>From your example, it rather looks like you've moved some DB tables into separate cores and are trying to do some SQL-like operations. Stop that! <G>...
Solr really isn't built for this kind of operation. I know this goes against all your DB training, but can you simply de-normalize all the data and put it into a single core/index? Solr searches lots and lots of data very efficiently, but any time you try to make it behave like a database, you should take a step back and ask if this is really the way to use Solr... And, of course, I may be misinterpreting your problem entirely... Best Erick On Fri, Feb 10, 2012 at 11:35 PM, Selvam <s.selvams...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi, > > This should be trivial question, still I am failing to get the details.I > have 2 cores+default collection, > > *collection1:* > article_id > title > content > > *core0:* > cluster_id > cluster_name > cluster_count > > *core1:* > article_id > article_cluster_id > score > > Given an article_id, I want to return top 10 ( based on score field in > core1 ) other articles falling in the same cluster. I would like to know, > how to implement this as I am fairly new to Solr. > > Version used : Solr 3.5 > -- > Regards, > S.Selvam > http://knackforge.com