— The web today is increasingly characterized by social and real-time signals, which we believe represent two frontiers in information retrieval. In this paper, we present Earlybird, the core retrieval engine that powers Twitter’s realtime search service. Although Earlybird builds and maintains inverted indexes like nearly all modern retrieval engines, its index structures differ from those built to support traditional web search. We describe these differences and present the rationale behind our design. A key requirement of real-time search is the ability to ingest content rapidly and make it searchable immediately, while concurrently supporting low-latency, highthroughput query evaluation. These demands are met with a single-writer, multiple-reader concurrency model and the targeted use of memory barriers. Earlybird represents a point in the design space of real-time search engines that has worked well for Twitter’s needs. By sharing our experiences, we hope to spur additional ...