There could be some testing and cooling happening post-replication. will have to dig a bit more into the code.
Deepak "The greatness of a nation can be judged by the way its animals are treated - Mahatma Gandhi" +91 73500 12833 [email protected] Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/deicool LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/deicool "Plant a Tree, Go Green" Make In India : http://www.makeinindia.com/home On Thu, Oct 21, 2021 at 9:57 PM Dominic Humphries <[email protected]> wrote: > One more tidbit: I just tried leaving replication off for a few hours and > then triggering a "big" replication run so I could see the distinct stages. > > > - Beginning replication didn't cause any performance degradation. > - Several minutes of downloading the replication files saw no > degradation > - Only after downloading had completed did we start to see performance > issues in our tests > - But we saw the "number of docs/timestamp of latest file" both jump > almost immediately after downloading completed and never move again > - But the performance degradation continued for about seven more minutes > even though replication was clearly finished at this point > > > Is there some kind of re-indexing optimization thing that solr can run > post-replication? At this point it's about my only remaining suspect.. >
