Reference documentation and code samples for the Discovery Engine V1 API class Google::Cloud::DiscoveryEngine::V1::SearchRequest::ContentSearchSpec::SummarySpec.
A specification for configuring a summary returned in a search response.
Inherits
- Object
Extended By
- Google::Protobuf::MessageExts::ClassMethods
Includes
- Google::Protobuf::MessageExts
Methods
#ignore_adversarial_query
def ignore_adversarial_query() -> ::Boolean
-
(::Boolean) — Specifies whether to filter out adversarial queries. The default value
is
false
.Google employs search-query classification to detect adversarial queries. No summary is returned if the search query is classified as an adversarial query. For example, a user might ask a question regarding negative comments about the company or submit a query designed to generate unsafe, policy-violating output. If this field is set to
true
, we skip generating summaries for adversarial queries and return fallback messages instead.
#ignore_adversarial_query=
def ignore_adversarial_query=(value) -> ::Boolean
-
value (::Boolean) — Specifies whether to filter out adversarial queries. The default value
is
false
.Google employs search-query classification to detect adversarial queries. No summary is returned if the search query is classified as an adversarial query. For example, a user might ask a question regarding negative comments about the company or submit a query designed to generate unsafe, policy-violating output. If this field is set to
true
, we skip generating summaries for adversarial queries and return fallback messages instead.
-
(::Boolean) — Specifies whether to filter out adversarial queries. The default value
is
false
.Google employs search-query classification to detect adversarial queries. No summary is returned if the search query is classified as an adversarial query. For example, a user might ask a question regarding negative comments about the company or submit a query designed to generate unsafe, policy-violating output. If this field is set to
true
, we skip generating summaries for adversarial queries and return fallback messages instead.
#ignore_jail_breaking_query
def ignore_jail_breaking_query() -> ::Boolean
-
(::Boolean) — Optional. Specifies whether to filter out jail-breaking queries. The
default value is
false
.Google employs search-query classification to detect jail-breaking queries. No summary is returned if the search query is classified as a jail-breaking query. A user might add instructions to the query to change the tone, style, language, content of the answer, or ask the model to act as a different entity, e.g. "Reply in the tone of a competing company's CEO". If this field is set to
true
, we skip generating summaries for jail-breaking queries and return fallback messages instead.
#ignore_jail_breaking_query=
def ignore_jail_breaking_query=(value) -> ::Boolean
-
value (::Boolean) — Optional. Specifies whether to filter out jail-breaking queries. The
default value is
false
.Google employs search-query classification to detect jail-breaking queries. No summary is returned if the search query is classified as a jail-breaking query. A user might add instructions to the query to change the tone, style, language, content of the answer, or ask the model to act as a different entity, e.g. "Reply in the tone of a competing company's CEO". If this field is set to
true
, we skip generating summaries for jail-breaking queries and return fallback messages instead.
-
(::Boolean) — Optional. Specifies whether to filter out jail-breaking queries. The
default value is
false
.Google employs search-query classification to detect jail-breaking queries. No summary is returned if the search query is classified as a jail-breaking query. A user might add instructions to the query to change the tone, style, language, content of the answer, or ask the model to act as a different entity, e.g. "Reply in the tone of a competing company's CEO". If this field is set to
true
, we skip generating summaries for jail-breaking queries and return fallback messages instead.
#ignore_low_relevant_content
def ignore_low_relevant_content() -> ::Boolean
-
(::Boolean) — Specifies whether to filter out queries that have low relevance. The
default value is
false
.If this field is set to
false
, all search results are used regardless of relevance to generate answers. If set totrue
, only queries with high relevance search results will generate answers.
#ignore_low_relevant_content=
def ignore_low_relevant_content=(value) -> ::Boolean
-
value (::Boolean) — Specifies whether to filter out queries that have low relevance. The
default value is
false
.If this field is set to
false
, all search results are used regardless of relevance to generate answers. If set totrue
, only queries with high relevance search results will generate answers.
