Welcome to Solr
- What Is Solr?
- Get Started
-
News
- 28 July 2011 - WARNING: Index corruption and crashes in Apache Lucene Core / Apache Solr with Java 7
- July 2011 - Solr 3.3 Released
- May 2011 - Solr 3.2 Released
- March 2011 - Solr 3.1 Released
- 25 June 2010 - Solr 1.4.1 Released
- 7 May 2010 - Apache Lucene Eurocon 2010 Coming to Prague May 18-21
- 10 November 2009 - Solr 1.4 Released
- 20 August 2009 - Solr's first book is published!
- 18 August 2009 - Lucene at US ApacheCon
- 09 February 2009 - Lucene at ApacheCon Europe 2009 in Amsterdam
- 19 December 2008 - Solr Logo Contest Results
- 03 October 2008 - Solr Logo Contest
- 15 September 2008 - Solr 1.3.0 Available
- 28 August 2008 - Lucene/Solr at ApacheCon New Orleans
- 03 September 2007 - Lucene at ApacheCon Atlanta
- 06 June 2007: Release 1.2 available
- 17 January 2007: Solr graduates from Incubator
- 22 December 2006: Release 1.1.0 available
- 15 August 2006: Solr at ApacheCon US
- 21 April 2006: Solr at ApacheCon
- 21 February 2006: nightly builds
- 17 January 2006: Solr Joins Apache Incubator
What Is Solr?
Solr is the popular, blazing fast open source enterprise search platform from the Apache Lucene project. Its major features include powerful full-text search, hit highlighting, faceted search, dynamic clustering, database integration, rich document (e.g., Word, PDF) handling, and geospatial search. Solr is highly scalable, providing distributed search and index replication, and it powers the search and navigation features of many of the world's largest internet sites.
Solr is written in Java and runs as a standalone full-text search server within a servlet container such as Tomcat. Solr uses the Lucene Java search library at its core for full-text indexing and search, and has REST-like HTTP/XML and JSON APIs that make it easy to use from virtually any programming language. Solr's powerful external configuration allows it to be tailored to almost any type of application without Java coding, and it has an extensive plugin architecture when more advanced customization is required.
See the complete feature list for more details.
For more information about Solr, please see the Solr wiki.
Get Started
News
28 July 2011 - WARNING: Index corruption and crashes in Apache Lucene Core / Apache Solr with Java 7
Oracle released Java 7 today. Unfortunately it contains hotspot compiler optimizations, which miscompile some loops. This can affect code of several Apache projects. Sometimes JVMs only crash, but in several cases, results calculated can be incorrect, leading to bugs in applications (see Hotspot bugs 7070134, 7044738, 7068051).
Apache Lucene Core and Apache Solr are two Apache projects, which are affected by these bugs, namely all versions released until today. Solr users with the default configuration will have Java crashing with SIGSEGV as soon as they start to index documents, as one affected part is the well-known Porter stemmer (see LUCENE-3335). Other loops in Lucene may be miscompiled, too, leading to index corruption (especially on Lucene trunk with pulsing codec; other loops may be affected, too - LUCENE-3346).
These problems were detected only 5 days before the official Java 7 release, so Oracle had no time to fix those bugs, affecting also many more applications. In response to our questions, they proposed to include the fixes into service release u2 (eventually into service release u1, see this mail). This means you cannot use Apache Lucene/Solr with Java 7 releases before Update 2! If you do, please don't open bug reports, it is not the committers' fault! At least disable loop optimizations using the -XX:-UseLoopPredicate JVM option to not risk index corruptions.
Please note: Also Java 6 users are affected, if they use one of those JVM options, which are not enabled by default: -XX:+OptimizeStringConcat or -XX:+AggressiveOpts.
It is strongly recommended not to use any hotspot optimization switches in any Java version without extensive testing!
