Dear Joseph,

The codes that start with an "m" are the communites so for instance "m6"
would be community with identifier 6. The codes that start with an "l" are
collections so "l11" would be collection with identifier 11. These codes
are used when user are searching for something in a specific
community/collection.

I hope this answers your question.

Kind regards,


Kevin Van de Velde
@mire
Esperantolaan 4 - 3001 Heverlee - Belgium
2888 Loker Avenue East, Suite 305 - Carlsbad, CA 92010 - USA
atmire.com - Institutional Repository Solutions



On 2 December 2011 21:36, Joseph <[email protected]> wrote:

> Dear DSpace Devel,
>
> (DSpace 1.7.2, XMLUI, Discovery)
>
> I was looking at the dspace statistics through the web interface, and
> i notices that some of the top search terms for the dspace instance I
> manage were "m6", "m8", "i11" and such.
> I entered these in to the search box and do indeed come up with results.
>
> However, looking at the metadata in these results (my means of "Show
> full item record" and then using the browser's find) I come up with
> zip.
>
> I also tested this using the above described method on the dspace demo
> (XMLUI)  server and atmire/labs17, dspace at cambridge
> The results of my quick (and admittedly not thorough as I only
> searched for "m6" and looked at one or two results) inspection, were
> the same.
>
> Are these special codes in Solr/Lucene?
> Is this something obvious that I should know about, or is this a real bug?
>
> Thanks,
> Joseph
>
>
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
All the data continuously generated in your IT infrastructure 
contains a definitive record of customers, application performance, 
security threats, fraudulent activity, and more. Splunk takes this 
data and makes sense of it. IT sense. And common sense.
http://p.sf.net/sfu/splunk-novd2d
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