Dear Nicholas, What do you mean? I think a distributed search engine should consider the issue.
Thanks, Bing Li On Wed, Nov 17, 2010 at 11:33 PM, Nicholas Paldino [.NET/C# MVP] < [email protected]> wrote: > That's in horribly bad taste. > > -----Original Message----- > From: Derek Finlen [mailto:[email protected]] > Sent: Wednesday, November 17, 2010 9:58 AM > To: [email protected]; [email protected] > Subject: RE: How to Transmit and Append Indexes > > I hope, this isn't for the search engine Bing? :P > > -----Original Message----- > From: Bing Li [mailto:[email protected]] > Sent: Wednesday, November 17, 2010 2:59 AM > To: [email protected] > Subject: How to Transmit and Append Indexes > > Hi, all, > > I am working on a distributed searching system. Now I have one server only. > It has to crawl pages from the Web, generate indexes locally and respond > users' queries. I think this is too busy for it to work smoothly. > > I plan to use two servers at at least. The jobs to crawl pages and generate > indexes are done by one of them. After that, the new available indexes > should be transmitted to anther one which is responsible for responding > users' queries. From users' point of view, this system must be fast. > However, I don't know how I can get the additional indexes which I can > transmit. After transmission, how to append them to the old indexes? Does > the appending block searching? > > Thanks so much for your help! > > Bing Li > > ### > > > > This e-mail is confidential and may well be legally > > privileged. If you received it in error, you are on notice > > of its status. Please notify us immediately by reply e-mail > > and then delete this message from your system. Please > > do not copy it or use it for any purposes or disclose its > > contents to any other person. To do so could violate > > state and federal privacy laws. Thank you for your > > cooperation. > > > > ### > > > >
