On Fri, 25 Mar 2011 13:44 +0200, "Dmitry Kan" <dmitry....@gmail.com>
wrote:
> Hi Yonik,
> 
> Oh, this is great. Is distributed faceting available in the trunk? What
> is
> the basic server setup needed for trying this out, is it cloud with HDFS
> and
> SOLR with zookepers?
> Any chance to see the related documentation? :)

Distributed faceting has been available for a long time, and is
available in the 1.4.1 release.

The distribution of facet requests across hosts happens in the
background. There's no real difference (in query syntax) between a
standard facet query and a distributed one.

i.e. you don't need SolrCloud nor Zookeeper for it. (they may provide
other benefits, but you don't need them for distributed faceting).

Upayavira

> On Fri, Mar 25, 2011 at 1:35 PM, Yonik Seeley
> <yo...@lucidimagination.com>wrote:
> 
> > On Tue, Mar 22, 2011 at 7:51 AM, Dmitry Kan <dmitry....@gmail.com> wrote:
> > > Basically, of high interest is checking out the Map-Reduce for
> > distributed
> > > faceting, is it even possible with the trunk?
> >
> > Solr already has distributed faceting, and it's much more performant
> > than a map-reduce implementation would be.
> >
> > I've also seen a product use the term "map reduce" incorrectly... as in,
> > we "map" the request to each shard, and then "reduce" the results to a
> > single list (of course, that's not actually map-reduce at all ;-)
> >
> >
> :) this sounds pretty strange to me as well. It was only my guess, that
> if
> you have MR as computational model and a cloud beneath it, you could
> naturally map facet fields to their counts inside single documents (no
> matter, where they are, be it shards or "single" index) and pass them
> onto
> reducers.
> 
> 
> > -Yonik
> > http://www.lucenerevolution.org -- Lucene/Solr User Conference, May
> > 25-26, San Francisco
> >
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> Regards,
> 
> Dmitry Kan
> 
--- 
Enterprise Search Consultant at Sourcesense UK, 
Making Sense of Open Source

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