That is working. I created a path field in my schema and use the "path attribute". I have one problem, I don't see the name of the cifs server, just the path inside it. I try to use "Match Regexp" in the metadata tab with the following values: Match regexp: "(.*)" Replace string: "file:////server_name/$(1)"
but it did not work. Still seeing the path only. What am I doing wrong? How can I add my server name to the path? Thanks Yossi On Wed, May 1, 2013 at 4:10 PM, Yossi Nachum <[email protected]> wrote: > Thanks I will try that > On May 1, 2013 3:54 PM, "Karl Wright" <[email protected]> wrote: > >> There is also a different way to do this entirely - there is a path >> attribute you can send as metadata to Solr. Just include the entire path, >> and put it into a different field that you declare in your schema. See >> "path attribute" in the end-user documentation for the JCIFS connector. >> >> >> >> On Wed, May 1, 2013 at 8:52 AM, Karl Wright <[email protected]> wrote: >> >>> IE 6 is extremely old and I believe we developed for IE 7 at a minimum >>> (there were two different versions with different functionality we had to >>> support there), and made further changes for IE 8 when it came out. I have >>> no idea what IE 9 or IE 10 do. >>> >>> The only way to change the encoding of the IRI is to modify the JCIFS >>> connector code. But please bear in mind that unless you can show your >>> modifications will work across a wide variety of browsers, we are unlikely >>> to accept these changes back into the code base. >>> >>> The alternative is, since the encoding IS deterministic and reversible, >>> you could readily write a Tika plugin that would modify at least the URL >>> field in the manner you desire. But you could not modify the ID field >>> since ManifoldCF uses this to delete documents that have disappeared. >>> >>> Karl >>> >>> >>> >>> On Wed, May 1, 2013 at 8:45 AM, Yossi Nachum <[email protected]>wrote: >>> >>>> The IRI is not working in my IE. I am using old version of IE V6 SP3. >>>> But what I realy want is to display the correct name of the path with >>>> hebrew characters. >>>> If I understand you right, then I need to change the representation of >>>> the IRI. How can I do that? >>>> On May 1, 2013 3:14 PM, "Karl Wright" <[email protected]> wrote: >>>> >>>>> Right, that is exactly what I would expect. >>>>> >>>>> ManifoldCF uses a URL (which is constructed by the connector) as the >>>>> primary key for every document as indexed in the search engine. The URL >>>>> has two purposes: first, it is supposed to be unique, and second, it is >>>>> supposed to allow someone who browses to that result to locate the >>>>> document. In the case of JCIFS, the environment is presumed to be the >>>>> local active directory domain(s), and the "URL" generated is really a file >>>>> IRI, usually of the form "file://///server.domain/path/filename". You >>>>> thus >>>>> should be able to paste the "URL" of the document from Solr into a browser >>>>> on a machine in the domain, and see the document load. >>>>> >>>>> As I said before, however, there are already certain problems with >>>>> this because each version of IE differs somewhat in how it deals with >>>>> non-ASCII characters. IRI legal character rules are somewhat different >>>>> than URL rules, but IRI's are still nevertheless escaped in various ways. >>>>> There are also multiple equivalent ways of representing the same file path >>>>> with different IRI's. >>>>> >>>>> It is not typical that the ID and URL fields of a document are >>>>> presented to the user in any meaningful way, so your question is usually >>>>> academic in most settings. If you have a problem with the IRI's not >>>>> actually working in a browser, that's of more immediate interest. Please >>>>> let us know if that's the case. >>>>> >>>>> Thanks, >>>>> Karl >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> On Wed, May 1, 2013 at 8:04 AM, Yossi Nachum <[email protected]>wrote: >>>>> >>>>>> Thanks for your response >>>>>> I am seeing these characters in solr when I search these files. >>>>>> I am using the solr example site and these characters show up in the >>>>>> ID field and URL field. >>>>>> BTW I am running solr and mcf on a linux server >>>>>> On May 1, 2013 1:11 PM, "Karl Wright" <[email protected]> wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>>> Where are you seeing these characters? Are you talking about the >>>>>>> file IRI's that the JCIFS connector generates? Those IRI's are >>>>>>> supposed to >>>>>>> be constructed so that your browser would find them if you paste them >>>>>>> into >>>>>>> the browser URL window. Unfortunately, there is no good standard, and >>>>>>> people follow IE's behavior, and IE has changed multiple times in how it >>>>>>> deals with non-latin-1 characters. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Please provide a bit more information so that we can provide a >>>>>>> better answer. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Karl >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> On Wed, May 1, 2013 at 3:11 AM, Yossi Nachum <[email protected]>wrote: >>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Hello, >>>>>>>> I install search server with solr and manifoldcf. >>>>>>>> I want to index my netapp files over cifs and I have a problem with >>>>>>>> hebrew files and directories. >>>>>>>> When I search for these files in solr I see "%D7%91%D7%..." instead >>>>>>>> of the directory path that contain hebrew characters . >>>>>>>> I try to run the java process with "-Djcifs.encoding=cp1255" but it >>>>>>>> didn't help. >>>>>>>> Can anyone help and tell me how can I index directories/files in >>>>>>>> hebrew? >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Thanks >>>>>>>> Yossi >>>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>> >>> >>
