If you insist on using Tomcat, the log is often in catalina.out
On Thu, Sep 3, 2015 at 7:04 AM, Upayavira <u...@odoko.co.uk> wrote: > > > On Thu, Sep 3, 2015, at 02:31 PM, shahper wrote: >> >> On Thursday 03 September 2015 05:48 PM, Upayavira wrote: >> > >> > On Thu, Sep 3, 2015, at 11:32 AM, shahper wrote: >> >> Hi, >> >> >> >> I have setup solr when I am clicking on logging there nothing coming. >> >> Its just showing loading. >> > Have a look in your browser's developer tools and see what happens to >> > the request for logging information. >> > >> > If you give us more information as to what version of Solr you are >> > using, and how you started it, we might be able to tell you where you >> > can find logs on the filesystem also. >> > >> > Or, just search through your Solr directory for solr.log. That should >> > have your log info in it. >> > >> > Upayavira >> Version of solr is solr-5.2.1 I have installed it on tomcat . I have >> started it with Tomcat. I have checked at there is no solr.log file. >> >> As I was checking online I think there is some problem with jar which it >> is not able to read for logging. I am just guessing it may be the >> problem. If its the problen can you suggest me how to do that eg slf4j >> ,log4j > > Running it in Tomcat is no longer a supported action. It may work, it > may not. > > You are much better off using the embedded Jetty, that is, just use the > bin/solr script to start Solr, and Solr will take care of everything > else, including logging. > > Upayavira