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Ryan McKinley commented on SOLR-793: ------------------------------------ perhaps it is better to think of it as selectivly enabling the autoCommit feature. bq. If I have 10 docs with with a commitWithin="100" This may mean that there will be 10 commits because each <add> happened at different time. assuming the last of the 10 docs were sent to solr within 100ms, then all of them would be committed at once. The commtWithin time is a *maximum* time, not a minimum. This is identical to how autoCommit works now -- the advantage is that various documents could require different time bounds. > set a commit time bounds in the <add> command > --------------------------------------------- > > Key: SOLR-793 > URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/SOLR-793 > Project: Solr > Issue Type: Improvement > Components: update > Reporter: Ryan McKinley > Priority: Minor > Attachments: SOLR-793-commitWithin.patch, SOLR-793-commitWithin.patch > > > Currently there are two options for how to handle commiting documents: > 1. the client explicitly starts the commit via <commit/> > 2. set an auto commit value on the server -- clients can assume all documents > will be commited within that time. > However, this does not help in the case where the clients know what documents > need updating quickly and others that could wait. I suggest adding: > {code:xml} > <add commitWithin="100">... > {/code:xml} > to the update syntax so the client can schedule commits explicitly. -- This message is automatically generated by JIRA. - You can reply to this email to add a comment to the issue online.