SolrClient::addDocument

(PECL solr >= 0.9.2)

SolrClient::addDocumentAdds a document to the index

Description

public SolrClient::addDocument ( SolrInputDocument $doc [, bool $overwrite = true [, int $commitWithin = 0 ]] ) : SolrUpdateResponse

This method adds a document to the index.

Parameters

doc

The SolrInputDocument instance.

overwrite

Whether to overwrite existing document or not. If false there will be duplicates (several documents with the same ID).

Warning

PECL Solr < 2.0 $allowDups was used instead of $overwrite, which does the same functionality with exact opposite bool flag.

$allowDups = false is the same as $overwrite = true

commitWithin

Number of milliseconds within which to auto commit this document. Available since Solr 1.4 . Default (0) means disabled.

When this value specified, it leaves the control of when to do the commit to Solr itself, optimizing number of commits to a minimum while still fulfilling the update latency requirements, and Solr will automatically do a commit when the oldest add in the buffer is due.

Return Values

Returns a SolrUpdateResponse object or throws an Exception on failure.

Errors/Exceptions

Throws SolrClientException if the client had failed, or there was a connection issue.

Throws SolrServerException if the Solr Server had failed to process the request.

Examples

Example #1 SolrClient::addDocument() example

<?php

$options = array
(
    'hostname' => SOLR_SERVER_HOSTNAME,
    'login'    => SOLR_SERVER_USERNAME,
    'password' => SOLR_SERVER_PASSWORD,
    'port'     => SOLR_SERVER_PORT,
);

$client = new SolrClient($options);

$doc = new SolrInputDocument();

$doc->addField('id', 334455);
$doc->addField('cat', 'Software');
$doc->addField('cat', 'Lucene');

$updateResponse = $client->addDocument($doc);

// you will have to commit changes to be written if you didn't use $commitWithin
$client->commit();

print_r($updateResponse->getResponse());

?>

The above example will output something similar to:


SolrObject Object
(
    [responseHeader] => SolrObject Object
        (
            [status] => 0
            [QTime] => 1
        )

)

Example #2 SolrClient::addDocument() example 2

<?php

$options = array
(
    'hostname' => SOLR_SERVER_HOSTNAME,
    'login'    => SOLR_SERVER_USERNAME,
    'password' => SOLR_SERVER_PASSWORD,
    'port'     => SOLR_SERVER_PORT,
);

$client = new SolrClient($options);

$doc = new SolrInputDocument();

$doc->addField('id', 334455);
$doc->addField('cat', 'Software');
$doc->addField('cat', 'Lucene');

// No need to call commit() because $commitWithin is passed, so Solr Server will auto commit within 10 seconds
$updateResponse = $client->addDocument($doc, false, 10000);

print_r($updateResponse->getResponse());

?>

The above example will output something similar to:


SolrObject Object
(
    [responseHeader] => SolrObject Object
        (
            [status] => 0
            [QTime] => 1
        )

)

See Also

© 1997–2020 The PHP Documentation Group
Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License v3.0 or later.
https://www.php.net/manual/en/solrclient.adddocument.php