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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/LUCENE-1821?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=12746291#action_12746291
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Mark Miller edited comment on LUCENE-1821 at 8/21/09 3:21 PM:
--------------------------------------------------------------

Lucene also use maxBufferedDocs to make sure there are multiple segments in 
some tests -

Tim's idea here is nice too though - you still see some merging that way - with 
a mergepolicy that just returns null you can easily pick the exact number of 
segments by issuing commits mod whatever. (*edit you just have to set 
maxBufferedDocs to Integer.max)

The mergepolicy impl is easy enough - anon class generated by eclipse will work 
out of the box.

      was (Author: markrmil...@gmail.com):
    Lucene also use maxBufferedDocs to make sure there are multiple segments in 
some tests -

Tim's idea here is nice too though - you still see some merging that way - with 
a mergepolicy that just returns null you can easily pick the exact number of 
segments by issuing commits mod whatever.

The mergepolicy impl is easy enough - anon class generated by eclipse will work 
out of the box.
  
> Weight.scorer() not passed doc offset for "sub reader"
> ------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: LUCENE-1821
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/LUCENE-1821
>             Project: Lucene - Java
>          Issue Type: Bug
>          Components: Search
>    Affects Versions: 2.9
>            Reporter: Tim Smith
>             Fix For: 2.9
>
>         Attachments: LUCENE-1821.patch
>
>
> Now that searching is done on a per segment basis, there is no way for a 
> Scorer to know the "actual" doc id for the document's it matches (only the 
> relative doc offset into the segment)
> If using caches in your scorer that are based on the "entire" index (all 
> segments), there is now no way to index into them properly from inside a 
> Scorer because the scorer is not passed the needed offset to calculate the 
> "real" docid
> suggest having Weight.scorer() method also take a integer for the doc offset
> Abstract Weight class should have a constructor that takes this offset as 
> well as a method to get the offset
> All Weights that have "sub" weights must pass this offset down to created 
> "sub" weights
> Details on workaround:
> In order to work around this, you must do the following:
> * Subclass IndexSearcher
> * Add "int getIndexReaderBase(IndexReader)" method to your subclass
> * during Weight creation, the Weight must hold onto a reference to the passed 
> in Searcher (casted to your sub class)
> * during Scorer creation, the Scorer must be passed the result of 
> YourSearcher.getIndexReaderBase(reader)
> * Scorer can now rebase any collected docids using this offset
> Example implementation of getIndexReaderBase():
> {code}
> // NOTE: more efficient implementation can be done if you cache the result if 
> gatherSubReaders in your constructor
> public int getIndexReaderBase(IndexReader reader) {
>   if (reader == getReader()) {
>     return 0;
>   } else {
>     List readers = new ArrayList();
>     gatherSubReaders(readers);
>     Iterator iter = readers.iterator();
>     int maxDoc = 0;
>     while (iter.hasNext()) {
>       IndexReader r = (IndexReader)iter.next();
>       if (r == reader) {
>         return maxDoc;
>       } 
>       maxDoc += r.maxDoc();
>     } 
>   }
>   return -1; // reader not in searcher
> }
> {code}
> Notes:
> * This workaround makes it so you cannot serialize your custom Weight 
> implementation

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