Re: [Apache Solr] Twitter Account

2020-12-05 Thread Ishan Chattopadhyaya
I can volunteer. I am fairly regular with Twitter and release
management. @Shalin
Shekhar Mangar , if needed, please let me know.

On Sun, 6 Dec, 2020, 6:59 am Marcus Eagan,  wrote:

> One of the committers should pick it up, make release announcements, and
> share important insights with the community periodically.
>
> On Sat, Dec 5, 2020 at 14:06 Anshum Gupta  wrote:
>
>> Yes, I agree that it should be more active, but that's not really an
>> official 'Apache' Solr account :)
>>
>> I know at some point Shalin tried to find someone who would be up for it
>> and manage it, but considering we are all volunteering, it's tough to keep
>> up and he didn't get any volunteers.
>>
>> As of now it's just a dormant account w.r.t. activity.
>>
>> On Sat, Dec 5, 2020 at 2:40 AM Alessandro Benedetti <
>> abenede...@apache.org> wrote:
>>
>>> Hi,
>>> I noticed the Apache Solr twitter account not to be that active anymore.
>>> There are not even a tweet - > release 1 to 1 matching.
>>> Not to mention the countless interesting blog posts Solr related, that
>>> could benefit the community if better shared.
>>>
>>> In my opinion, that's a shame, given the good number of followers the
>>> account has.
>>> Who's managing it?
>>>
>>> I understand that the management of that page must be unbiased, sharing
>>> interesting posts, without direct commercial purpose, given the fact many
>>> companies (including mine) make a living out of Apache Solr (but also give
>>> back to the community in form of blogs and contributions).
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Regards
>>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> Anshum Gupta
>>
> --
> Marcus Eagan
>
>


Re: [Apache Solr] Twitter Account

2020-12-05 Thread Marcus Eagan
One of the committers should pick it up, make release announcements, and
share important insights with the community periodically.

On Sat, Dec 5, 2020 at 14:06 Anshum Gupta  wrote:

> Yes, I agree that it should be more active, but that's not really an
> official 'Apache' Solr account :)
>
> I know at some point Shalin tried to find someone who would be up for it
> and manage it, but considering we are all volunteering, it's tough to keep
> up and he didn't get any volunteers.
>
> As of now it's just a dormant account w.r.t. activity.
>
> On Sat, Dec 5, 2020 at 2:40 AM Alessandro Benedetti 
> wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>> I noticed the Apache Solr twitter account not to be that active anymore.
>> There are not even a tweet - > release 1 to 1 matching.
>> Not to mention the countless interesting blog posts Solr related, that
>> could benefit the community if better shared.
>>
>> In my opinion, that's a shame, given the good number of followers the
>> account has.
>> Who's managing it?
>>
>> I understand that the management of that page must be unbiased, sharing
>> interesting posts, without direct commercial purpose, given the fact many
>> companies (including mine) make a living out of Apache Solr (but also give
>> back to the community in form of blogs and contributions).
>>
>>
>>
>> Regards
>>
>
>
> --
> Anshum Gupta
>
-- 
Marcus Eagan


Re: [Apache Solr] Twitter Account

2020-12-05 Thread Anshum Gupta
Yes, I agree that it should be more active, but that's not really an
official 'Apache' Solr account :)

I know at some point Shalin tried to find someone who would be up for it
and manage it, but considering we are all volunteering, it's tough to keep
up and he didn't get any volunteers.

As of now it's just a dormant account w.r.t. activity.

On Sat, Dec 5, 2020 at 2:40 AM Alessandro Benedetti 
wrote:

> Hi,
> I noticed the Apache Solr twitter account not to be that active anymore.
> There are not even a tweet - > release 1 to 1 matching.
> Not to mention the countless interesting blog posts Solr related, that
> could benefit the community if better shared.
>
> In my opinion, that's a shame, given the good number of followers the
> account has.
> Who's managing it?
>
> I understand that the management of that page must be unbiased, sharing
> interesting posts, without direct commercial purpose, given the fact many
> companies (including mine) make a living out of Apache Solr (but also give
> back to the community in form of blogs and contributions).
>
>
>
> Regards
>


-- 
Anshum Gupta


Re: jira patch "precommit" jenkins jobs? (don't seem to be running lately)

2020-12-05 Thread Mikhail Khludnev
Uwe, thank you for your response. I remember that yetus run tests via
JIRA's precommit before, but github checks doesn't run tests. Is it
correct?

