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14 <title>Pazpar2 - User's Guide and Reference</title>
16 <firstname>Sebastian</firstname><surname>Hammer</surname>
19 <firstname>Adam</firstname><surname>Dickmeiss</surname>
22 <firstname>Marc</firstname><surname>Cromme</surname>
25 <firstname>Jakub</firstname><surname>Skoczen</surname>
28 <firstname>Mike</firstname><surname>Taylor</surname>
31 <firstname>Dennis</firstname><surname>Schafroth</surname>
33 <releaseinfo>&version;</releaseinfo>
35 <year>©right-year;</year>
36 <holder>Index Data</holder>
40 Pazpar2 is a high-performance metasearch engine featuring
41 merging, relevance ranking, record sorting,
43 It is middleware: it has no user interface of its own, but can be
44 configured and controlled by an XML-over-HTTP web-service to provide
45 metasearching functionality behind any user interface.
48 This document is a guide and reference to Pazpar2 version &version;.
53 <imagedata fileref="common/id.png" format="PNG"/>
56 <imagedata fileref="common/id.eps" format="EPS"/>
63 <chapter id="introduction">
64 <title>Introduction</title>
66 <section id="what.pazpar2.is">
67 <title>What Pazpar2 is</title>
69 Pazpar2 is a stand-alone metasearch engine with a web-service API, designed
70 to be used either from a browser-based client (JavaScript, Flash,
72 etc.), from server-side code, or any combination of the two.
73 Pazpar2 is a highly optimized client designed to
74 search many resources in parallel. It implements record merging,
75 relevance-ranking and sorting by arbitrary data content, and facet
76 analysis for browsing purposes. It is designed to be data-model
77 independent, and is capable of working with MARC, DublinCore, or any
78 other <ulink url="&url.xml;">XML</ulink>-structured response format
79 -- <ulink url="&url.xslt;">XSLT</ulink> is used to normalize and extract
80 data from retrieval records for display and analysis. It can be used
81 against any server which supports the
82 <ulink url="&url.z39.50;">Z39.50</ulink>, <ulink url="&url.sru;">SRU/SRW</ulink>
83 or <ulink url="&url.solr;">SOLR</ulink> protocol. Proprietary
84 backend modules can function as connectors between these standard
85 protocols and any non-standard API, including web-site scraping, to
86 support a large number of other protocols.
89 Additional functionality such as
90 user management and attractive displays are expected to be implemented by
91 applications that use Pazpar2. Pazpar2 itself is user-interface independent.
92 Its functionality is exposed through a simple XML-based web-service API,
93 designed to be easy to use from an Ajax-enabled browser, Flash
94 animation, Java applet, etc., or from a higher-level server-side language
95 like PHP, Perl or Java. Because session information can be shared between
96 browser-based logic and server-side scripting, there is tremendous
97 flexibility in how you implement application-specific logic on top
101 Once you launch a search in Pazpar2, the operation continues behind the
102 scenes. Pazpar2 connects to servers, carries out searches, and
103 retrieves, deduplicates, and stores results internally. Your application
104 code may periodically inquire about the status of an ongoing operation,
105 and ask to see records or result set facets. Results become
106 available immediately, and it is easy to build end-user interfaces than
107 feel extremely responsive, even when searching more than 100 servers
111 Pazpar2 is designed to be highly configurable. Incoming records are
112 normalized to XML/UTF-8, and then further normalized using XSLT to a
113 simple internal representation that is suitable for analysis. By
114 providing XSLT stylesheets for different kinds of result records, you
115 can configure Pazpar2 to work against different kinds of information
116 retrieval servers. Finally, metadata is extracted in a configurable
117 way from this internal record, to support display, merging, ranking,
118 result set facets, and sorting. Pazpar2 is not bound to a specific model
119 of metadata, such as DublinCore or MARC: by providing the right
120 configuration, it can work with any combination of different kinds of data in
121 support of many different applications.
124 Pazpar2 is designed to be efficient and scalable. You can set it up to
125 search several hundred targets in parallel, or you can use it to support
126 hundreds of concurrent users. It is implemented with the same attention
127 to performance and economy that we use in our indexing engines, so that
128 you can focus on building your application without worrying about the
129 details of metasearch logic. You can devote all of your attention to
130 usability and let Pazpar2 do what it does best -- metasearch.
133 Pazpar2 is our attempt to re-think the traditional paradigms for
134 implementing and deploying metasearch logic, with an uncompromising
135 approach to performance, and attempting to make maximum use of the
136 capabilities of modern browsers. The demo user interface that
137 accompanies the distribution is but one example. If you think of new
138 ways of using Pazpar2, we hope you'll share them with us, and if we
139 can provide assistance with regards to training, design, programming,
140 integration with different backends, hosting, or support, please don't
141 hesitate to contact us. If you'd like to see functionality in Pazpar2
142 that is not there today, please don't hesitate to contact us. It may
143 already be in our development pipeline, or there might be a
144 possibility for you to help out by sponsoring development time or
145 code. Either way, get in touch and we will give you straight answers.