In case you upgrade to Java 7, remember that you may have to reindex, as the unicode version shipped with Java 7 changed and tokenization behaves differently (e.g. lowercasing). For more information, read JRE_VERSION_MIGRATION.txt in your distribution package!
July 2011 - Solr 3.3 Released
The Lucene PMC is pleased to announce the release of Apache Solr 3.3!
Solr's version number was synced with Lucene following the Lucene/Solr merge, so Solr 3.3 contains Lucene 3.3.
Solr 3.3 release highlights include
- Grouping / Field Collapsing
- A new, automaton-based suggest/autocomplete implementation offering an order of magnitude smaller RAM consumption.
- KStemFilterFactory, an optimized implementation of a less aggressive stemmer for English.
- Solr defaults to a new, more efficient merge policy (TieredMergePolicy). See http://s.apache.org/merging for more information.
- Important bugfixes, including extremely high RAM usage in spellchecking.
- Bugfixes and improvements from Apache Lucene 3.3
See the release notes for a more complete list of all the new features, improvements, and bugfixes.
May 2011 - Solr 3.2 Released
The Lucene PMC is pleased to announce the release of Apache Solr 3.2!
Solr's version number was synced with Lucene following the Lucene/Solr merge, so Solr 3.2 contains Lucene 3.2. Solr 3.2 is the first release after Solr 3.1.
Solr 3.2 release highlights include
- Ability to specify overwrite and commitWithin as request parameters when using the JSON update format
- TermQParserPlugin, useful when generating filter queries from terms returned from field faceting or the terms component.
- DebugComponent now supports using a NamedList to model Explanation objects in it's responses instead of Explanation.toString
- Improvements to the UIMA and Carrot2 integrations
- Bugfixes and improvements from Apache Lucene 3.2
See the release notes for a more complete list of all the new features, improvements, and bugfixes.
March 2011 - Solr 3.1 Released
The Lucene PMC is pleased to announce the release of Apache Solr 3.1!
Solr's version number was synced with Lucene following the Lucene/Solr merge, so Solr 3.1 contains Lucene 3.1. Solr 3.1 is the first release after Solr 1.4.1.
Solr 3.1 release highlights include
- Numeric range facets (similar to date faceting).
- New spatial search, including spatial filtering, boosting and sorting capabilities.
- Example Velocity driven search UI at http://localhost:8983/solr/browse
- A new faster termvector-based highlighter.
- Extended dismax (edismax) query parser with support for fielded queries, enhanced relevancy, and full lucene syntax support.
- Distributed search support for the Spell check and Terms components.
- Suggester, a fast trie-based autocomplete component.
- Sort results by any function query.
- JSON document indexing.
- CSV response format
- Apache UIMA integration for metadata extraction.
- Tons of optimizations, bugfixes, and new analysis capabilities via Apache Lucene 3.1.
See the release notes for a more complete list of all the new features, improvements, and bugfixes.
25 June 2010 - Solr 1.4.1 Released
Solr 1.4.1 has been released and is now available for public download! Solr 1.4.1 is a bug fix release for Solr 1.4 that includes many Solr bug fixes as well as Lucene bug fixes from Lucene 2.9.3.
See the release notes for more details.
