Configuring solrconfig.xml
The solrconfig.xml
file is the configuration file with the most parameters affecting Solr itself.
While configuring Solr, you’ll work with solrconfig.xml
often, either directly or via the Config API to create "configuration overlays" (configoverlay.json
) to override the values in solrconfig.xml
.
In solrconfig.xml
, you configure important features such as:
request handlers, which process the requests to Solr, such as requests to add documents to the index or requests to return results for a query
listeners, processes that "listen" for particular query-related events; listeners can be used to trigger the execution of special code, such as invoking some common queries to warm-up caches
the Request Dispatcher for managing HTTP communications
the Admin Web interface
parameters related to replication and duplication (these parameters are covered in detail in Legacy Scaling and Distribution)
The solrconfig.xml
file is located in the conf/
directory for each collection. Several well-commented example files can be found in the server/solr/configsets/
directories demonstrating best practices for many different types of installations.
We’ve covered the options in the following sections:
Some SolrConfig aspects are covered in other sections. See lib directives in SolrConfig, which can be used for both Plugins and Resources.
Substituting Properties in Solr Config Files
Solr supports variable substitution of property values in configuration files, which allows runtime specification of various configuration options in solrconfig.xml
. The syntax is ${propertyname[:option default value]
}. This allows defining a default that can be overridden when Solr is launched. If a default value is not specified, then the property must be specified at runtime or the configuration file will generate an error when parsed.
There are multiple methods for specifying properties that can be used in configuration files. Of those below, strongly consider "config overlay" as the preferred approach, as it stays local to the configset and is easy to modify.
JVM System Properties
Any JVM System properties, usually specified using the -D
flag when starting the JVM, can be used as variables in any XML configuration file in Solr.
For example, in the sample solrconfig.xml
files, you will see this value which defines the locking type to use:
<lockType>${solr.lock.type:native}</lockType>
Which means the lock type defaults to "native" but when starting Solr, you could override this using a JVM system property by launching the Solr it with:
bin/solr start -Dsolr.lock.type=none
In general, any Java system property that you want to set can be passed through the bin/solr
script using the standard -Dproperty=value
syntax. Alternatively, you can add common system properties to the SOLR_OPTS
environment variable defined in the Solr include file (bin/solr.in.sh
or bin/solr.in.cmd
). For more information about how the Solr include file works, refer to: Taking Solr to Production.
Config API to Override solrconfig.xml
The Config API allows you to use an API to modify Solr’s configuration, specifically user defined properties. Changes made with this API are stored in a file named configoverlay.json
. This file should only be edited with the API, but will look like this example:
{"userProps": {
"dih.db.url": "jdbc:oracle:thin:@localhost:1521",
"dih.db.user": "username",
"dih.db.pass": "password"}}
For more details, see the section Config API.
solrcore.properties
If the configuration directory for a Solr core contains a file named solrcore.properties
that file can contain any arbitrary user-defined property names and values using the Java properties file format. Those properties can then be used as variables in other configuration files for that Solr core.
For example, the following solrcore.properties
file could be created in the conf/
directory of a collection using one of the example configurations, to override the lockType used.
#conf/solrcore.properties
solr.lock.type=none
Deprecation
|
The path and name of the |
User-Defined Properties in core.properties
Every Solr core has a core.properties
file, automatically created when using the APIs. When you create a SolrCloud collection, you can pass through custom parameters by prefixing the parameter name with property.name
as a parameter.
For example, to add a property named "my.custom.prop":
V1 API
http://localhost:8983/solr/admin/collections?action=CREATE&name=gettingstarted&numShards=1&property.my.custom.prop=edismax
V2 API
curl -X POST -H 'Content-type: application/json' -d '{"create": {"name": "gettingstarted", "numShards": "1", "property.my.custom.prop": "edismax"}}' http://localhost:8983/api/collections
This will create a core.properties
file that has at least the following properties (others omitted for brevity):
#core.properties
name=gettingstarted
my.custom.prop=edismax
The my.custom.prop
property can then be used as a variable, such as in solrconfig.xml
:
<requestHandler name="/select">
<lst name="defaults">
<str name="defType">${my.custom.prop}</str>
</lst>
</requestHandler>
Implicit Core Properties
Several attributes of a Solr core are available as "implicit" properties that can be used in variable substitution, independent of where or how the underlying value is initialized.
For example, regardless of whether the name for a particular Solr core is explicitly configured in core.properties
or inferred from the name of the instance directory, the implicit property solr.core.name
is available for use as a variable in that core’s configuration file:
<requestHandler name="/select">
<lst name="defaults">
<str name="collection_name">${solr.core.name}</str>
</lst>
</requestHandler>
All implicit properties use the solr.core.
name prefix, and reflect the runtime value of the equivalent core.properties
property:
solr.core.name
solr.core.config
solr.core.schema
solr.core.dataDir
solr.core.transient
solr.core.loadOnStartup