I need to install Solr on Windows Server 2008 R2, and integrate it with a asp.net mvc3 application. I have tried to find the docs on how to install/setup solr on windows server, but found no good docs / help. Moreover, after install I want to integrate results into asp.net mvc3 applications, so a search query and results need to be displayed there. I'm also clue less how to do this. Although both the questions are little different, any suggestions / document that may help us getting started are truly welcome.
Here is the step by step procedure to get you started:
Step 1: Download Solr. It's just a zip file.
Step 2: Copy from your SOLR_HOME_DIR/dist/apache-solr-1.3.0.war
to your tomcat webapps directory: $CATALINA_HOME/webapps/solr.war
– Note the war file name change. That’s important.
Step 3: Create your solr home directory at a location of your choosing. This is where the configuration for that solr install resides. The easiest way to do this is to copy the SOLR_HOME_DIR/examples/solr
directory to wherever it is you want your solr home container to be. Say place it in C:\solr
.
Step 4: Hope you have set your environment variables, if not then please set JAVA_HOME
, JRE_HOME
, CATALINA_OPTS
, CATALINA_HOME
. Note that CATALINA_HOME
refers to your Tomcat directory & CATALINA_OPTS
refers to the amount of heap memory you want to give to your Solr.
Step 5: Start tomcat. Note this is only necessary to allow tomcat to unpack your war file. If you look under $CATALINA_HOME/webapps
there should now be a solr directory.
Step 6: Stop tomcat
Step 7: Go into that solr directory and edit WEB-INF/web.xml
. Scroll down until you see an entry that looks like this:
<!-- People who want to hardcode their "Solr Home" directly into the
WAR File can set the JNDI property here...
-->
<!--
<env-entry>
<env-entry-name>solr/home</env-entry-name>
<env-entry-value>/Path/To/My/solr/Home/solr/</env-entry-value>
<env-entry-type>java.lang.String</env-entry-type>
</env-entry>
-->
Set your Solr home (for example: C:\solr
) and uncomment the env entry.
Step 8: Start Tomcat again, and things should be going splendidly. You should be able to verify that solr is running by trying the url http://localhost:8080/solr/admin/
.
The other answers here are good enough to get you integrate Solr with your ASP.Net & it should be pretty simple as Solr exposes HTTP.
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