Thank you very much.
I'm using the one mentioned by @Anshum ..but the problem is that after
indexing some no of docs what I see is only the last one indexed which
clearly indicates that the index is getting overwritten. I'm posing my
simple indexer and searcher herewith. Actually I'm trying to crawl web pages
and add each pages content under a filed called "content" againts a field
called "id" and for this id I'm using the page URL. These are the codes

The indexer:
--------------------------------------------
package solrSearch;

import org.apache.lucene.analysis.SimpleAnalyzer;
import org.apache.lucene.analysis.standard.StandardAnalyzer;
import org.apache.lucene.document.Document;
import org.apache.lucene.document.Field;
import org.apache.lucene.index.IndexWriter;

public class SimpleIndexer {

  // Base Path to the index directory
  private static final String baseIndexPath = "/opt/lucene/index/";


  public void createIndex(String pageContent, String pageId, String coreId)
throws Exception {
    String trueIndexPath = baseIndexPath + coreId ;
    String contentField = "content";
    String contentId    = "id";

    // Create a writer
    IndexWriter writer = new IndexWriter(trueIndexPath, new
StandardAnalyzer(), true);

    System.out.println("Adding page to lucene " + pageId);
    Document doc = new Document();
    doc.add(new Field(contentField, pageContent, Field.Store.YES,
Field.Index.TOKENIZED));
    doc.add(new Field(contentId, pageId, Field.Store.YES,
Field.Index.TOKENIZED));

    // Add documents to the index
    writer.addDocument(doc);

    // Lucene recommends calling optimize upon completion of indexing
    writer.optimize();

    // clean up
    writer.close();
  }

  public static void main(String args[]) throws Exception{
       SimpleIndexer empIndex = new SimpleIndexer();
    empIndex.createIndex("this is sample test content", "test0", "core0");
    System.out.println("Data indexed by lucene");
  }

}

and the searcher:
---------------------------------------
package solrSearch;

import java.io.FileReader;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.InputStreamReader;
import java.util.Date;

import org.apache.lucene.analysis.Analyzer;
import org.apache.lucene.analysis.standard.StandardAnalyzer;
import org.apache.lucene.document.Document;
import org.apache.lucene.index.FilterIndexReader;
import org.apache.lucene.index.IndexReader;
import org.apache.lucene.queryParser.QueryParser;
import org.apache.lucene.search.HitCollector;
import org.apache.lucene.search.Hits;
import org.apache.lucene.search.IndexSearcher;
import org.apache.lucene.search.Query;
import org.apache.lucene.search.ScoreDoc;
import org.apache.lucene.search.Searcher;
import org.apache.lucene.search.TopDocCollector;

/** Simple command-line based search demo. */
public class SimpleSearcher {
    private static final String baseIndexPath = "/opt/lucene/index/" ;

    private void searchIndex(String queryString, String coreId) throws
Exception{
        String trueIndexPath = baseIndexPath + coreId;
        String searchField = "content";
         IndexSearcher searcher = new IndexSearcher(trueIndexPath);
        QueryParser queryParser = null;
        try {
            queryParser = new QueryParser(searchField, new
StandardAnalyzer());
        } catch (Exception ex) {
             ex.printStackTrace();
        }

        Query query = queryParser.parse(queryString);

        Hits hits = null;
        try {
             hits = searcher.search(query);
        } catch (Exception ex) {
             ex.printStackTrace();
        }

        int hitCount = hits.length();
        System.out.println("Results found :" + hitCount);

        for (int ix=0; (ix<hitCount && ix<10); ix++) {
             Document doc = hits.doc(ix);
            System.out.println(doc.get("id"));
            System.out.println(doc.get("content"));
        }
    }

    public static void main(String args[]) throws Exception{
         SimpleSearcher searcher = new SimpleSearcher();
        String queryString = args[0];
        System.out.println("Quering for :" + queryString);
        searcher.searchIndex(queryString, "core0");
    }

}

---------------
When I tried intially without having the core0 directory, it automatically
created that. Its fine, but I'm not able to figure what is the issue, why
the data is getting overwritten. Some silly mistakes some where. Can some
one point me that?
And this is the code snip that I'm using to post to lucene index.

public void postToSolr(String rawText, String pageId) throws Exception{
        // Which solr core are we posting to???
        //String solrCoreId = getCoreId(pageId);
        String coreId = "core0";
        SimpleIndexer indexer = new SimpleIndexer();
        indexer.createIndex(rawText, pageId, coreId);

    }

NB: I din't pay attention to change the names , so you might find the word
"solr" here and there. I was using that earlier, but bcoz of lack of
facility of creating new separate indexes I moved to lucene today only. I
guess trying to crete a new index with non-existing directory will
automatically create it, which is what i want. Correct me if i'm wrong. As I
mentioned earlier for each domain [say www.bcd.co.uk] I want to have a
separate index and coreId is a map of this URL to a unique number. Do let me
know if i'm going wrong anywhere of if you feel it can be done in any other
better way.


Thanks,
KK.


On Wed, May 20, 2009 at 4:10 PM, Anshum <ansh...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Hi KK,
>
> Easier still, you could just open the indexwriter with the last (3rd)
> arguement as true, this way the indexwriter would create a new index as
> soon
> as you start indexing. Also, if you just leave the indexWriter without the
> 3rd arguement, it'd conditionally create a new directory i.e. only if the
> index dir doesn't exist at that location would it create a new index else
> it
> would append to the already existing index at that location.
> Coming to the 2nd point, if you are talking about the index name, as
> mentioned by John you could simply use the timestamp as the index name.
>
> --
> Anshum Gupta
> Naukri Labs!
> http://ai-cafe.blogspot.com
>
> The facts expressed here belong to everybody, the opinions to me. The
> distinction is yours to draw............
>
>
> On Wed, May 20, 2009 at 3:23 PM, John Byrne <john.by...@propylon.com>
> wrote:
>
> > You can do this with pure Java. Create a file object with the path you
> > want, check if it exists, and it not, create it:
> >
> > File newIndexDir = new File("/foo/bar")
> >
> > if(!newFileDir.exists())   {
> >
> >   newDirFile.mkdirs();
> > }
> >
> > The 'mkdirs()' method creates any necessary parent directories.
> >
> > If you want to automate the generation of the path itself, then there are
> > several ways to do it, but the best way really depends on *why* you're
> > generating a new index. For instance, you could just create a timestamped
> > name, but that name might not be very meaningful.
> >
> > Hope that helps!
> >
> > -John
> >
> > KK wrote:
> >
> >> How to create a new index? everytime I need to do so , I've to create a
> >> new
> >> directory and put the path to that, right? how to automate the creation
> of
> >> new directory?
> >>
> >> I'm a new user of lucene. Please help me out.
> >>
> >> Thanks,
> >> KK.
> >>
> >>
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> >>
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> >>
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
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