- all non-dht targets (previously separated into 'robinson' for dht-like
queries and 'node' for solr queries) are non 'extra' peers, which are
queries using solr
- these extra-peers are now selected using a ranking on last-seen,
peer-tag-matches, node-peer flags, peer age, and link count. The ranking
is done using a weight and a random factor.
- the number of extra peers is 50% of the dht peers
- the dht peers now exclude too young peers to prevent bad results
during strong growth of the network
- the number of dht peers (and therefore extra-peers) is reduced when
the memory of the peer is low and/or some documents still appear in the
indexing-queue. This shall prevent a peer from deadlocks when p2p
queries are made in a fast sequence on weak hardware.
- the admin user name can be configured, in apiExec calls the default "admin" username is used.
TODO: the bin/apicall.sh script should likely take that into account.
java.lang.NullPointerException
at net.yacy.cora.federate.solr.responsewriter.GSAResponseWriter.highlight(GSAResponseWriter.java:328)
at net.yacy.cora.federate.solr.responsewriter.GSAResponseWriter.write(GSAResponseWriter.java:263)
at net.yacy.http.servlets.SolrServlet.service(SolrServlet.java:235)
work around the unfolding process in Solr's BinaryResponseWriter.
This was a huge performance bottleneck in the embedded solr connector
and the problem is actually on Solr side, but we have now a workaround.
- This made it possible to abstract a high-performance index access
method which is implemented as method getDocumentListByParams. That
method is also implemented in the SolrServerConnector and provides a
very efficient access to a solr index if the index is embedded.
- a popular use of the document list retrieval is a result count which
can now also make use of the new method, via getDocumentCountByParams.
- enhanced the Error cache which now does not store error documents
within the ram cache if the document is also written to solr. When
documents are retrieved from the cache, they are partly read from the
ram cache and if not existent there, from the Solr index.
and it is highly recommend to close every SolrRequest.
Every Request, which is not closed leaves a Searcher with its Chaches an
can not be garbage-collectet.
servlet since YaCy 1.63. This is much more performant for the client
than using the XMLResponseWriter because parsing of XML data is very CPU
intensive. Older YaCy peers are still requested using the
XMLResponseWriter but the majority of YaCy peers already respond with
the binary writer. This makes remote searches much faster and less CPU
intensive.