So you are saying that no-one is triggering any commit, and that the auto soft commit solution is not actually waiting the proper time ? I suspect something is not like described, because if the Auto Soft commit was not working I would expect thousands of bugs raised.
let's dig a little bit into details… What are you using exactly to index content ? Maybe some commit is actually hidden there :) Cheers 2015-07-08 2:21 GMT+01:00 Summer Shire <shiresum...@gmail.com>: > No the client lets solr handle it. > > > > On Jul 7, 2015, at 2:38 PM, Mike Drob <mad...@cloudera.com> wrote: > > > > Are the clients that are posting updates requesting commits? > > > >> On Tue, Jul 7, 2015 at 4:29 PM, Summer Shire <shiresum...@gmail.com> > wrote: > >> > >> HI All, > >> > >> Can someone help me understand the following behavior. > >> I have the following maxTimes on hard and soft commits > >> > >> yet I see a lot of Opening Searchers in the log > >> org.apache.solr.search.SolrIndexSearcher - Opening Searcher@1656a258 > [main] > >> realtime > >> also I see a soft commit happening almost every 30 secs > >> org.apache.solr.update.UpdateHandler - start > >> > commit{,optimize=false,openSearcher=true,waitSearcher=true,expungeDeletes=false,softCommit=true,prepareCommit=false} > >> <autoCommit> > >> <maxTime>480000</maxTime> > >> <openSearcher>false</openSearcher> > >> </autoCommit> > >> > >> <autoSoftCommit> > >> <maxTime>180000</maxTime> > >> </autoSoftCommit> > >> I tried disabling softCommit by setting maxTime to -1. > >> On startup solrCore recognized it and logged "Soft AutoCommit: disabled" > >> but I could still see softCommit=true > >> org.apache.solr.update.UpdateHandler - start > >> > commit{,optimize=false,openSearcher=true,waitSearcher=true,expungeDeletes=false,softCommit=true,prepareCommit=false} > >> <autoSoftCommit> > >> <maxTime>-1</maxTime> > >> </autoSoftCommit> > >> > >> Thanks, > >> Summer > -- -------------------------- Benedetti Alessandro Visiting card : http://about.me/alessandro_benedetti "Tyger, tyger burning bright In the forests of the night, What immortal hand or eye Could frame thy fearful symmetry?" William Blake - Songs of Experience -1794 England