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-User Directory API Implementation
-=================================
+# User Directory API Implementation
 
-The user directory is currently maintained based on the 'visible' users
-on this particular server - i.e. ones which your account shares a room with, or
-who are present in a publicly viewable room present on the server.
+The user directory is maintained based on users that are 'visible' to the homeserver -
+i.e. ones which are local to the server and ones which any local user shares a
+room with.
 
-The directory info is stored in various tables, which can (typically after
-DB corruption) get stale or out of sync. If this happens, for now the
+The directory info is stored in various tables, which can sometimes get out of
+sync (although this is considered a bug). If this happens, for now the
 solution to fix it is to use the [admin API](usage/administration/admin_api/background_updates.md#run)
 and execute the job `regenerate_directory`. This should then start a background task to
-flush the current tables and regenerate the directory.
+flush the current tables and regenerate the directory. Depending on the size
+of your homeserver (number of users and rooms) this can take a while.
 
-Data model
-----------
+## Data model
 
 There are five relevant tables that collectively form the "user directory".
-Three of them track a master list of all the users we could search for.
-The last two (collectively called the "search tables") track who can
-see who.
+Three of them track a list of all known users. The last two (collectively called
+the "search tables") track which users are visible to each other.
 
 From all of these tables we exclude three types of local user:
-  - support users
-  - appservice users
-  - deactivated users
-
-* `user_directory`. This contains the user_id, display name and avatar we'll
-  return when you search the directory.
-  - Because there's only one directory entry per user, it's important that we only
-    ever put publicly visible names here. Otherwise we might leak a private
+
+- support users
+- appservice users
+- deactivated users
+
+A description of each table follows:
+
+* `user_directory`. This contains the user ID, display name and avatar of each user.
+  - Because there is only one directory entry per user, it is important that it
+    only contain publicly visible information. Otherwise, this will leak the
     nickname or avatar used in a private room.
   - Indexed on rooms. Indexed on users.
 
 * `user_directory_search`. To be joined to `user_directory`. It contains an extra
-  column that enables full text search based on user ids and display names.
-  Different schemas for SQLite and Postgres with different code paths to match.
+  column that enables full text search based on user IDs and display names.
+  Different schemas for SQLite and Postgres are used.
   - Indexed on the full text search data. Indexed on users.
 
 * `user_directory_stream_pos`. When the initial background update to populate
   the directory is complete, we record a stream position here. This indicates
   that synapse should now listen for room changes and incrementally update
-  the directory where necessary.
+  the directory where necessary. (See [stream positions](development/synapse_architecture/streams.html).)
 
-* `users_in_public_rooms`. Contains associations between users and the public rooms they're in.
-  Used to determine which users are in public rooms and should be publicly visible in the directory.
+* `users_in_public_rooms`. Contains associations between users and the public
+  rooms they're in.  Used to determine which users are in public rooms and should
+  be publicly visible in the directory. Both local and remote users are tracked.
 
 * `users_who_share_private_rooms`. Rows are triples `(L, M, room id)` where `L`
    is a local user and `M` is a local or remote user. `L` and `M` should be
    different, but this isn't enforced by a constraint.
+
+   Note that if two local users share a room then there will be two entries:
+   `(user1, user2, !room_id)` and `(user2, user1, !room_id)`.
+
+## Configuration options
+
+The exact way user search works can be tweaked via some server-level
+[configuration options](usage/configuration/config_documentation.md#user_directory).
+
+The information is not repeated here, but the options are mentioned below.
+
+## Search algorithm
+
+If `search_all_users` is `false`, then results are limited to users who:
+
+1. Are found in the `users_in_public_rooms` table, or
+2. Are found in the `users_who_share_private_rooms` where `L` is the requesting
+   user and `M` is the search result.
+
+Otherwise, if `search_all_users` is `true`, no such limits are placed and all
+users known to the server (matching the search query) will be returned.
+
+By default, locked users are not returned. If `show_locked_users` is `true` then
+no filtering on the locked status of a user is done.
+
+The user provided search term is lowercased and normalized using [NFKC](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicode_equivalence#Normalization),
+this treats the string as case-insensitive, canonicalizes different forms of the
+same text, and maps some "roughly equivalent" characters together.
+
+The search term is then split into words:
+
+* If [ICU](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Components_for_Unicode) is
+  available, then the system's [default locale](https://unicode-org.github.io/icu/userguide/locale/#default-locales)
+  will be used to break the search term into words. (See the
+  [installation instructions](setup/installation.md) for how to install ICU.)
+* If unavailable, then runs of ASCII characters, numbers, underscores, and hypens
+  are considered words.
+
+The queries for PostgreSQL and SQLite are detailed below, by their overall goal
+is to find matching users, preferring users who are "real" (e.g. not bots,
+not deactivated). It is assumed that real users will have an display name and
+avatar set.
+
+### PostgreSQL
+
+The above words are then transformed into two queries:
+
+1. "exact" which matches the parsed words exactly (using [`to_tsquery`](https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/textsearch-controls.html#TEXTSEARCH-PARSING-QUERIES));
+2. "prefix" which matches the parsed words as prefixes (using `to_tsquery`).
+
+Results are composed of all rows in the `user_directory_search` table whose information
+matches one (or both) of these queries. Results are ordered by calculating a weighted
+score for each result, higher scores are returned first:
+
+* 4x if a user ID exists.
+* 1.2x if the user has a display name set.
+* 1.2x if the user has an avatar set.
+* 0x-3x by the full text search results using the [`ts_rank_cd` function](https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/textsearch-controls.html#TEXTSEARCH-RANKING)
+  against the "exact" search query; this has four variables with the following weightings:
+  * `D`: 0.1 for the user ID's domain
+  * `C`: 0.1 for unused
+  * `B`: 0.9 for the user's display name (or an empty string if it is not set)
+  * `A`: 0.1 for the user ID's localpart
+* 0x-1x by the full text search results using the `ts_rank_cd` function against the
+  "prefix" search query. (Using the same weightings as above.)
+* If `prefer_local_users` is `true`, then 2x if the user is local to the homeserver.
+
+Note that `ts_rank_cd` returns a weight between 0 and 1. The initial weighting of
+all results is 1.
+
+### SQLite
+
+Results are composed of all rows in the `user_directory_search` whose information
+matches the query. Results are ordered by the following information, with each
+subsequent column used as a tiebreaker, for each result:
+
+1. By the [`rank`](https://www.sqlite.org/windowfunctions.html#built_in_window_functions)
+   of the full text search results using the [`matchinfo` function](https://www.sqlite.org/fts3.html#matchinfo). Higher
+   ranks are returned first.
+2. If `prefer_local_users` is `true`, then users local to the homeserver are
+   returned first.
+3. Users with a display name set are returned first.
+4. Users with an avatar set are returned first.