7 May 2010 - Apache Lucene Eurocon 2010 Coming to Prague May 18-21
On May 18th to the 21st Prague will play host to the first ever dedicated Lucene and Solr User Conference in Europe: Apache Lucene Eurocon 2010. This is a a not-for-profit conference presented by Lucid Imagination, with net proceeds being donated to The Apache Software Foundation. Registration is now open. Schedule highlights include:
-
Two
days of in depth training classes:
- Solr Application Development Workshop - Erik Hatcher
- Lucene Bootcamp - Grant Ingersoll
-
Four
general sessions:
- The Search Revolution: How Lucene & Solr Are Changing The World - Eric Gries
- From Publisher To Platform: How The Guardian Used Content, Search, and Open Source To Build a Powerful New Business Model - Stephen Dunn
- Software Disruption: How Using Open Source, Search, Big Data and Cloud technology are Disrupting IT - Zack Urlocker
- Solr 1.5 and Beyond - Yonik Seeley
- 24 technical sessions, spanning two days, divided into two tracks
- A Thursday night MeetUp
- An event at the Czech Beer Festival
10 November 2009 - Solr 1.4 Released
Solr 1.4 has been released and is now available for public download! New Solr 1.4 features include
- Major performance enhancements in indexing, searching, and faceting
- Revamped all-Java index replication that's simple to configure and can replicate config files
- Greatly improved database integration via the DataImportHandler
- Rich document processing (Word, PDF, HTML) via Apache Tika
- Dynamic search results clustering via Carrot2
- Multi-select faceting (support for multiple items in a single category to be selected)
- Many powerful query enhancements, including ranges over arbitrary functions, nested queries of different syntaxes
- Many other plugins including Terms for auto-suggest, Statistics, TermVectors, Deduplication
See the release notes for more details.
20 August 2009 - Solr's first book is published!
David Smiley and Eric Pugh are proud to introduce the first book on Solr, "Solr 1.4 Enterprise Search Server" from Packt Publishing.
This book is a comprehensive reference guide for nearly every feature Solr has to offer. It serves the reader right from initiation to development to deployment. It also comes with complete running examples to demonstrate its use and show how to integrate it with other languages and frameworks.
To keep this interesting and realistic, it uses a large open source set of metadata about artists, releases, and tracks courtesy of the MusicBrainz.org project. Using this data as a testing ground for Solr, you will learn how to import this data in various ways from CSV to XML to database access. You will then learn how to search this data in a myriad of ways, including Solr's rich query syntax, "boosting" match scores based on record data and other means, about searching across multiple fields with different boosts, getting facets on the results, auto-complete user queries, spell-correcting searches, highlighting queried text in search results, and so on.
After this thorough tour, you'll see working examples of integrating a variety of technologies with Solr such as Java, JavaScript, Drupal, Ruby, PHP, and Python.
Finally, this book covers various deployment considerations to include indexing strategies and performance-oriented configuration that will enable you to scale Solr to meet the needs of a high-volume site.
18 August 2009 - Lucene at US ApacheCon
ApacheCon US is once again in the Bay Area and Lucene is coming along for the ride! The Lucene community has planned two full days of talks, plus a meetup and the usual bevy of training. With a well-balanced mix of first time and veteran ApacheCon speakers, the Lucene track at ApacheCon US promises to have something for everyone. Be sure not to miss:
Training:
- Lucene Boot Camp - A two day training session, Nov. 2nd & 3rd
- Solr Day - A one day training session, Nov. 2nd
Thursday, Nov. 5th
- Introduction to the Lucene Ecosystem - Grant Ingersoll @ 9:00
- Lucene Basics and New Features - Michael Busch @ 10:00
- Apache Solr: Out of the Box - Chris Hostetter @ 14:00
- Introduction to Nutch - Andrzej Bialecki @ 15:00
- Lucene and Solr Performance Tuning - Mark Miller @ 16:30
Friday, Nov. 6th
- Implementing an Information Retrieval Framework for an Organizational Repository - Sithu D Sudarsan @ 9:00
- Apache Mahout - Going from raw data to Information - Isabel Drost @ 10:00
- MIME Magic with Apache Tika - Jukka Zitting @ 11:30
- Building Intelligent Search Applications with the Lucene Ecosystem - Ted Dunning @ 14:00
- Realtime Search - Jason Rutherglen @ 15:00
09 February 2009 - Lucene at ApacheCon Europe 2009 in Amsterdam
Lucene will be extremely well represented at ApacheCon US 2009 in Amsterdam, Netherlands this March 23-27, 2009:
- Lucene Boot Camp - A two day training session, March 23 & 24th
- Solr Boot Camp - A one day training session, March 24th
- Introducing Apache Mahout - Grant Ingersoll. March 25th @ 10:30
- Lucene/Solr Case Studies - Erik Hatcher. March 25th @ 11:30
- Advanced Indexing Techniques with Apache Lucene - Michael Busch. March 25th @ 14:00
- Apache Solr - A Case Study - Uri Boness. March 26th @ 17:30
- Best of breed - httpd, forrest, solr and droids - Thorsten Scherler. March 27th @ 17:30
- Apache Droids - an intelligent standalone robot framework - Thorsten Scherler. March 26th @ 15:00
19 December 2008 - Solr Logo Contest Results
Many great logos were submitted, but only one could be chosen. Congratulations Michiel, the creator of the winning logo that is proudly displayed at the top of this page.