151 Pazpar2 is covered by the GNU General Public License (GPL) version 2.
152 See <xref linkend="license"/> for further information.
156 <section id="connectors">
157 <title>Connectors to non-standard databases</title>
159 If you wish to connect to commercial or other databases which do not
160 support open standards, please contact Index Data on
161 <email>info@indexdata.com</email>. We have a
162 proprietary framework for building connectors that enable Pazpar2
164 thousands of online databases, in addition to the vast number of catalogs
165 and online services that support the Z39.50/SRU/SRW/SOLR protocols.
170 <title>A note on the name Pazpar2</title>
172 The name Pazpar2 derives from three sources. One one hand, it is
173 Index Data's second major piece of software that does parallel
174 searching of Z39.50 targets. On the other, it is a near-homophone
175 of Passpartout, the ever-helpful servant in Jules Verne's novel
176 Around the World in Eighty Days (who helpfully uses the language
177 of his master). Finally, "passe par tout" means something like
178 "passes through anything" in French -- on other words, a universal
179 solution, or if you like a MasterKey.
184 <chapter id="installation">
185 <title>Installation</title>
187 The Pazpar2 package includes documentation as well
188 as the Pazpar2 server. The package also includes a simple user
189 interface called "test1", which consists of a single HTML page and a single
190 JavaScript file to illustrate the use of Pazpar2.
193 Pazpar2 depends on the following tools/libraries:
195 <varlistentry><term><ulink url="&url.yaz;">YAZ</ulink></term>
198 The popular Z39.50 toolkit for the C language.
199 YAZ <emphasis>must</emphasis> be compiled with Libxml2/Libxslt support.
203 <varlistentry><term><ulink url="&url.icu;">International
204 Components for Unicode (ICU)</ulink></term>
207 ICU provides Unicode support for non-English languages with
208 character sets outside the range of 7bit ASCII, like
209 Greek, Russian, German and French. Pazpar2 uses the ICU
210 Unicode character conversions, Unicode normalization, case
211 folding and other fundamental operations needed in
212 tokenization, normalization and ranking of records.
215 Compiling, linking, and usage of the ICU libraries is optional,
216 but strongly recommended for usage in an international
224 In order to compile Pazpar2, a C compiler which supports C99 or later
228 <section id="installation.unix">
229 <title>Installation from source on Unix (including Linux, MacOS, etc.)</title>
231 The latest source code for Pazpar2 is available from
232 <ulink url="&url.pazpar2.download;"/>.
233 Most Unix-based operating systems have the required
234 tools available as binary packages.
235 For example, if Libxml2/libXSLT libraries
236 are already installed as development packages, use these.
240 Ensure that the development libraries and header files are
241 available on your system before compiling Pazpar2. For installation
242 of YAZ, refer to the Installation chapter of the YAZ manual at
243 <ulink url="&url.yaz.install;"/>.
246 Once the dependencies are in place, Pazpar2 can be unpacked and
247 installed as follows:
250 tar xzf pazpar2-VERSION.tar.gz
257 The <literal>make install</literal> will install manpages as well as the
258 Pazpar2 server, <literal>pazpar2</literal>,
259 in PREFIX<literal>/sbin</literal>.
260 By default, PREFIX is <literal>/usr/local/</literal> . This can be
261 changed with configure option <option>--prefix</option>.
265 <section id="installation.win32">
266 <title>Installation from source on Windows</title>
268 Pazpar2 can be built for Windows using
269 <ulink url="&url.vstudio;">Microsoft Visual Studio</ulink>.
270 The support files for building YAZ on Windows are located in the
271 <filename>win</filename> directory. The compilation is performed
272 using the <filename>win/makefile</filename> which is to be
273 processed by the NMAKE utility part of Visual Studio.
276 Ensure that the development libraries and header files are
277 available on your system before compiling Pazpar2. For installation
279 the Installation chapter of the YAZ manual at
280 <ulink url="&url.yaz.install;"/>.
281 It is easiest if YAZ and Pazpar2 are unpacked in the same
282 directory (side-by-side).
285 The compilation is tuned by editing the makefile of Pazpar2.
286 The process is similar to YAZ. Adjust the various directories
287 <literal>YAZ_DIR</literal>, <literal>ZLIB_DIR</literal>, etc.,
291 Compile Pazpar2 by invoking <application>nmake</application> in
292 the <filename>win</filename> directory.
