Thanks erick, the main reason why i want to use atomic updates is, to increase updating existing kind of large documents.
So if under to cover, everything is the same (loading the whole doc, updating, re-index the whole doc) it is not interesting for me anymore. What is the best the most performant way to update a large document? Any recommendations? THANKS! -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- Von: Erick Erickson [mailto:erickerick...@gmail.com] Gesendet: Sonntag, 13. Januar 2013 16.53 An: solr-user@lucene.apache.org Betreff: Re: SolrJ | Atomic Updates | How works exactly? Atomic updates work by storing (stored="true") all the fields (note, you don't have to set stored="true" for the destinations of copyField). Anyway, when you use the atomic update syntax under the covers Solr reads all the stored fields out, re-assembles the document and re-indexes it. So your index may be significantly larger. Also note that in the 4.1 world, stored fields are automatically compressed so this may not be so much of a problem. And, there's been at least 1 or 2 fixes to this since 4.0 as I remember, so you might want to wait for 4.1 to experiment with (there's talk of cutting RC1 for Solr4.1 early next week) or use a nightly build. Best Erick On Sun, Jan 13, 2013 at 3:43 AM, uwe72 <uwe.clem...@exxcellent.de> wrote: > i have very big documents in the index. > > i want to update a multivalue field of a document, without loading the > whole document. > > how can i do this? > > is there somewhere a good documentation? > > regards > > > > -- > View this message in context: > http://lucene.472066.n3.nabble.com/SolrJ-Atomic-Updates-How-works-exac > tly-tp4032976.html Sent from the Solr - User mailing list archive at > Nabble.com. >