if you write only a few docs you may not observe much difference in
size. if you write large no:of docs you may observe a big difference.

2010/1/27 Tim Terlegård <tim.terleg...@gmail.com>:
> I got the binary format to work perfectly now. Performance is better
> than with xml. Thanks!
>
> Although, it doesn't look like a binary file is smaller in size than
> an xml file?
>
> /Tim
>
> 2010/1/27 Noble Paul നോബിള്‍  नोब्ळ् <noble.p...@corp.aol.com>:
>> 2010/1/21 Tim Terlegård <tim.terleg...@gmail.com>:
>>> Yes, it worked! Thank you very much. But do I need to use curl or can
>>> I use CommonsHttpSolrServer or StreamingUpdateSolrServer? If I can't
>>> use BinaryWriter then I don't know how to do this.
>> if your data is serialized using JavaBinUpdateRequestCodec, you may
>> POST it using curl.
>> If you are writing directly , use CommonsHttpSolrServer
>>>
>>> /Tim
>>>
>>> 2010/1/20 Noble Paul നോബിള്‍  नोब्ळ् <noble.p...@corp.aol.com>:
>>>> 2010/1/20 Tim Terlegård <tim.terleg...@gmail.com>:
>>>>>>>> BinaryRequestWriter does not read from a file and post it
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Is there any other way or is this use case not supported? I tried this:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> $ curl <host>/solr/update/javabin -F stream.file=/tmp/data.bin
>>>>>>> $ curl <host>/solr/update -F stream.body=' <commit />'
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Solr did read the file, because solr complained when the file wasn't
>>>>>>> in the format the JavaBinUpdateRequestCodec expected. But no data is
>>>>>>> added to the index for some reason.
>>>>>
>>>>>> how did you create the file /tmp/data.bin ? what is the format?
>>>>>
>>>>> I wrote this in the first email. It's in the javabin format (I think).
>>>>> I did like this (groovy code):
>>>>>
>>>>>   fieldId = new NamedList()
>>>>>   fieldId.add("name", "id")
>>>>>   fieldId.add("val", "9-0")
>>>>>   fieldId.add("boost", null)
>>>>>   fieldText = new NamedList()
>>>>>   fieldText.add("name", "text")
>>>>>   fieldText.add("val", "Some text")
>>>>>   fieldText.add("boost", null)
>>>>>   fieldNull = new NamedList()
>>>>>   fieldNull.add("boost", null)
>>>>>   doc = [fieldNull, fieldId, fieldText]
>>>>>   docs = [doc]
>>>>>   root = new NamedList()
>>>>>   root.add("docs", docs)
>>>>>   fos = new FileOutputStream("data.bin")
>>>>>   new JavaBinCodec().marshal(root, fos)
>>>>>
>>>>> /Tim
>>>>>
>>>> JavaBin is a format.
>>>> use this method JavaBinUpdateRequestCodec# marshal(UpdateRequest
>>>> updateRequest, OutputStream os)
>>>>
>>>> The output of this can be posted to solr and it should work
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> -----------------------------------------------------
>>>> Noble Paul | Systems Architect| AOL | http://aol.com
>>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> -----------------------------------------------------
>> Noble Paul | Systems Architect| AOL | http://aol.com
>>
>



-- 
-----------------------------------------------------
Noble Paul | Systems Architect| AOL | http://aol.com

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