Thanks for sharing this info, Per - this info may prove to be valuable for me in the future.
Shahar. -----Original Message----- From: Per Steffensen [mailto:st...@designware.dk] Sent: Thursday, January 10, 2013 6:10 PM To: solr-user@lucene.apache.org Subject: Re: CoreAdmin STATUS performance The collections are created dynamically. Not on update though. We use one collection per month and we have a timer-job running (every hour or so), which checks if all collections that need to exist actually does exist - if not it creates the collection(s). The rule is that the collection for "next month" has to exist as soon as we enter "current month", so the first time the timer job runs e.g. 1. July it will create the August-collection. We never get data with timestamp in the future. Therefore if the timer-job just gets to run once within every month we will always have needed collections ready. We create collections using the new Collection API in Solr. Be used to manage creation of every single Shard/Replica/Core of the collections during the Core Admin API in Solr, but since an Collection API was introduced we decided that we better use that. In 4.0 it did not have the features we needed, which triggered SOLR-4114, SOLR-4120 and SOLR-4140 which will be available in 4.1. With those features we are now using the Collection API. BTW, our timer-job also handles deletion of "old" collections. In our system you can configure how many historic month-collection you will keep before it is ok to delete them. Lets say that this is configured to 3, as soon at it becomes 1. July the timer-job will delete the March-collection (the historic collections to keep will just have become April-, May- and June-collections). This way we will always have a least 3 months of historic data, and last in a month close to 4 months of history. It does not matter that we have a little to much history, when we just do not go below the lower limit on lenght of historic data. We also use the new Collection API for deletion. Regards, Per Steffensen On 1/10/13 3:04 PM, Shahar Davidson wrote: > Hi Per, > > Thanks for your reply! > > That's a very interesting approach. > > In your system, how are the collections created? In other words, are the > collections created dynamically upon an update (for example, per new day)? > If they are created dynamically, who handles their creation (client/server) > and how is it done? > > I'd love to hear more about it! > > Appreciate your help, > > Shahar. > > -----Original Message----- > From: Per Steffensen [mailto:st...@designware.dk] > Sent: Thursday, January 10, 2013 1:23 PM > To: solr-user@lucene.apache.org > Subject: Re: CoreAdmin STATUS performance > > On 1/10/13 10:09 AM, Shahar Davidson wrote: >> search request, the system must be aware of all available cores in >> order to execute distributed search on_all_ relevant cores > For this purpose I would definitely recommend that you go "SolrCloud". > > Further more we do something "ekstra": > We have several collections each containing data from a specific > period in time - timestamp of ingoing data decides which collection it > is indexed into. One important search-criteria for our clients are > search on timestamp-interval. Therefore most searches can be > restricted to only consider a subset of all our collections. Instead > of having the logic calculating the subset of collections to search > (given the timestamp > search-interval) in clients, we just let clients do "dumb" searches by giving > the timestamp-interval. The subset of collections to search are calculated on > server-side from the timestamp-interval in the search-query. We handle this > in a Solr SearchComponent which we place "early" in the chain of > SearchComponents. Maybe you can get some inspiration by this approach, if it > is also relevant for you. > > Regards, Per Steffensen > > Email secured by Check Point > Email secured by Check Point