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Solr makes it easy to create advanced search features in Islandora, like faceting (arranging search results in columns with numerical counts of key terms). The following comes from the Solr guide; a link to the guide is provided in the Selected Reading section of this guide:
Solr builds on another open source search technology - Lucene, a Java library that provides indexing and search technology, as well as spell-checking, hit highlighting and advanced analysis/tokenization capabilities. Both Solr and Lucene are managed by the Apache Software Foundation (www.apache.org).
The Lucene search library currently ranks among the top 15 open source projects and is one of the top 5 Apache projects, with installations at over 4,000 companies. Lucene/Solr downloads have grown nearly 10x over the past three years, with a current run-rate of over 6,000 downloads a day.
Islandora uses Solr to make objects in your Islandora installation discoverable. The Solr search module uses an xslt in Gsearch to index the FOXML documents in your repository, and allows you to configure search fields for searching and faceting. Whenever you add a new object in Fedora, the Solr module updates your index, and makes those results available to your users.
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The Solr module comes with support for simple Dublin Core and simple MODS (i.e. no qualified fields!) searching and faceting to support our solution packs.
When Solr is installed, six additional blocks appear under your site's Structure>Blocks section:
Islandora simple search - provides a simple full-text search of all items in the repository. A term will appear, no matter where it appears in the metadata.
Islandora advanced search - provides a configurable search for users, where specific metadata fields can be searched and combined with boolean operators.
Islandora query - when a user is viewing a set of search results by facet, this block will show the current filters being applied in the search.
Islandora facets - this block will show users the facets they can use to browse and refine search results.
Islandora displays - displays current search query
Islandora sort - displays sorting options for search results.
By placing these blocks in regions of your site and configuring the Solr module under Islandora>Solr client, you can facilitate both full-text searching and faceted searching of items ingested using Solution Packs. The basic configuration of Solr can be modified to change the weight of search fields, and extend the out-of-the-box functionality. Information for doing this is provided in Customizing Islandora.
In order for Solr to work for your collections, you will have to activate the blocks that you want (see above), and configure them to display your desired results.
The following instructions will show you how to configure the initial Solr set up in your Islandora instance. Additional information about installing Solr and how Islandora uses Solr is provided in Installing Solr and GSearch. Additional information about customizing Islandora’s Solr Search Module is provided in Customizing Islandora.
Start by going to the ‘Islandora’ page in the admin panel and click on the ‘Solr Index’ link.
The Solr URL should be ip.address.of.site:port/solr. So, for example, if you’re using the Islandora Virtual Machine Image, your Solr URL should be 192.168.56.195:8080/solr, or if using a local installation it should be localhost:8080/solr. If the URL is correct you will see a green check mark.
Make sure the request handler is set to ‘standard’. You can customize the request handler by editing solrconfig.xml to make other request handlers available. This assumes that you are using the default request handler, which will support all the metadata in our solution packs.
You can modify the way search results are displayed by configuring the Display Profiles. You can choose from List, Bookmark, Grid (set to Default in the screenshot below), and Table. Secondary display profiles provide optional secondary outputs for search results. Switching back and forth between different display profiles is simple, so feel free to experiment and see which default display profile best suits your site. The display profiles appear on your site through the "Islandora displays" block, mentioned above.
Out-of-the-box, support for RSS and CSV output is also provided. Selecting these options will place an RSS feed and CSV button next to your search results.
Here you can choose the search terms that will appear in the drop-down menus on the advanced search block. Terms must be entered by their field names (in most cases this will be Dublin Core, but you can also use MODS), though you can optionally specify a more human-readable label with the configure option. To determine the appropriate syntax for your search terms, simply edit the metadata on any object in your repository (for instructions, see How to Edit an Object’s Metadata in Getting Started with Islandora). Each field label will display the proper syntax for adding it to your Solr search configuration. A full list of the terms made available by the schema provided in the module package is provided in APPENDIX D - SOLR SCHEMA (SEARCH) Term Reference.
Note that you will want to use fields that have been indexed as “text” in the advanced search block. Read APPENDIX D - SOLR SCHEMA (SEARCH) Term Reference for more information.
You may notice when setting up your Solr instance that some fields contain qualifiers like _t, _s, _mt, or _ms at the end of the field name. These indicate how the values of these fields are stored in Solr. Read APPENDIX D - SOLR SCHEMA (SEARCH) Term Reference for more information. |
You also have the option of setting permissions on a per-field basis, allowing only certain subsets of users access to search across different facets. These permissions, and the human-readable label for each Solr field, can be configured by clicking configure to open a new options window:
Solr field permissions are dependent on a role having Drupal permissions to search the Solr index. Roles without this permissions may appear in this list, but they will not be selectable. |
Solr uses faceting to filter search results. Here, you can choose which fields you wish to allow faceting on. The format is the same as the search terms described above. You can also use this screen to configure:
Note that you will want to use terms here that have been indexed as “strings”. Read APPENDIX D - SOLR SCHEMA (SEARCH) Term Reference for more information.
Using the same field formatting as Advanced Search and Faceting fields, you can select fields to make available to the user to sort their search results in the Sort block.
The field for a relevance based sort is "score". |
This section of the configuration panel provides advanced Solr query customization options:
After setting up all of the above sections, you will have successfully configured your Solr client!
You may wish to now use the Islandora Solr Metadata module to configure your site's Metadata Display - find out more in Islandora Solr Metadata.
Consult the Solr Reference Guide to read more about Solr: https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/solr/Apache+Solr+Reference+Guide |
You may find it useful to know that you can access Solr, and GSearch in your browser, as well as through your server.
In a browser:
On your server: