فهرست منبع

Readme formatting

Use named container instead of capturing the container id
Use fenced code blocks with language
Martijn Koster 10 سال پیش
والد
کامیت
5c9dabcda8
2فایلهای تغییر یافته به همراه38 افزوده شده و 14 حذف شده
  1. 19 7
      solr/README.md
  2. 19 7
      solr/content.md

+ 19 - 7
solr/README.md

@@ -19,19 +19,25 @@ Learn more on [Apache Solr homepage](http://lucene.apache.org/solr/) and in the
 
 To run a single Solr server:
 
-    SOLR_CONTAINER=$(docker run -d -p 8983:8983 -t solr)
+```console
+$ docker run --name my_solr -d -p 8983:8983 -t solr
+```
 
 Then with a web browser go to `http://localhost:8983/` to see the Admin Console (adjust the hostname for your docker host).
 
 To use Solr, you need to create a "core", an index for your data. For example:
 
-    docker exec -it --user=solr $SOLR_CONTAINER bin/solr create_core -c gettingstarted
+```console
+$ docker exec -it --user=solr my_solr bin/solr create_core -c gettingstarted
+```
 
 In the web UI if you click on "Core Admin" you should now see the "gettingstarted" core.
 
 If you want to load some example data:
 
-    docker exec -it --user=solr $SOLR_CONTAINER bin/post -c gettingstarted example/exampledocs/manufacturers.xml
+```console
+$ docker exec -it --user=solr my_solr bin/post -c gettingstarted example/exampledocs/manufacturers.xml
+```
 
 In the UI, find the "Core selector" popup menu and select the "gettingstarted" core, then select the "Query"
 menu item. This gives you a default search for "*:*" which returns all docs. Hit the "Execute Query" button,
@@ -45,22 +51,28 @@ You can also run a distributed Solr configuration, with Solr nodes in separate c
 
 Run ZooKeeper, and define a name so we can link to it:
 
-    docker run --name zookeeper -d -p 2181:2181 -p 2888:2888 -p 3888:3888 jplock/zookeeper
+```console
+$ docker run --name zookeeper -d -p 2181:2181 -p 2888:2888 -p 3888:3888 jplock/zookeeper
+```
 
 Run two Solr nodes, linked to the zookeeper container:
 
-    docker run --name solr1 --link zookeeper:ZK -d -p 8983:8983 \
+```console
+$ docker run --name solr1 --link zookeeper:ZK -d -p 8983:8983 \
       solr \
       bash -c '/opt/solr/bin/solr start -f -z $ZK_PORT_2181_TCP_ADDR:$ZK_PORT_2181_TCP_PORT'
 
-    docker run --name solr2 --link zookeeper:ZK -d -p 8984:8983 \
+$ docker run --name solr2 --link zookeeper:ZK -d -p 8984:8983 \
       solr \
       bash -c '/opt/solr/bin/solr start -f -z $ZK_PORT_2181_TCP_ADDR:$ZK_PORT_2181_TCP_PORT'
+```
 
 Create a collection:
 
-    docker exec -i -t solr1 /opt/solr/bin/solr create_collection \
+```console
+$ docker exec -i -t solr1 /opt/solr/bin/solr create_collection \
         -c collection1 -shards 2 -p 8983
+```
 
 Then go to `http://localhost:8983/solr/#/~cloud` (adjust the hostname for your docker host) to see the two shards and Solr nodes.
 

+ 19 - 7
solr/content.md

@@ -11,19 +11,25 @@ Learn more on [Apache Solr homepage](http://lucene.apache.org/solr/) and in the
 
 To run a single Solr server:
 
-    SOLR_CONTAINER=$(docker run -d -p 8983:8983 -t solr)
+```console
+$ docker run --name my_solr -d -p 8983:8983 -t solr
+```
 
 Then with a web browser go to `http://localhost:8983/` to see the Admin Console (adjust the hostname for your docker host).
 
 To use Solr, you need to create a "core", an index for your data. For example:
 
-    docker exec -it --user=solr $SOLR_CONTAINER bin/solr create_core -c gettingstarted
+```console
+$ docker exec -it --user=solr my_solr bin/solr create_core -c gettingstarted
+```
 
 In the web UI if you click on "Core Admin" you should now see the "gettingstarted" core.
 
 If you want to load some example data:
 
-    docker exec -it --user=solr $SOLR_CONTAINER bin/post -c gettingstarted example/exampledocs/manufacturers.xml
+```console
+$ docker exec -it --user=solr my_solr bin/post -c gettingstarted example/exampledocs/manufacturers.xml
+```
 
 In the UI, find the "Core selector" popup menu and select the "gettingstarted" core, then select the "Query"
 menu item. This gives you a default search for "*:*" which returns all docs. Hit the "Execute Query" button,
@@ -37,22 +43,28 @@ You can also run a distributed Solr configuration, with Solr nodes in separate c
 
 Run ZooKeeper, and define a name so we can link to it:
 
-    docker run --name zookeeper -d -p 2181:2181 -p 2888:2888 -p 3888:3888 jplock/zookeeper
+```console
+$ docker run --name zookeeper -d -p 2181:2181 -p 2888:2888 -p 3888:3888 jplock/zookeeper
+```
 
 Run two Solr nodes, linked to the zookeeper container:
 
-    docker run --name solr1 --link zookeeper:ZK -d -p 8983:8983 \
+```console
+$ docker run --name solr1 --link zookeeper:ZK -d -p 8983:8983 \
       solr \
       bash -c '/opt/solr/bin/solr start -f -z $ZK_PORT_2181_TCP_ADDR:$ZK_PORT_2181_TCP_PORT'
 
-    docker run --name solr2 --link zookeeper:ZK -d -p 8984:8983 \
+$ docker run --name solr2 --link zookeeper:ZK -d -p 8984:8983 \
       solr \
       bash -c '/opt/solr/bin/solr start -f -z $ZK_PORT_2181_TCP_ADDR:$ZK_PORT_2181_TCP_PORT'
+```
 
 Create a collection:
 
-    docker exec -i -t solr1 /opt/solr/bin/solr create_collection \
+```console
+$ docker exec -i -t solr1 /opt/solr/bin/solr create_collection \
         -c collection1 -shards 2 -p 8983
+```
 
 Then go to `http://localhost:8983/solr/#/~cloud` (adjust the hostname for your docker host) to see the two shards and Solr nodes.