* DocValuesFieldExistsQuery and NormsFieldExistsQuery are used for existence queries when possible.
* Added documentation on the difference between field:* and field:[* TO *]
Prior to this commit, Solr's Jetty listened for connections on all
network interfaces. This commit changes it to only listen on localhost,
to prevent incautious administrators from accidentally exposing their
Solr deployment to the world.
Administrators who wish to override this behavior can set the
SOLR_JETTY_HOST property in their Solr include file
(solr.in.sh/solr.in.cmd) to "0.0.0.0" or some other value.
A version of this commit was previously reverted due to inconsistency
between SOLR_HOST and SOLR_JETTY_HOST. This commit fixes this issue.
{!terms} queries have a docValues-based implementation that uses per-segment DV structures. This does well with a small to moderate (a few hundred) number of query terms, but doesn't well scale beyond that due to repetitive seeks done on each segment.
This commit introduces an implementation that uses a "top-level" docValues structure, which scales much better to very large {!terms} queries (many hundreds, thousands of terms).
Prior to this commit, Solr's Jetty listened for connections on all
network interfaces. This commit changes it to only listen on localhost,
to prevent incautious administrators from accidentally exposing their
Solr deployment to the world.
Administrators who wish to override this behavior can set the
SOLR_JETTY_HOST property in their Solr include file
(solr.in.sh/solr.in.cmd) to "0.0.0.0" or some other value.
Currently the documentation pretends to create a JKS keystore. It is
only actually a JKS keystore on java 8: on java9+ it is a PKCS12
keystore with a .jks extension (because PKCS12 is the new java default).
It works even though solr explicitly tells the JDK
(SOLR_SSL_KEY_STORE_TYPE=JKS) that its JKS when it is in fact not, due
to how keystore backwards compatibility was implemented.
Fix docs to explicitly create a PKCS12 keystore with .p12 extension and
so on instead of a PKCS12 keystore masquerading as a JKS one. This
simplifies the SSL steps since the "conversion" step (which was doing
nothing) from .JKS -> .P12 can be removed.