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InfoQ Homepage News Apache Solr: Extensible, Clustered Search Server Built on Lucene

Apache Solr: Extensible, Clustered Search Server Built on Lucene

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The Apache Solr project, an open source enterprise search server based on Apache Lucene, recently released version 1.3. InfoQ spoke with Solr creator Yonik Seeley to learn more about this release, and also about what capabilities Solr offers to end users.

Seeley began by describing the target audience as "Pretty much anyone that needs a search box, faceted browsing (guided navigation) or a combination of the two", and identified the key features of Solr as:

  • Standards-based open interfaces - XML, JSON and HTTP are supported for querying the Solr search server and retrieving results
  • Easy administration - Solr servers can be administered via an HTML interface, server statistics are exposed via JMX, and Solr configuration is done via XML
  • Faceted search - query results are automatically broken into categories
  • Integrated hit highlighting - matching words are automatically highlighted in the search results
  • Scalability - fast incremental updates and snapshot distribution/replication to other servers
  • Extensible plugin architecture - new capabilities (such as custom request processors and query result formatting) can be easily added into a Solr server as a plugin

Seeley also indicated that the major new features in this release are:

  • Distributed search - indexes can now be transparently broken into multiple shards, a single Solr server can now support multiple indexes with their own configuration and schema, and major configuration changes can be made without bringing down the Solr server
  • Expanded query capabilities - This includes a new Java client (SolrJ) and several new features such as direct configuration of which documents appear first for specific queries, more-like-this, search timeouts, date faceting and spell checking
  • Enhanced data import tool - databases and other structured data sources can now be imported, and mapping and transformation can be done on the imported values
  • More custom extension points - there is a new update processor chain which allows modification or redirecting of documents during indexing, a search component chain which modifies or adds to query results, customer query parsers and pluggable functions
  • Performance enhancements - greatly increased indexing speed, a binary response format and a much faster delete-by query have been incorporated

A comprehensive changelog is also available.

Seeley spoke in more detail about the scaling, capacity and relevance features of Solr, saying:

Solr is already deployed with collection sizes in the hundreds of millions of documents, and with the addition of distributed search, Solr should be able to handle billion document collections.

Solr has excellent full text relevancy, building on Lucene and easily providing term proximity boosting, recent document boosting, editorial boosting, and even custom scoring based on arbitrary functions of numeric field values.

AOL is using Solr to power it's channels: Music, NFL Sports, AOL Recipes, Reference Center, Real Estate and Autos being several examples. Solr also powers the search features of Netflix, Zappos, Gamespot, and the Internet Archive. There are *many* other big users I'm aware of that haven't publicly stated their use.

When asked about future plans for Solr, Seeley indicated that greater scalability, easier configuration and management of large cluster, location-based and realtime search and a refactoring to use Spring for configuration of plugins was on the horizon. Seeley also pointed out a mailing list post in which he discussed the future plans for Solr in more detail, in particular around the 2.0 timeframe.

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