add "-Dsolr.log=<log_directory>" to your command line On 27 October 2015 at 08:13, Steven White <swhite4...@gmail.com> wrote:
> How do I specify a different log directory by editing "log4j.properties"? > > Steve > > On Mon, Oct 26, 2015 at 9:08 PM, Pushkar Raste <pushkar.ra...@gmail.com> > wrote: > > > It depends on your case. If you don't mind logs from 3 different > instances > > inter-mingled with each other you should be fine. > > You add "-Dsolr.log=<log_directory>" to make logs to go different > > directories. If you want logs to go to same directory but different files > > try updating log4j.properties. > > > > On 26 October 2015 at 13:33, Steven White <swhite4...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > Hi, > > > > > > For reasons I have no control over, I'm required to run 2 (maybe more) > > > instances of Solr on the same server (Windows and Linux). To be more > > > specific, I will need to start each instance like so: > > > > > > > solr\bin start -p 8983 -s ..\instance_one > > > > solr\bin start -p 8984 -s ..\instance_two > > > > solr\bin start -p 8985 -s ..\instance_three > > > > > > Each of those instances is a stand alone Solr (no ZK here at all). > > > > > > I have tested this over and over and did not see any issue. However, I > > did > > > notice that each instance is writing to the same solr\server\logs\ > files > > > (will this be an issue?!!) > > > > > > Is the above something I should avoid? If so, why? > > > > > > Thanks in advanced !! > > > > > > Steve > > > > > >