And keep Solr behind a firewall or authentication or even better,
both! People *will* find and exploit your Solr installation.

Michael Della Bitta

------------------------------------------------
Appinions, Inc. -- Where Influence Isn’t a Game.
http://www.appinions.com


On Thu, Jun 7, 2012 at 10:31 AM, Walter Underwood <wun...@wunderwood.org> wrote:
> This is a bad idea. Solr is not designed to be exposed to arbitrary internet 
> traffic and attacks. The best design is to have a front end server make 
> requests to Solr, then use those to make HTML pages.
>
> wunder
>
> On Jun 7, 2012, at 4:49 AM, Spadez wrote:
>
>> Final comment from me then Ill let someone else speak.
>>
>> The solution we seem to be looking at is send a GET request to SOLR and then
>> send back a renderized page, so we are basically creating the results page
>> on the server rather than the client side.
>>
>> I would really like to hear what people have to say about this. Is this a
>> good idea? Are there any major disadvantages?
>>
>> It seems like the only way to go to have a reliable search site which works
>> without Javascript.
>>
>> --
>> View this message in context: 
>> http://lucene.472066.n3.nabble.com/Help-Confused-about-using-Jquery-for-the-Search-query-Want-to-ditch-it-tp3988123p3988158.html
>> Sent from the Solr - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
>
>
>
>

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