Please consider using ddev/ddev-solr, which runs Solr in the modern "cloud" mode. This offers several advantages. If you are using Drupal, the biggest advantage is that you can update the Solr Configset from the UI or with a Drush command everytime you update search_api_solr.
The current addon runs in "classic standalone" mode. It is probably simpler at first to setup, but comes with the added maintainance steps for configsets. Most Solr hosting service providers run "Solr Cloud" as a backend.
This repository allows you to quickly install Apache Solr for Drupal 9+ into a Ddev project using just ddev add-on get ddev/ddev-drupal-solr
. It follows the Setting up Solr (single core) - the classic way recipe.
-
ddev add-on get ddev/ddev-drupal-solr && ddev restart
-
You may need to install the relevant Drupal requirements:
ddev composer require drush/drush drupal/search_api_solr
-
Enable the
search_api_solr
module either using the web interface orddev drush en -y search_api_solr
-
Create a Search API server at
admin/config/search/search-api
-> "Add server" -
Create a server with the following settings
- Set "Server name" to anything you want. Maybe
ddev-solr-server
. - Set "Backend" to
Solr
- Configure Solr backend
- Set "Solr Connector" to
Standard
- Set "Solr host" to
solr
- Set "solr core" to
dev
- Under "Advanced server configuration" set the "solr.install.dir" to
/opt/solr
.
- Set "Solr Connector" to
- Set "Server name" to anything you want. Maybe
-
ddev restart
If you get a message about Solr having outdated config files, you need to update the included Solr config files.
- Click "Get config.zip" on the server page
- Unzip the files, and put the config files into
.ddev/solr/conf/
- Run
ddev restart
See the documentation in the doc
folder
This is the classic Drupal solr:8
image recipe used for a long time by Drupal users and compatible with search_api_solr
.
- It installs a
.ddev/docker-compose.solr.yaml
using the solr:8 docker image. - A standard Drupal 9+ Solr configuration is included in .ddev/solr/conf.
- A .ddev/docker-entrypoint-initdb.d/solr-configupdate.sh is included and mounted into the Solr container so that you can change Solr config in
.ddev/solr/conf
with just addev restart
.
- The Solr admin interface will be accessible at:
http://<projectname>.ddev.site:8983/solr/
For example, if the project is namedmyproject
the hostname will be:http://myproject.ddev.site:8983/solr/
. - To access the Solr container from inside the web container use:
http://solr:8983/solr/
- A Solr core is automatically created by default with the name "dev"; it can be accessed (from inside the web container) at the URL:
http://solr:8983/solr/dev
or from the host athttp://<projectname>.ddev.site:8983/solr/#/~cores/dev
. You can obviously create other cores to meet your needs.
If you want to use a core name other than the default "dev", add a .ddev/docker-compose.solr-env.yaml
with these contents, using the core name you want to use:
services:
solr:
environment:
- SOLR_CORENAME=somecorename
- Change SOLR_CORENAME environment variable in the
environment:
section. - Change your Drupal configuration to use the new core.
You can delete the "dev" core from http://<projectname>.ddev.site:8983/solr/#/~cores/dev
by clicking "Unload".
- This recipe won't work with versions of Solr before
solr:8
, and Acquia's hosting requires Solr 7. You'll want to see the contributed recipes for older versions of Solr.