedProperties(
            Schema sspSchema)
        {
            Debug.Assert(sspSchema != null);

            ManagedPropertyCollection properties = sspSchema.AllManagedProperties;

            // Configure "ListItemIntId" managed property
            ManagedProperty property =
                SharePointSearchHelper.EnsureManagedProperty(
                    properties,
                    "ListItemIntId",
                    ManagedDataType.Integer);

            SharePointSearchHelper.EnsureManagedPropertyMapping(
                property,
                "ows_ID",
                SharePointSearchHelper.CrawledPropertyCategory.SharePoint,
                SharePointSearchHelper.CrawledPropertyVariantType.Integer);

            // Configure "Product" managed property
            property = SharePointSearchHelper.EnsureManagedProperty(
                properties,
                "Product",
                ManagedDataType.Text);

            SharePointSearchHelper.EnsureManagedPropertyMapping(
                property,
                "ows_Product",
                SharePointSearchHelper.CrawledPropertyCategory.SharePoint,
                SharePointSearchHelper.CrawledPropertyVariantType.MultiValuedText);

            // Configure "ContentTypeName" managed property
            ...
        }
        
        ...

        private static void ConfigureSspSettings(
            SPSite site)
        {
            Debug.Assert(site != null);

            SearchContext context = SearchContext.GetContext(site);
            if (context == null)
            {
                string message = string.Format(
                    CultureInfo.InvariantCulture,
                    "Unable to get SearchContext for site ({0}).",
                    site.Url);

                throw new ArgumentException(message);
            }

            Schema sspSchema = new Schema(context);
            if (sspSchema == null)
            {
                string message = string.Format(
                    CultureInfo.InvariantCulture,
                    "Unable to get SSP schema for search context ({0}).",
                    context.Name);

                throw new ArgumentException(message);
            }            

            ConfigureFileTypes(context);

            ConfigureManagedProperties(sspSchema);

            ConfigureSearchScopes(context, site.Url);
        }

        ...
    }
}