I'm adding another vote for Drupal. The standard module is pretty good for
most cases and if you don't want the hassle to manage Solr you can subscribe
to Acquia which manage Solr for you.
Also, for those cases where you're not happy with the module you can easily
build your own (which is what I di
Hello Wojtek,
I don't want to discourage all the famous CMSs around nor solr uptake
but xwiki is quite a powerful CMS and has a search that is lucene based.
paul
Le 07-août-09 à 22:42, Olivier Dobberkau a écrit :
I've been asked to suggest a framework for managing a website's
content an
Am 07.08.2009 um 19:01 schrieb wojtekpia:
I've been asked to suggest a framework for managing a website's
content and
making all that content searchable. I'm comfortable using Solr for
search,
but I don't know where to start with the content management system. Is
anyone using a CMS (open so
Thanks for the responses. I'll give Drupal a shot. It sounds like it'll do
the trick, and if it doesn't then at least I'll know what I'm looking for.
Wojtek
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I would second that and add that you may want to consider acquia.com as they
provide a solid infrustracture to support the solr instance.
On Fri, Aug 7, 2009 at 11:20 AM, Andre Hagenbruch
wrote:
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> wojtekpia schrieb:
>
> Hi Wojtek,
>
> > I've bee
lucidimagination.com is powered off of Drupal and we index it using
Solr (but not the Drupal plugin, as we have non CMS data as well). It
has blogs, articles, white papers, mail archives, JIRA tickets, Wiki's
etc.
On Aug 7, 2009, at 1:01 PM, wojtekpia wrote:
I've been asked to suggest a
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wojtekpia schrieb:
Hi Wojtek,
> I've been asked to suggest a framework for managing a website's content and
> making all that content searchable. I'm comfortable using Solr for search,
> but I don't know where to start with the content management sys