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Karl Wright commented on SOLR-12798: ------------------------------------ {quote} This looks to me like a plain Solr document post to /update handler, in whatever format you'd like? If you can take adavantage of Noble Paul's enhancements to stream the content this can still be a plain document not needing multipart, and no need sending data in http params? {quote} The streaming part is great. But if you look at the current master implementation of HttpSolrClient, you will note that all parameters and metadata are folded into the URL for the ContentWriter transmission mechanism. This fails for us because the URL size can easily exceed 8192 bytes. That is why we need the multipart post handling even for UpdateRequest/SolrInputDocument requests. > Structural changes in SolrJ since version 7.0.0 have effectively disabled > multipart post > ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- > > Key: SOLR-12798 > URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/SOLR-12798 > Project: Solr > Issue Type: Improvement > Security Level: Public(Default Security Level. Issues are Public) > Components: SolrJ > Affects Versions: 7.4 > Reporter: Karl Wright > Assignee: Karl Wright > Priority: Major > Attachments: HOT Balloon Trip_Ultra HD.jpg, > SOLR-12798-approach.patch, solr-update-request.txt > > > Project ManifoldCF uses SolrJ to post documents to Solr. When upgrading from > SolrJ 7.0.x to SolrJ 7.4, we encountered significant structural changes to > SolrJ's HttpSolrClient class that seemingly disable any use of multipart > post. This is critical because ManifoldCF's documents often contain metadata > in excess of 4K that therefore cannot be stuffed into a URL. > The changes in question seem to have been performed by Paul Noble on > 10/31/2017, with the introduction of the RequestWriter mechanism. Basically, > if a request has a RequestWriter, it is used exclusively to write the > request, and that overrides the stream mechanism completely. I haven't > chased it back to a specific ticket. > ManifoldCF's usage of SolrJ involves the creation of > ContentStreamUpdateRequests for all posts meant for Solr Cell, and the > creation of UpdateRequests for posts not meant for Solr Cell (as well as for > delete and commit requests). For our release cycle that is taking place > right now, we're shipping a modified version of HttpSolrClient that ignores > the RequestWriter when dealing with ContentStreamUpdateRequests. We > apparently cannot use multipart for all requests because on the Solr side we > get "pfountz Should not get here!" errors on the Solr side when we do, which > generate HTTP error code 500 responses. That should not happen either, in my > opinion. -- This message was sent by Atlassian JIRA (v7.6.3#76005) --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@lucene.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@lucene.apache.org