On 11/27/2017 2:58 AM, Leo Prince wrote:
> Actually I have two major cores. One I have primary document store as MySQL
> and I can populate and re-index data from MySQL. However the other core
> with 40mil, is keeping as primary store (with stored=true), I get the fact
> that it's not a good
Leo
Your low priority data could be accumulated in a Couchbase DB or just in JSONL.
Then it would be easy to re-index.
Cheers -- Rick
--
Sorry for being brief. Alternate email is rickleir at yahoo dot com
Hi Daniel,
Thanks for the help.
Actually I have two major cores. One I have primary document store as MySQL
and I can populate and re-index data from MySQL. However the other core
with 40mil, is keeping as primary store (with stored=true), I get the fact
that it's not a good practice, however
Leo, the general rule of thumb here is that the Solr index should *not* be
your main document store. It is the index to your document store, but if
it needs to be re-indexed, you should use your document store as the place
to index from.
Your index will not have the full source data (unless ALL
Hi Shawn,
Thanks for the help.
I hate to burst your bubble here ... but 4 million docs is pretty small for
> a Solr index. I have one index that's a hundred times larger, and there
> are people with *billions* of documents in SolrCloud.
>
Sorry I missed a "0" there. It's actually 40 Millions,
On 11/23/2017 11:31 PM, Leo Prince wrote:
We were using bit older version Solr 4.10.2 and upgrading to Solr7.
We have like 4mil records in one of the core which is of course pretty
huge, hence re-sourcing the index is nearly impossible and re-querying from
source Solr to Solr7 is also going to
Hi,
We were using bit older version Solr 4.10.2 and upgrading to Solr7.
We have like 4mil records in one of the core which is of course pretty
huge, hence re-sourcing the index is nearly impossible and re-querying from
source Solr to Solr7 is also going to be an exhausting effort.
Hence, I