commit | 32c0746d9083981b3bb9dcb9be9a422e9f3cd8c3 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Jan Høydahl <janhoy@users.noreply.github.com> | Wed Oct 21 13:38:54 2020 +0200 |
committer | GitHub <noreply@github.com> | Wed Oct 21 13:38:54 2020 +0200 |
tree | dafab5b36df67fcebd6ebfb961609b9e4967f190 | |
parent | e6fa78321a8f45d08561a48e48b29e7a6e5fd08f [diff] |
SOLR-14445: Add Entity Caching documentation (#2013) Signed-off-by: Jan Høydahl <janhoy@apache.org> Co-authored-by: Tobias Kässmann <tobias.kaessmann@mondia.com>
Apache Lucene is a high-performance, full featured text search engine library written in Java.
Apache Solr is an enterprise search platform written using Apache Lucene. Major features include full-text search, index replication and sharding, and result faceting and highlighting.
This README file only contains basic setup instructions. For more comprehensive documentation, visit:
(You do not need to do this if you downloaded a pre-built package.)
Lucene and Solr are built using Apache Ant. To build Lucene and Solr, run:
ant compile
If you see an error about Ivy missing while invoking Ant (e.g., .ant/lib does not exist
), run ant ivy-bootstrap
and retry.
Sometimes you may face issues with Ivy (e.g., an incompletely downloaded artifact). Cleaning up the Ivy cache and retrying is a workaround for most of such issues:
rm -rf ~/.ivy2/cache
The Solr server can then be packaged and prepared for startup by running the following command from the solr/
directory:
ant server
After building Solr, the server can be started using the bin/solr
control scripts. Solr can be run in either standalone or distributed (SolrCloud mode).
To run Solr in standalone mode, run the following command from the solr/
directory:
bin/solr start
To run Solr in SolrCloud mode, run the following command from the solr/
directory:
bin/solr start -c
The bin/solr
control script allows heavy modification of the started Solr. Common options are described in some detail in solr/README.txt. For an exhaustive treatment of options, run bin/solr start -h
from the solr/
directory.
Ant can be used to generate project files compatible with most common IDEs. Run the ant command corresponding to your IDE of choice before attempting to import Lucene/Solr.
ant eclipse
(See this for details)ant idea
(See this for details)ant netbeans
(See this for details)The standard test suite can be run with the command:
ant test
Like Solr itself, the test-running can be customized or tailored in a number or ways. For an exhaustive discussion of the options available, run:
ant test-help
Please review the Contributing to Solr Guide for information on contributing.
#solr
and #solr-dev
on freenode.net