--
Mikhail

On Mon, Oct 12, 2020 at 9:18 AM Uwe Schindler  wrote:

> It no longer works since jenkins was moved to new hardware.
>
> IMHO, you should use pull requests in GitHub. There we have full support
> for automatic precommit. We use it every day, much easier than Jira. I'd
> not spend much time in reactivating it. It's dead.
>
> On Jira it's disabled since longer time.
>
> Uwe
>
> Am October 12, 2020 3:50:26 PM UTC schrieb Chris Hostetter <
> hossman_luc...@fucit.org>:
>>
>>
>> Does anyone know / un derstand the current status of the "PreCommit"
>> jenkins jobs that are suppose to run against jira issues in the "Path
>> Available" status?
>>
>> For example: I noticed this AM that even though SOLR-14870 was in the
>> "Path Available" status all weekend (I didn't want to commit build changes
>> on a friday afternoon) it never got a comment from the jenkins build bot
>> regarding the patch -- when I went looking for the "PreCommit" build jobs
>> in jenkins i found that they are marked "N/A" for last
>> success/failure/durration -- which i believe means they haven't run at all
>> since all the jenkins jobs were moved to ci-builds.apache.org?
>>
>> https://ci-builds.apache.org/job/Lucene/
>> https://ci-builds.apache.org/job/Lucene/job/PreCommit-LUCENE-Build/
>> https://ci-builds.apache.org/job/Lucene/job/PreCommit-SOLR-Build/
>>
>> ...the descriptions of those jobs say they are run by the
>> "PreCommit-Admin" job, but the links is a 404.  searching jenkinds jobs
>> turns up a few other "PreCommit" jobs in other projects -- most are
>> disabled, except for this "Atlas" one which has run somewhat recently --
>> but it looks like people were manually triggering it?
>>
>> https://ci-builds.apache.org/job/Atlas/job/PreCommit-ATLAS-Build-Test/
>>
>> do any of hte jenkins admins/experts know what's the status of the
>> infra/jira hooks to get these jobs working again?
>>
>>
>>
>> -Hoss
>> http://www.lucidworks.com/
>> --
>> To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@lucene.apache.org
>> For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@lucene.apache.org
>>
>>
> --
> Uwe Schindler
> Achterdiek 19, 28357 Bremen
> https://www.thetaphi.de
>


-- 
Sincerely yours
Mikhail Khludnev


Re: [DISCUSS] Cross Data-Center Replication in Apache Solr

2020-12-05 Thread Ilan Ginzburg
That's an interesting initiative Anshum!

I can see at least two different approaches here, your mention of SolrJ
seems to hint at the first one:
1. Get the data as it comes from the client and fork it to local and remote
data centers,
2. Create (an asynchronous) stream replicating local data center data to
remote.

Option 1 is strongly consistent but adds latency and potentially blocking
on the critical path.
Option 2 could look like remote PULL replicas, might have lower impact on
the local data center but has to deal with the remote data center always
being somewhat behind. If the client application can handle that, the
performance and efficiency gain (as well as simpler implementation? It
doesn't require another persistence layer) might be worth it...

Ilan

On Fri, Dec 4, 2020 at 5:24 PM Anshum Gupta  wrote:

> Hi everyone,
>
>
> Large scale Solr installations often require cross data-center replication
> in order to achieve data replication for both, access latency reasons as
> well as disaster recovery. In the past users have either designed their own
> solutions to deal with this or have tried to rely on the now-deprecated
> CDCR.
>
>
> It would be really good to have support for cross data-center replication
> within Solr, that is offered and supported by the community. This would
> allow the effort around this shared problem to converge.
>
>
> I’d like to propose a new solution based on my experiences at my day job.
> The key points about this approach:
>
>1. Uses an external, configurable, messaging system in the middle for
>actual replication/mirroring.
>2. We offer an abstraction and some default implementations based on
>what we can support and what users really want. An example here would be
>Kafka.
>3. This would be a separate repository allowing it to have its own
>release cadence. We shouldn’t have to release this with every Solr release
>as the overlap is just limited to SolrJ interactions.
>
>
> I’ll share a more detailed and evolving document soon with the design for
> everyone else to contribute to but wanted to share this as I’m starting to
> work on this and wanted to avoid parallel efforts towards the same end-goal.
>
> --
> Anshum Gupta
>


Re: [Apache Solr] Twitter Account

2020-12-05 Thread Ishan Chattopadhyaya
IIRC, Shalin used to run it once upon a time.

On Sat, 5 Dec, 2020, 4:10 pm Alessandro Benedetti, 
wrote:

> Hi,
> I noticed the Apache Solr twitter account not to be that active anymore.
> There are not even a tweet - > release 1 to 1 matching.
> Not to mention the countless interesting blog posts Solr related, that
> could benefit the community if better shared.
>
> In my opinion, that's a shame, given the good number of followers the
> account has.
> Who's managing it?
>
> I understand that the management of that page must be unbiased, sharing
> interesting posts, without direct commercial purpose, given the fact many
> companies (including mine) make a living out of Apache Solr (but also give
> back to the community in form of blogs and contributions).
>
>
>
> Regards
>


[Apache Solr] Twitter Account

2020-12-05 Thread Alessandro Benedetti
Hi,
I noticed the Apache Solr twitter account not to be that active anymore.
There are not even a tweet - > release 1 to 1 matching.
Not to mention the countless interesting blog posts Solr related, that
could benefit the community if better shared.

In my opinion, that's a shame, given the good number of followers the
account has.
Who's managing it?

I understand that the management of that page must be unbiased, sharing
interesting posts, without direct commercial purpose, given the fact many
companies (including mine) make a living out of Apache Solr (but also give
back to the community in form of blogs and contributions).



Regards