Thanks for the answer. If I find something that explains using embedded
Jetty or Jetty, or Tomcat it would be nice.

2013/4/23 Mark Miller <markrmil...@gmail.com>

> Tomcat should work just fine in most cases. The downside to Tomcat is that
> all of the devs generally run Jetty since it's the default. Also, all of
> our units tests run against Jetty - in fact, a specific version of Jetty.
>
> Usually, Solr will run fine in other webapps. Many, many users run Solr in
> other webapps. All of our tests run against a specific version of Jetty
> though. In some (generally rare) cases, that means something might work
> with Jetty and not another container until/unless the issue is reported by
> a user and fixed.
>
> - Mark
>
> On Apr 23, 2013, at 3:25 PM, Furkan KAMACI <furkankam...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > At first I will work on 100 Solr nodes and I want to use Tomcat as
> > container and deploy Solr as a war. I just wonder what folks are using
> for
> > large systems and what kind of problems or benefits they have with their
> > choices.
> >
> >
> > 2013/3/26 Otis Gospodnetic <otis.gospodne...@gmail.com>
> >
> >> Hi,
> >>
> >> This question is too open-ended for anyone to give you a good answer.
> >> Maybe you want to ask more specific questions?  As for embedding vs.
> war,
> >> start with a simpler war and think about the alternatives if that
> doesn't
> >> work for you.
> >>
> >> Otis
> >> --
> >> Solr & ElasticSearch Support
> >> http://sematext.com/
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> On Fri, Mar 22, 2013 at 8:07 AM, Furkan KAMACI <furkankam...@gmail.com
> >>> wrote:
> >>
> >>> If I want to use Solr in a web search engine what kind of strategies
> >> should
> >>> I follow about how to run Solr. I mean I can run it via embedded jetty
> or
> >>> use war and deploy to a container? You should consider that I will have
> >>> heavy work load on my Solr.
> >>>
> >>
>
>

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