Thanks Alex for the response.
Alexandre Rafalovitch wrote
> What features are you planning to use from SolrJ client? Because you can
> always just talk to Solr server directly with HTTP query URLs and JSON
> results.
Because SolrJ is a Java client, we've chosen that as the default client that
wi
Chris Hostetter-3 wrote
> Your best bet is probably to ignore SolrJ -- just pick an HTTP library and
> an XML serialiation library that you are familiar with and know will run
> in your client app and use them to talk to Solr with some custom code to
> format your docs in XML for indexing and pa
Shawn Heisey-4 wrote
> Although SolrJ is a standalone component, it is also an integral part of
> Solr itself, so it has the same Java requirement as Solr. It is highly
> unlikely that it will work at all with a 1.3.x Java version.
Thanks Shawn. So which version of Solr supports JDK 1.3? Or any
Currently our application is running on BroadVision server which is actually
based on very older version of JDK that is v1.3. Now we've a requirement
for searching documents and we want to integrate Apache Solr within our
application. We have also decided to run Apache Solr service separately in