To my understanding it adds a in-memory index which holds the recent
commits and which is flushed to the main index based on the config
options. Not sure if it helps to get solr near real time. I am
evaluating it currently, and I am really not sure if it adds anything
because of the cache regeneration of solr on every commit ??
-Janne
Lähetetty iPodista
brad anderson <solrinter...@gmail.com> kirjoitti 19.3.2010 kello 20.53:
Indeed, which is why I'm wondering what is Zoie adding if you still
need to
commit to search recent documents. Does anyone know?
Thanks,
Brad
On 18 March 2010 19:41, Erik Hatcher <erik.hatc...@gmail.com> wrote:
"When I don't do the commit, I cannot search the documents I've
indexed." -
that's exactly how Solr without Zoie works, and it's how Lucene
itself
works. Gotta commit to see the documents indexed.
Erik
On Mar 18, 2010, at 5:41 PM, brad anderson wrote:
Tried following their tutorial for plugging zoie into solr:
http://snaprojects.jira.com/wiki/display/ZOIE/Zoie+Server
It appears it only allows you to search on documents after you do a
commit?
Am I missing something here, or does plugin not doing anything.
Their tutorial tells you to do a commit when you index the docs:
curl http://localhost:8983/solr/update/csv?commit=true --data-binary
@books.csv -H 'Content-type:text/plain; charset=utf-8'
When I don't do the commit, I cannot search the documents I've
indexed.
Thanks,
Brad
On 9 March 2010 23:34, Don Werve <d...@madwombat.com> wrote:
2010/3/9 Shalin Shekhar Mangar <shalinman...@gmail.com>
I think Don is talking about Zoie - it requires a long uniqueKey.
Yep; we're using UUIDs.