How about Krugle?
http://opensearch.krugle.org/
Walter Underwood
wun...@wunderwood.org
http://observer.wunderwood.org/ (my blog)
On May 11, 2015, at 3:18 AM, Tomasz Borek wrote:
> There's also Perl-backed ACK. http://beyondgrep.com/
>
> Which does the job of searching code really well.
>
>
There's also Perl-backed ACK. http://beyondgrep.com/
Which does the job of searching code really well.
And I think at least once I came across something that stemmed from ACK and
claimed it was faster/better... googling... aah! The Silver Searcher it
was. :-)
http://betterthanack.com/
pozdrawiam
Hi Alexandre,
Solr & ASM is the extact poblem I'm looking to hack about with so I'm keen
to consider any code no matter how ugly or broken
Regards
Mark
On 9 May 2015 at 10:21, Alexandre Rafalovitch wrote:
> If you only have classes/jars, use ASM. I have done this before, have some
> ugly cod
If you only have classes/jars, use ASM. I have done this before, have some
ugly code to share if you want.
If you have sources, javadoc 8 is a good way too. I am doing that now for
solr-start.com, code on Github.
Regards,
Alex
On 9 May 2015 7:09 am, "Mark" wrote:
> To answer why bytecode -
Erik,
Thanks for the pretty much OOTB approach.
I think I'm going to just try a range of approaches, and see how far I get.
The "IDE does this suggestion" would be worth looking into as well.
On 8 May 2015 at 22:14, Mark wrote:
>
> https://searchcode.com/
>
> looks really interesting, howe
https://searchcode.com/
looks really interesting, however I want to crunch as much searchable
aspects out of jars sititng on a classpath or under a project structure...
Really early days so I'm open to any suggestions
On 8 May 2015 at 22:09, Mark wrote:
> To answer why bytecode - because mos
To answer why bytecode - because mostly the use case I have is looking to
index as much detail from jars/classes.
extract class names,
method names
signatures
packages / imports
I am considering using ASM in order to generate an analysis view of the
class
The sort of usecases I have would be met
), of which there are a
few available as well.
Hmm, this looks interesting ...
https://searchcode.com/
-Original Message-
From: Erik Hatcher [mailto:erik.hatc...@gmail.com]
Sent: Friday, May 08, 2015 4:19 PM
To: solr-user@lucene.apache.org
Subject: Re: indexing java byte code in classes /
Oh, and sorry, I omitted a couple of details:
# creating the “java” core/collection
bin/solr create -c java
# I ran this from my Solr source code checkout, so that SolrLogFormatter.class
just happened to be handy
Erik
> On May 8, 2015, at 4:11 PM, Erik Hatcher wrote:
>
> What kin
What kinds of searches do you want to run? Are you trying to extract class
names, method names, and such and make those searchable? If that’s the case,
you need some kind of “parser” to reverse engineer that information from .class
and .jar files before feeding it to Solr, which would happen
What do the various Java IDEs use for indexing classes for
field/type/variable/method usage search? I imagine it's got to be bytecode.
On Fri, May 8, 2015 at 2:40 PM, Tomasz Borek wrote:
> Out of curiosity: why bytecode?
>
> pozdrawiam,
> LAFK
>
> 2015-05-08 21:31 GMT+02:00 Mark :
>
> > I lookin
Out of curiosity: why bytecode?
pozdrawiam,
LAFK
2015-05-08 21:31 GMT+02:00 Mark :
> I looking to use Solr search over the byte code in Classes and Jars.
>
> Does anyone know or have experience of Analyzers, Tokenizers, and Token
> Filters for such a task?
>
> Regards
>
> Mark
>
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