Hi,

we're using Solarium, too, via Drupal's search_api / search_api_solr modules,
and I hear there are plans by the Typo3 project to move to Solarium.

So there are at least two major CMS projects that will be relying on it in the 
future.

I don't have any experience with wordpress but a web search 
returned wpsolr (I assume you are aware of this):
https://www.wpsolr.com/knowledgebase/what-is-your-solr-php-client-library/
So someone from the wordpress  world seems to be using it successfully, too.

I haven't used the standard extension so I cannot comment on the differences
but here is the Solarium project's description in their own words:
https://solarium.readthedocs.io/en/latest/

Solarium is under active development. They recently added support
for Solr cloud streaming expressions and for the JSON Facet API
(the latter is in the beta version).


Best regards
Christian Spitzlay


> Am 16.07.2018 um 21:19 schrieb Zimmermann, Thomas 
> <tzimmerm...@techtarget.com>:
> 
> Hi,
> 
> We're in the midst of our first major Solr upgrade in years and are trying to 
> run some cleanup across
> all of our client codebases. We're currently using the standard PHP Solr 
> Extension when communicating
> with our cluster from our Wordpress installs. 
> http://php.net/manual/en/book.solr.php
> 
> Few questions.
> 
> Should we have any concerns about communicating with a Solr 7 cloud from that 
> client?
> Is anyone using another client they prefer? If so what are the benefits of 
> switching to it?
> 
> Thanks!
> TZ



--  

Christian Spitzlay
Diplom-Physiker,
Senior Software-Entwickler

E-Mail: christian.spitz...@biologis.com

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Altenhöferallee 3
60438 Frankfurt am Main

Geschäftsführung: Prof. Dr. med. Daniela Steinberger, Dipl.Betriebswirt Enrico 
Just
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