The Jetty servlet container that Solr uses doesn't understand those
files. It would not use them to determine access, and would likely make
them accessible to web requests in plain text.
On 1/6/15 16:01, Craig Hoffman wrote:
Thanks Otis. Do think a .htaccess / .passwd file in the Solr admin di
Thanks Otis. Do think a .htaccess / .passwd file in the Solr admin dir would
interfere with its operation?
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> On Jan 6, 2015, at 1:09 PM, Otis G
Hi Craig,
If you want to protect Solr, put it behind something like Apache / Nginx /
HAProxy and put .htaccess at that level, in front of Solr.
Or try something like
http://blog.jelastic.com/2013/06/17/secure-access-to-your-jetty-web-application/
Otis
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Monitoring * Alerting * Anomaly Detection
Craig,
1. What is .htaccess file meant for?
2. What are the contents inside this file?
3. How will you or how Solr knows that it needs to look for this file to
bring in the needed security to this (which) area?
4. What event is causing for you to re-index the engine eve