This is true with Lucene as it stands. It would be much faster if there
were a specialized in-memory index such as is typically used with high
performance search engines.
On Tue, Feb 7, 2012 at 9:50 PM, Lance Norskog goks...@gmail.com wrote:
Experience has shown that it is much faster to run
But the solr did not have the im-memory index, I am right?
At 2012-02-08 16:17:49,Ted Dunning ted.dunn...@gmail.com wrote:
This is true with Lucene as it stands. It would be much faster if there
were a specialized in-memory index such as is typically used with high
performance search
A start maybe to use a RAM disk for that. Mount is as a normal disk and
have the index files stored there. Have a read here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RAM_disk
Cheers,
Patrick
2012/2/8 Ted Dunning ted.dunn...@gmail.com
This is true with Lucene as it stands. It would be much faster if
Hi,
This talk has some interesting details on setting up an Lucene index in RAM:
http://www.lucidimagination.com/devzone/events/conferences/revolution/2011/lucene-yelp
Would be great to hear your findings!
Dmitry
2012/2/8 James ljatreey...@163.com
Is there any practice to load index into
On 08/02/2012 09:17, Ted Dunning wrote:
This is true with Lucene as it stands. It would be much faster if there
were a specialized in-memory index such as is typically used with high
performance search engines.
This could be implemented in Lucene trunk as a Codec. The challenge
though is to
I concur with this. As long as index segment files are cached in OS file cache
performance is as about good as it gets. Pulling segment files into RAM inside
JVM process may actually be slower, given Lucene's existing data structures and
algorithms for reading segment file data. If you have
Add this as well:
http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.155.5030
On Wed, Feb 8, 2012 at 1:56 AM, Andrzej Bialecki a...@getopt.org wrote:
On 08/02/2012 09:17, Ted Dunning wrote:
This is true with Lucene as it stands. It would be much faster if there
were a specialized
Experience has shown that it is much faster to run Solr with a small
amount of memory and let the rest of the ram be used by the operating
system disk cache. That is, the OS is very good at keeping the right
disk blocks in memory, much better than Solr.
How much RAM is in the server and how much