IIRC "standalone" was deemed the wrong color for the shed because
[original/non-cloud/standalone/legacy/user-managed] solr can have more than
one machine, and does distributed search.
On Mon, Feb 26, 2024 at 3:22 PM Eric Pugh
wrote:
> Thanks for the link…. I don’t think anything I read in the
Please no :-) 100% of my small/medium sized customers would never ever
use Solr Cloud.
Uwe
Am 23.02.2024 um 19:06 schrieb Eric Pugh:
During today’s community discussion the topic of moving to defaulting to
SolrCloud mode came up.
The idea here is that when a user run’s “bin/solr start” it fi
This change is definitely NOT about requiring them to use Solr Cloud….
We’ve changed the bin/solr script to require a “start” parameter, so “bin/solr
start” to fire up solr, so if you are used to "bin/solr", you will need to
learn the “bin/solr start” command. Though, if you are using install
On Wed, Feb 28, 2024 at 7:50 AM Gus Heck wrote:
> IIRC "standalone" was deemed the wrong color for the shed because
> [original/non-cloud/standalone/legacy/user-managed] solr can have more than
> one machine, and does distributed search.
Nonetheless each node acts alone and/or acts on requests wh
Standalone makes sense for the configs. Each node has their own local set of
configs which are not shared.
wunder
Walter Underwood
wun...@wunderwood.org
http://observer.wunderwood.org/ (my blog)
> On Feb 28, 2024, at 10:51 AM, David Smiley wrote:
>
> On Wed, Feb 28, 2024 at 7:50 AM Gus Heck
Hi,
My problem is more: If you want to start a single Solr server, why the
hell do you want a zookeeper? This is total crap and waste of resources
and a security leak on top (why start some software that you don't need?).
I would agree with the new Solr Cloud default, if there would be by
de