online marketing Free Computer Science, Engineering, Medical Ebooks: David Smiley, Eric Pugh, "Solr 1.4 Enterprise Search Server"

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

David Smiley, Eric Pugh, "Solr 1.4 Enterprise Search Server"

Solr 1.4 Enterprise Search Server


David Smiley, Eric Pugh, "Solr 1.4 Enterprise Search Server"
Packt Publishing | 2009 | ISBN: 1847195881 | 250 pages | PDF | 6,6 MB

Enhance your search with faceted navigation, result highlighting, fuzzy queries, ranked scoring, and more
Deploy, embed, and integrate Solr with a host of programming languages
Implement faceting in e-commerce and other sites to summarize and navigate the results of a text search
Enhance your search by highlighting search results, offering spell-corrections, auto-suggest, finding "similar" records, boosting records and fields for scoring, phonetic matching
Informative and practical approach to development with fully working examples of integrating a variety of technologies

In Detail
If you are a Java developer building a high-traffic web site, you need to have a terrific search engine. Sites like Netflix.com and Zappos.com employ Solr, an open source enterprise search server, which uses and extends the Lucene search library. This is the first book in the market on Solr and it will show you how to optimize your web site for high volume web traffic with full-text search capabilities along with loads of customization options. So, let your users gain a terrific search experience.

This book is a comprehensive reference guide for 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.

This book first gives you a quick overview of Solr, and then gradually takes you from basic to advanced features that enhance your search. It starts off by discussing Solr and helping you understand how it fits into your architecture--where all databases and document/web crawlers fall short, and Solr shines. The main part of the book is a thorough exploration of nearly every feature that Solr offers. To keep this interesting and realistic, we use 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, we'll demonstrate working examples of integrating a variety of technologies with Solr such as Java, JavaScript, Drupal, Ruby, XSLT, PHP, and Python.

Finally, we'll cover 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.






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