There's a decent tutorial here: https://sematext.com/blog/solr-plugins-system/ But it's unclear if a standalone tool like Luke is really sensible as a Solr "plug-in" because it does not "plug-in" to Solr; it does not live within Solr in any way.
It'd be interesting if Docker could run GUI apps or if somehow Luke could run as an Applet or something. Or maybe "java web start" but I thought that technology might be dead. ~ David Smiley Apache Lucene/Solr Search Developer http://www.linkedin.com/in/davidwsmiley On Sun, Aug 9, 2020 at 8:57 PM Tomoko Uchida <[email protected]> wrote: > I don't know anything about Solr packages, is there any guide for plugin > developers / maintainers? Also, maybe an official host server for the > plugin is needed? > In general Luke is just an ordinary JAR, all you need is downloading the > correct version of it and setting the right classpaths. > If there is proper documentation and others think it's somewhat beneficial > that solr has the "Luke plugin", I'd be happy to add it my todo list (or > it'd be perfectly fit for "newdevs", I think). > > Tomoko > > > 2020年8月10日(月) 4:39 Erick Erickson <[email protected]>: > >> Tomoko: >> >> Indeed, this is what is behind my question about whether it should be a >> package for Solr rather than something in the standard distro. The more I >> think about this, it’s hard to justify it being part of the standard distro >> rather than a package given that some people find it _very_ useful, but I’d >> bet that most Solr users don’t even know it exists... >> >> Which means I’ll have to actually _understand_ the package >> infrastructure… Something about an old dog and new tricks. Siiigggh… >> >> Best, >> Erick >> >> > On Aug 9, 2020, at 2:32 PM, Tomoko Uchida <[email protected]> >> wrote: >> > >> > LUCENE-9448 >> >> >> --------------------------------------------------------------------- >> To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected] >> For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected] >> >>