-
(::Boolean) — Specifies whether to filter out queries that have low relevance. The
default value is
false
.If this field is set to
false
, all search results are used regardless of relevance to generate answers. If set totrue
, only queries with high relevance search results will generate answers.
#ignore_non_summary_seeking_query
def ignore_non_summary_seeking_query() -> ::Boolean
-
(::Boolean) — Specifies whether to filter out queries that are not summary-seeking.
The default value is
false
.Google employs search-query classification to detect summary-seeking queries. No summary is returned if the search query is classified as a non-summary seeking query. For example,
why is the sky blue
andWho is the best soccer player in the world?
are summary-seeking queries, butSFO airport
andworld cup 2026
are not. They are most likely navigational queries. If this field is set totrue
, we skip generating summaries for non-summary seeking queries and return fallback messages instead.
#ignore_non_summary_seeking_query=
def ignore_non_summary_seeking_query=(value) -> ::Boolean
-
value (::Boolean) — Specifies whether to filter out queries that are not summary-seeking.
The default value is
false
.Google employs search-query classification to detect summary-seeking queries. No summary is returned if the search query is classified as a non-summary seeking query. For example,
why is the sky blue
andWho is the best soccer player in the world?
are summary-seeking queries, butSFO airport
andworld cup 2026
are not. They are most likely navigational queries. If this field is set totrue
, we skip generating summaries for non-summary seeking queries and return fallback messages instead.
-
(::Boolean) — Specifies whether to filter out queries that are not summary-seeking.
The default value is
false
.Google employs search-query classification to detect summary-seeking queries. No summary is returned if the search query is classified as a non-summary seeking query. For example,
why is the sky blue
andWho is the best soccer player in the world?
are summary-seeking queries, butSFO airport
andworld cup 2026
are not. They are most likely navigational queries. If this field is set totrue
, we skip generating summaries for non-summary seeking queries and return fallback messages instead.
#include_citations
def include_citations() -> ::Boolean
-
(::Boolean) — Specifies whether to include citations in the summary. The default
value is
false
.When this field is set to
true
, summaries include in-line citation numbers.Example summary including citations:
BigQuery is Google Cloud's fully managed and completely serverless enterprise data warehouse [1]. BigQuery supports all data types, works across clouds, and has built-in machine learning and business intelligence, all within a unified platform [2, 3].
The citation numbers refer to the returned search results and are 1-indexed. For example, [1] means that the sentence is attributed to the first search result. [2, 3] means that the sentence is attributed to both the second and third search results.
#include_citations=
def include_citations=(value) -> ::Boolean
-
value (::Boolean) — Specifies whether to include citations in the summary. The default
value is
false
.When this field is set to
true
, summaries include in-line citation numbers.Example summary including citations:
BigQuery is Google Cloud's fully managed and completely serverless enterprise data warehouse [1]. BigQuery supports all data types, works across clouds, and has built-in machine learning and business intelligence, all within a unified platform [2, 3].
The citation numbers refer to the returned search results and are 1-indexed. For example, [1] means that the sentence is attributed to the first search result. [2, 3] means that the sentence is attributed to both the second and third search results.
-
(::Boolean) — Specifies whether to include citations in the summary. The default
value is
false
.When this field is set to
true
, summaries include in-line citation numbers.Example summary including citations:
BigQuery is Google Cloud's fully managed and completely serverless enterprise data warehouse [1]. BigQuery supports all data types, works across clouds, and has built-in machine learning and business intelligence, all within a unified platform [2, 3].
The citation numbers refer to the returned search results and are 1-indexed. For example, [1] means that the sentence is attributed to the first search result. [2, 3] means that the sentence is attributed to both the second and third search results.
#language_code
def language_code() -> ::String
- (::String) — Language code for Summary. Use language tags defined by BCP47. Note: This is an experimental feature.
#language_code=
def language_code=(value) -> ::String
- value (::String) — Language code for Summary. Use language tags defined by BCP47. Note: This is an experimental feature.
- (::String) — Language code for Summary. Use language tags defined by BCP47. Note: This is an experimental feature.
