Simon Willnauer c70cceaee5 LUCENE-8253: Account for soft-deletes before they are flushed to disk
Inside the IndexWriter buffers are only written to disk if it's needed
or "worth it" which doesn't guarantee soft deletes to be accounted
in time. This is not necessarily a problem since they are eventually
collected and segments that have soft-deletes will me merged eventually
but for tests and on par behavior compared to hard deletes this behavior
is tricky.
This change cuts over to accounting in-place just like hard-deletes. This
results in accurate delete numbers for soft deletes at any give point in time
once the reader is loaded or a pending soft delete occurs.

This change also fixes an issue where all updates to a DV field are allowed
event if the field is unknown. Now this only works if the field is equal
to the soft deletes field. This behavior was never released.
2018-04-16 16:17:06 +02:00
2018-04-16 13:16:05 +02:00
2017-09-20 15:31:25 -04:00
2010-12-12 15:36:08 +00:00

Apache Lucene and Solr

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.

Online Documentation

This README file only contains basic setup instructions. For more comprehensive documentation, visit:

Building Lucene/Solr

(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

Running Solr

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.

Development/IDEs

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.

  • Eclipse - ant eclipse
  • IntelliJ - ant idea
  • Netbeans - ant netbeans

Running Tests

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

Contributing

Please review the Contributing to Solr Guide for information on contributing.

Discussion and Support

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