Thank you for the answers, the idea was to use Solr with REST. Is there
a XMLQueryParser yet? I didn't find it in the source.

Max

Erik Hatcher schrieb:
> Also consider that I expect Solr to support the XMLQueryParser at some
> point in the near future, which would be POSTed in a body for a search
> request.  Being RESTful is something I strive for all too often myself,
> and using HTTP verbs appropriately.  But pragmatically speaking, a POST
> to Solr is not a big deal.  Solr is designed to be hidden and not
> crawled anyway, so whatever front-end would have the responsibility for
> dealing with how the world sees the search interface.
> 
>     Erik
> 
> 
> On Jan 19, 2007, at 9:16 PM, Yonik Seeley wrote:
> 
>> On 1/19/07, Brian Lucas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>> Walter Underwood wrote:
>>> > Use GET unless it really, really, really doesn't work. POST is
>>> > the wrong HTTP semantic for fetching information. Long query
>>> > strings are not a good enough reason. HTTP puts no limit on the
>>> > length of a URL.
>>> >
>>>
>>> Walter, while your above statement may be true, some java app servers
>>> have
>>> an issue with the length of URLs and truncate after a certain point. 
>>> I ran
>>> into this issue back in April.
>>
>> Yep, and given that even Apache has limits (which most people use to
>> front dynamic content), using really large URLs is asking for trouble.
>>
>> http://www.boutell.com/newfaq/misc/urllength.html
>>
>> -Yonik
> 
> 

Reply via email to