bin/solr start -d techproducts
that will set up a non-cloud (i.e. stand-alone) Solr that you can use
as a model. Note that Solr uses "core discovery", which basically
recursively descends from SOLR_HOME and any time it finds a
"core.properties" file it assumes it's at the root of another core and
loads it.

To start Solr with a script, use 'bin/solr start -s some_directory'.
"some_directory" is "solr home" as above. You can manually put as many
directories in SOLR_HOME as you want and as long as each has a "conf"
directory and the associated "core.propreties" file they should all be
found.

If you copy things around, however, do be careful to edit the
core.properties file appropriately, in this case just make the "name"
parameter unique.

Best,
Erick


On Wed, May 27, 2015 at 6:14 AM, Alexandre Rafalovitch
<arafa...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Well, the cloud initialization steps are in the scripts that set those
> examples up. Based on your parameters too. To connect with Oracle to
> read data, you are probably looking for DIH (DataImportHandler) and
> Oracle as your keywords - not really connected to the scripts.
>
> But if you really don't know how the configuration is setup, I'd start
> with non-cloud examples that store stuff on the disk (instead of in
> Zookeeper) and get very familiar with it there.
>
> Regards,
>    Alex.
> ----
> Solr Analyzers, Tokenizers, Filters, URPs and even a newsletter:
> http://www.solr-start.com/
>
>
> On 27 May 2015 at 23:01, Dean Ericson <deric...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> Alex,
>>
>> I already have gone over all the great examples, esp the cloud.  My main
>> goal is to stand up my own collections, my own nodes, etc without relying
>> on the cloud example's auto-magic configuration.  I am trying to gain
>> insight into where each configuration item needs to go, how to set up a
>> node, and how to attach Solr to our existing Oracle DB.  Maybe I am missing
>> something, but I have not been able to find a tutorial that walks you
>> through those steps.
>>
>> Best,
>> Dean
>>
>>
>>
>> On Wed, May 27, 2015 at 8:54 AM, Alexandre Rafalovitch <arafa...@gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Why exactly do you not want to use bundled examples. There is an
>>> example that spins several servers next to each other on one machine.
>>> Then you can examine everything in there.
>>>
>>> I am missing something I guess.
>>>
>>> Regards,
>>>    Alex.
>>> ----
>>> Solr Analyzers, Tokenizers, Filters, URPs and even a newsletter:
>>> http://www.solr-start.com/
>>>
>>>
>>> On 27 May 2015 at 21:06, Dean Ericson <deric...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> > I am looking for a good tutorial on Solr 5 that does not use the provided
>>> > dist examples.  I am trying to setup a 'test' environment - using
>>> embedded
>>> > zookeeper - that would mimic what would need to be done in test/prod
>>> > without having to spin up multiple machines to do so.
>>> >
>>> > Specifically, we are looking for documentation on where to put our
>>> > solrconfig files, what configs are needed for new nodes, etc. (Can this
>>> be
>>> > handled through the admin ui?)  I do not see any documentation that
>>> offers
>>> > this kind granularity.  Does anyone know of a good resource they might be
>>> > able to point me to, other than the official docs (we've been through
>>> them
>>> > already)
>>> >
>>> > Thank you,
>>> > Dean
>>>

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