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Hoss Man commented on SOLR-1729:
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Peter: I think you may have misconstrued my comments -- they were not 
criticisms of your patch, they were a clarification of why the functionality 
you are proposing is important.

bq. Can you point me toward the class(es) where filter queries' date math lives

it's all handled internally by DateField, at which point it has no notion of 
the request -- I believe this is why yonik suggested using a ThreadLocal 
variable to track a consistent "NOW" that any method anywhere in Solr could use 
(if set) for the current request ... then we just need something like SolrCore 
to set it on each request (or accept it as a parm if specified)

bq. As filter queries are cached separately, can you think of any potential 
caching issues relating to filter queries?

The cache keys for things like that are the Query objects themselves, and at 
that point the DateMath strings (including "NOW") have already been resolved 
into realy time values so that shouldn't be an issue.


> Date Facet now override time parameter
> --------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: SOLR-1729
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/SOLR-1729
>             Project: Solr
>          Issue Type: Improvement
>          Components: search
>    Affects Versions: 1.4
>         Environment: Solr 1.4
>            Reporter: Peter Sturge
>            Priority: Minor
>         Attachments: FacetParams.java, SimpleFacets.java
>
>
> This PATCH introduces a new query parameter that tells a (typically, but not 
> necessarily) remote server what time to use as 'NOW' when calculating date 
> facets for a query (and, for the moment, date facets *only*) - overriding the 
> default behaviour of using the local server's current time.
> This gets 'round a problem whereby an explicit time range is specified in a 
> query (e.g. timestamp:[then0 TO then1]), and date facets are required for the 
> given time range (in fact, any explicit time range). 
> Because DateMathParser performs all its calculations from 'NOW', remote 
> callers have to work out how long ago 'then0' and 'then1' are from 'now', and 
> use the relative-to-now values in the facet.date.xxx parameters. If a remote 
> server has a different opinion of NOW compared to the caller, the results 
> will be skewed (e.g. they are in a different time-zone, not time-synced etc.).
> This becomes particularly salient when performing distributed date faceting 
> (see SOLR-1709), where multiple shards may all be running with different 
> times, and the faceting needs to be aligned.
> The new parameter is called 'facet.date.now', and takes as a parameter a 
> (stringified) long that is the number of milliseconds from the epoch (1 Jan 
> 1970 00:00) - i.e. the returned value from a System.currentTimeMillis() call. 
> This was chosen over a formatted date to delineate it from a 'searchable' 
> time and to avoid superfluous date parsing. This makes the value generally a 
> programatically-set value, but as that is where the use-case is for this type 
> of parameter, this should be ok.
> NOTE: This parameter affects date facet timing only. If there are other areas 
> of a query that rely on 'NOW', these will not interpret this value. This is a 
> broader issue about setting a 'query-global' NOW that all parts of query 
> analysis can share.
> Source files affected:
> FacetParams.java   (holds the new constant FACET_DATE_NOW)
> SimpleFacets.java  getFacetDateCounts() NOW parameter modified
> This PATCH is mildly related to SOLR-1709 (Distributed Date Faceting), but as 
> it's a general change for date faceting, it was deemed deserving of its own 
> patch. I will be updating SOLR-1709 in due course to include the use of this 
> new parameter, after some rfc acceptance.
> A possible enhancement to this is to detect facet.date fields, look for and 
> match these fields in queries (if they exist), and potentially determine 
> automatically the required time skew, if any. There are a whole host of 
> reasons why this could be problematic to implement, so an explicit 
> facet.date.now parameter is the safest route.

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