#model_prompt_spec
def model_prompt_spec() -> ::Google::Cloud::DiscoveryEngine::V1::SearchRequest::ContentSearchSpec::SummarySpec::ModelPromptSpec
- (::Google::Cloud::DiscoveryEngine::V1::SearchRequest::ContentSearchSpec::SummarySpec::ModelPromptSpec) — If specified, the spec will be used to modify the prompt provided to the LLM.
#model_prompt_spec=
def model_prompt_spec=(value) -> ::Google::Cloud::DiscoveryEngine::V1::SearchRequest::ContentSearchSpec::SummarySpec::ModelPromptSpec
- value (::Google::Cloud::DiscoveryEngine::V1::SearchRequest::ContentSearchSpec::SummarySpec::ModelPromptSpec) — If specified, the spec will be used to modify the prompt provided to the LLM.
- (::Google::Cloud::DiscoveryEngine::V1::SearchRequest::ContentSearchSpec::SummarySpec::ModelPromptSpec) — If specified, the spec will be used to modify the prompt provided to the LLM.
#model_spec
def model_spec() -> ::Google::Cloud::DiscoveryEngine::V1::SearchRequest::ContentSearchSpec::SummarySpec::ModelSpec
- (::Google::Cloud::DiscoveryEngine::V1::SearchRequest::ContentSearchSpec::SummarySpec::ModelSpec) — If specified, the spec will be used to modify the model specification provided to the LLM.
#model_spec=
def model_spec=(value) -> ::Google::Cloud::DiscoveryEngine::V1::SearchRequest::ContentSearchSpec::SummarySpec::ModelSpec
- value (::Google::Cloud::DiscoveryEngine::V1::SearchRequest::ContentSearchSpec::SummarySpec::ModelSpec) — If specified, the spec will be used to modify the model specification provided to the LLM.
- (::Google::Cloud::DiscoveryEngine::V1::SearchRequest::ContentSearchSpec::SummarySpec::ModelSpec) — If specified, the spec will be used to modify the model specification provided to the LLM.
#summary_result_count
def summary_result_count() -> ::Integer
-
(::Integer) — The number of top results to generate the summary from. If the number
of results returned is less than
summaryResultCount
, the summary is generated from all of the results.At most 10 results for documents mode, or 50 for chunks mode, can be used to generate a summary. The chunks mode is used when SearchRequest.ContentSearchSpec.search_result_mode is set to CHUNKS.
#summary_result_count=
def summary_result_count=(value) -> ::Integer
-
value (::Integer) — The number of top results to generate the summary from. If the number
of results returned is less than
summaryResultCount
, the summary is generated from all of the results.At most 10 results for documents mode, or 50 for chunks mode, can be used to generate a summary. The chunks mode is used when SearchRequest.ContentSearchSpec.search_result_mode is set to CHUNKS.
-
(::Integer) — The number of top results to generate the summary from. If the number
of results returned is less than
summaryResultCount
, the summary is generated from all of the results.At most 10 results for documents mode, or 50 for chunks mode, can be used to generate a summary. The chunks mode is used when SearchRequest.ContentSearchSpec.search_result_mode is set to CHUNKS.
#use_semantic_chunks
def use_semantic_chunks() -> ::Boolean
- (::Boolean) — If true, answer will be generated from most relevant chunks from top search results. This feature will improve summary quality. Note that with this feature enabled, not all top search results will be referenced and included in the reference list, so the citation source index only points to the search results listed in the reference list.
#use_semantic_chunks=
def use_semantic_chunks=(value) -> ::Boolean
- value (::Boolean) — If true, answer will be generated from most relevant chunks from top search results. This feature will improve summary quality. Note that with this feature enabled, not all top search results will be referenced and included in the reference list, so the citation source index only points to the search results listed in the reference list.
- (::Boolean) — If true, answer will be generated from most relevant chunks from top search results. This feature will improve summary quality. Note that with this feature enabled, not all top search results will be referenced and included in the reference list, so the citation source index only points to the search results listed in the reference list.