Thanks for the fast responses. Looks like exactly what I was looking for!



Am 23.01.2014 09:46, schrieb Furkan KAMACI:
> Hi;
>
> Firstly you should read here and learn the terminology of Solr:
> http://wiki.apache.org/solr/SolrTerminology
>
> Thanks;
> Furkan KAMACI
>
>
> 2014/1/23 Alexandre Rafalovitch <arafa...@gmail.com>
>
>> If you are not worried about them stepping on each other's toes
>> (performance, disk space, etc), just create multiple collections.
>> There are examples of that in standard distribution (e.g. badly named
>> example/multicore).
>>
>> Regards,
>>   Alex.
>> Personal website: http://www.outerthoughts.com/
>> LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/alexandrerafalovitch
>> - Time is the quality of nature that keeps events from happening all
>> at once. Lately, it doesn't seem to be working.  (Anonymous  - via GTD
>> book)
>>
>>
>> On Thu, Jan 23, 2014 at 3:36 PM, Stavros Delisavas <stav...@delisavas.de>
>> wrote:
>>> Dear Solr-Experts,
>>>
>>> I am using Solr for my current web-application on my server successfully.
>>> Now I would like to use it in my second web-application that is hosted
>>> on the same server. Is it possible in any way to create two independent
>>> instances/databases in Solr? I know that I could create another set of
>>> fields with alternated field names, but I would prefer to be independent
>>> on my field naming for all my projects.
>>>
>>> Also I would like to be able to have one state of my development version
>>> and one state of my production version on my server so that I can do
>>> tests on my development-state without interference on my
>> production-version.
>>> What is the best-practice to achieve this or how can this be done in
>>> general?
>>>
>>> I have searched google but could not get any usefull results because I
>>> don't even know what terms to search for with solr.
>>> A minimal-example would be most helpfull.
>>>
>>> Thanks a lot!
>>>
>>> Stavros

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