I read the doc.  I discovered that Confluence supported inline comments, so
I left a few and even self-addressed some by adding to a couple of your
lists.

In a volunteer/open-source space, the challenge is not having workable
ideas, but convincing others to join / help.  Otherwise, you go it alone
and probably don't get far.  Or lack of early collaboration yields
something that doesn't get much interest because it doesn't address
requirements or constraints that matter to others, yet weren't known up
front.  At least lately I think there's been good collaboration.

On Mon, Mar 2, 2026 at 11:13 AM Kevin Liang (BLOOMBERG/ 919 3RD A) <
[email protected]> wrote:

> Hello everyone,
>
> Given the recent interest and discussion around Solr performance
> benchmarking, I figured it would be useful to 1) centralize the discussion
> and 2) bring it to a long-lived format (that's not email). So with that, I
> have started
> https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/SOLR/Solr+Performance+Benchmarking
> (I figured there's still more discussion to be had before it becomes a SIP
> with technical requirements).
>
> I encourage anyone and everyone who is interested to provide their input
> (comment or edit). This is a community initiative, and shouldn't be limited
> by me or any biases I may have. Hopefully people find this useful in moving
> the discussion forward.
>
> -Kevin

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