How about DBSight
http://www.dbsight.net/
or Compass?
http://www.compassframework.org/display/SITE/Home


--- "Hensley, Richard" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:

> We had this same problem. Went looking for a
> solution, and came back around
> to Lucene. I know this is not what you wanted to
> hear, but Lucene has the
> kind of search features that users expect, and that
> we would not find in
> other packages. I believe both Oracle and MySQL have
> some sort of text
> search capability, you might want to check them out.
> If you come back around
> to Lucene, let me know maybe I can help.
> 
> Richard 
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Patrick Casey [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> Sent: Wednesday, October 05, 2005 9:19 AM
> To: 'Tapestry users'
> Subject: [OT] FreeForm Text Search other than
> Lucene?
> 
>  
> 
>             Sorry for the OTness here, but I find
> this mailing list has
> more
> java knowledge in it than anywhere else I'm likely
> to look so .
> 
>  
> 
>             I'm considering adding freeform text
> search to a web
> application
> I'm working on. I've done the same thing before with
> other applications
> using Lucene, but that approach was, to be blunt,
> frail because I had to
> keep (and manage) two parallel data stores. There
> was Lucene's file
> based
> storage listing all the text and object keys, and
> there was my database
> that
> held the objects themselves. Keeping the two in
> synch through errors,
> transaction failures, backups, and recoveries was
> like pulling teeth and
> never *quite* worked right, resulting in the
> occasional "oh, just
> rebuild
> the whole lucene index" approach to fault recovery.
> 
>  
> 
>             What I'd really like is some form of
> vendor-neutral freeform
> text search that uses an RDBMS (not the file system)
> as its repository.
> Does
> anybody know of a java based solution that offers
> that kind of
> functionality?
> 
>  
> 
>             --- Pat
> 
> 
>
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> 


Konstantin Ignatyev




PS: If this is a typical day on planet earth, humans will add fifteen million 
tons of carbon to the atmosphere, destroy 115 square miles of tropical 
rainforest, create seventy-two miles of desert, eliminate between forty to one 
hundred species, erode seventy-one million tons of topsoil, add 2,700 tons of 
CFCs to the stratosphere, and increase their population by 263,000

Bowers, C.A.  The Culture of Denial:  Why the Environmental Movement Needs a 
Strategy for Reforming Universities and Public Schools.  New York:  State 
University of New York Press, 1997: (4) (5) (p.206)

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