How tolerant is your project of decreased search and indexing performance?
You could probably write a simple test that compares search and write
speeds of local and NFS-mounted indexes and make the decision based on the
results.
On Mon, Oct 1, 2012 at 3:06 PM, Jong Kim wrote:
> Hi,
>
> According
Hi,
According to the Lucene In Action (Second Edition), the section 2.11.2
"Accessing an index over a remote file system" explains that there are
issues related to accessing a Lucene index across remote file system
including NFS.
I'm particuarly interested in NFS compatibility, and wondering if t
Jack,
I wrote this custom analyzer:
@Override
protected TokenStreamComponents createComponents(String fieldName, Reader
reader) {
final Tokenizer source = new WhitespaceTokenizer(matchVersion, reader);
TokenStream sink = new LowerCaseFilter(matchVersion, source);
return new Token
Sorry, I meant apply the filter to the TOKENIZER that the analyzer uses.
-- Jack Krupansky
-Original Message-
From: Jack Krupansky
Sent: Monday, October 01, 2012 10:44 AM
To: java-user@lucene.apache.org
Subject: Re: Searching for a search string containing a literal slash
doesn't work
You can apply the lower case filter to the whitespace or other analyzer and
use that as the analyzer.
-- Jack Krupansky
-Original Message-
From: Jochen Hebbrecht
Sent: Monday, October 01, 2012 10:34 AM
To: java-user@lucene.apache.org
Subject: Re: Searching for a search string containi
Thanks Erick ,
I have figured out the underlying principle of working with payloads.
Regards,
Parnab
On Mon, Oct 1, 2012 at 5:14 PM, Erick Erickson wrote:
> Here's a good explanation
>
> http://searchhub.org/dev/2009/08/05/getting-started-with-payloads/
>
> Best
> Erick
>
> On Sun, S
Hi Jack,
I tried analyzing through WhitespaceAnalyzer. Now I can search on my query
string AND I can find my document! Great!
But all my searches are now case sensitive. So when I index a field as
"JavaOne", I also have to enter in my search word: "JavaOne" and not
"javaone" or "javaOne".
How do
That's "The escape merely..."
-- Jack Krupansky
-Original Message-
From: Jack Krupansky
Sent: Monday, October 01, 2012 9:58 AM
To: java-user@lucene.apache.org
Subject: Re: Searching for a search string containing a literal slash
doesn't work with QueryParser
The scape merely assures
The scape merely assures that the slash will not be parsed as query syntax
and will be passed directly to the analyzer, but the standard analyzer will
in fact always remove it. Maybe you want the white space analyzer or keyword
analyzer (no characters removed.)
-- Jack Krupansky
-Original
Here's a good explanation
http://searchhub.org/dev/2009/08/05/getting-started-with-payloads/
Best
Erick
On Sun, Sep 30, 2012 at 8:02 AM, parnab kumar wrote:
> Hi Erick,
> Can you please share your thoughts on the following :
> Since lucene by default does vector s
See the javadocs for each part of the Lucene40Codec: each class
details its format.
Mike McCandless
http://blog.mikemccandless.com
On Mon, Oct 1, 2012 at 1:16 AM, Selvakumar wrote:
> Hi Pranab Kumar,
>
> I'm not looking for reading the documents through IndexReader.
> I just want to know how do
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