Could you point me to the most non-intimidating introduction to SolrJ that you 
know of? I have a passing familiarity with Javascript and, with few exceptions, 
I haven't developing software that has a graphical user interface of any kind 
in about 25 years. I like the idea of having finer control over data imported 
from a database though.
Thanks,
Mike

-----Original Message-----
From: Erick Erickson [mailto:erickerick...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Monday, February 13, 2012 6:19 AM
To: solr-user@lucene.apache.org
Subject: Re: Recovering from database connection resets in DataimportHandler

I'd seriously consider using SolrJ and your favorite JDBC driver instead. It's 
actually quite easy to create one, although as always it may be a bit 
intimidating to get started. This allows you much finer control over error  
conditions than DIH does, so may be more suited to your needs.

Best
Erick

On Sat, Feb 11, 2012 at 2:40 AM, Mike O'Leary <tmole...@uw.edu> wrote:
> I am trying to use Solr's DataImportHandler to index a large number of 
> database records in a SQL Server database that is owned and managed by a 
> group we are collaborating with. The indexing jobs I have run so far, except 
> for the initial very small test runs, have failed due to database connection 
> resets. I have gotten indexing jobs to go further by using 
> CachedSqlEntityProcessor and specifying responseBuffering=adaptive in the 
> connection url, but I think in order to index that data I'm going to have to 
> work out how to catch database connection reset exceptions and resubmit the 
> queries that failed. Can anyone can suggest a good way to approach this? Or 
> have any of you encountered this problem and worked out a solution to it 
> already?
> Thanks,
> Mike

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