03 October 2008 - Solr Logo Contest
By popular demand, Solr is holding a contest to pick a new Solr logo. Details about how to submit an entry can be found on the wiki. The Deadline for submissions is November 20th, 2008 @ 11:59PM GMT.
15 September 2008 - Solr 1.3.0 Available
Solr 1.3.0 is available for public download. This version contains many enhancements and bug fixes, including distributed search capabilities, Lucene 2.3.x performance improvements and many others.
See the release notes for more details. Download is available from a Apache Mirror.
28 August 2008 - Lucene/Solr at ApacheCon New Orleans
Lucene will be extremely well represented at ApacheCon US 2008 in New Orleans this November 3-7, 2008:
- Lucene Boot Camp - A two day training session, November 3rd & 4th
- Solr Boot Camp - A one day training session, November 4th
- An entire day of Lucene sessions on November 5th
03 September 2007 - Lucene at ApacheCon Atlanta
Lucene will once again be well represented at ApacheCon USA in Atlanta this November 12-16, 2007.
The following talks and trainings are scheduled for this year's conference:
- November 12: Lucene Boot Camp by Grant Ingersoll. An all-day training focusing on getting started with Lucene.
- November 16, 9:00 am: Apache Solr out of the Box by Chris Hostetter. Introduction to Solr.
- November 16, 10:00 am: Building a Vertical Search Site using Apache Software by Ken Krugler. Will cover many Lucene-based projects.
- November 16, 3:00 pm: Apache Lucene Performance by Grant Ingersoll. Tips and techniques for improving Lucene performance.
- November 16, 4:00 pm: Advanced Indexing Techniques with Apache Lucene by Michael Busch. Information on payloads and advanced indexing techniques.
06 June 2007: Release 1.2 available
This is the first release since Solr graduated from the Incubator, bringing many new features, including CSV/delimited-text data loading, time based autocommit, faster faceting, negative filters, a spell-check handler, sounds-like word filters, regex text filters, and more flexible plugins.
See the release notes for more details.
17 January 2007: Solr graduates from Incubator
Solr has graduated from the Apache Incubator, and is now a sub-project of Lucene.
22 December 2006: Release 1.1.0 available
This is the first release since Solr joined the Incubator, and brings many new features and performance optimizations including highlighting, faceted search, and JSON/Python/Ruby response formats.
15 August 2006: Solr at ApacheCon US
Chris Hostetter will be presenting "Faceted Searching With Apache Solr" at ApacheCon US 2006, on October 13th at 4:30pm. See the ApacheCon website for more details.
21 April 2006: Solr at ApacheCon
Yonik Seeley will be presenting "Apache Solr, a Full-Text Search Server based on Lucene" at ApacheCon Europe 2006, on June 29th at 5:30pm. See the ApacheCon website for more details.
21 February 2006: nightly builds
Solr now has nightly builds. This automatically creates a downloadable version of Solr every night. All unit tests must pass, or a message is sent to the developers mailing list and no new version is created. This also updates the javadoc.
17 January 2006: Solr Joins Apache Incubator
Solr, a search server based on Lucene, has been accepted into the Apache Incubator. Solr was originally developed by CNET Networks, and is widely used within CNET to provide high relevancy search and faceted browsing capabilities.