293 The resulting binaries of the build process are located in the
294 <filename>bin</filename> of the Pazpar2 source
295 tree - including the <filename>pazpar2.exe</filename> and necessary DLLs.
298 The Windows version of Pazpar2 is a console application. It may
299 be installed as a Windows Service by adding option
300 <literal>-install</literal> for the pazpar2 program. This will
301 register Pazpar2 as a service and use the other options provided
302 in the same invocation. For example:
305 ..\bin\pazpar2 -install -f pazpar2.cfg -l pazpar2.log
307 The Pazpar2 service may now be controlled via the Service Control
308 Panel. It may be unregistered by passing the <literal>-remove</literal>
312 ..\bin\pazpar2 -remove
317 <section id="installation.test1">
318 <title>Installation of test interfaces</title>
320 In this section we show how to make available the set of simple
321 interfaces that are part of the Pazpar2 source package, and which
322 demonstrate some ways to use Pazpar2. (Note that Debian users can
323 save time by just installing the package <literal>pazpar2-test1</literal>.)
326 A web server, such as Apache, must be installed and running on the system.
330 Start the Pazpar2 daemon using the 'in-source' binary of the Pazpar2
331 daemon. On Unix the process is:
334 cp pazpar2.cfg.dist pazpar2.cfg
335 ../src/pazpar2 -f pazpar2.cfg
340 copy pazpar2.cfg.dist pazpar2.cfg
341 ..\bin\pazpar2 -f pazpar2.cfg
343 This will start a Pazpar2 listener on port 9004. It will proxy
344 HTTP requests to port 80 on localhost, which we assume will be the regular
345 HTTP server on the system. Inspect and modify pazpar2.cfg as needed
346 if this is to be changed. The pazpar2.cfg file includes settings from the
347 file <filename>settings/edu.xml</filename>
352 The test UIs are located in <literal>www</literal>. Ensure that this
353 directory is available to the web server by copying
354 <literal>www</literal> to the document root,
355 using Apache's <literal>Alias</literal> directive, or
356 creating a symbolic link: for example, on a Debian or Ubuntu
357 system with Apache2 installed from the standard package, you might
358 make the link as follows:
361 sudo ln -s `pwd`/www /var/www/pazpar2-demo
366 This makes the test applications visible at
367 <ulink url="http://localhost/pazpar2-demo/"/>
368 but they can not be run successfully from that URL, as they submit
369 search requests back to the server form which they were served,
370 and Apache2 doesn't know how to handle them. Instead, the test
371 applications must be accessed from Pazpar2 itself, acting as a
372 proxy to Apache2, at the URL
373 <ulink url="http://localhost:9004/pazpar2-demo/"/>
377 From here, the demo applications can be
378 accessed: <literal>test1</literal>, <literal>test2</literal> and
379 <literal>jsdemo</literal>
380 are pure HTML+JavaScript setups, needing no server-side
382 <literal>demo</literal>
383 requires PHP on the server.
386 If you don't see the test interfaces, check whether they are available
387 on port 80 (i.e. directly from the Apache2 server). If not, the
388 Apache configuration is incorrect.
391 In order to use Apache as frontend for the interface on port 80
392 for public access etc., refer to
393 <xref linkend="installation.apache2proxy"/>.
397 <section id="installation.debian">
398 <title>Installation on Debian or Ubuntu GNU/Linux</title>
400 Index Data provides Debian and Ubuntu packages for Pazpar2.
401 As of February 2010, these
402 are prepared for Debian versions Etch, Lenny and Squeeze; and for
403 Ubuntu versions 8.04 (hardy), 8.10 (intrepid), 9.04 (jaunty) and
404 9.10 (karmic). These packages are available at
405 <ulink url="&url.pazpar2.download.debian;"/> and
406 <ulink url="&url.pazpar2.download.ubuntu;"/>.
410 <section id="installation.apache2proxy">
411 <title>Apache 2 Proxy</title>
414 <ulink url="http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/mod/mod_proxy.html">
416 </ulink> which allows Pazpar2 to become a backend to an Apache 2
417 based web service. The Apache 2 proxy must operate in the
418 <emphasis>Reverse</emphasis> Proxy mode.
422 On a Debian based Apache 2 system, the relevant modules can
425 sudo a2enmod proxy_http
430 Traditionally Pazpar2 interprets URL paths with suffix
431 <literal>/search.pz2</literal>.
434 url="http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/mod/mod_proxy.html#proxypass"
435 >ProxyPass</ulink> directive of Apache must be used to map a URL path
436 the the Pazpar2 server (listening port).
441 The ProxyPass directive takes a prefix rather than
442 a suffix as URL path. It is important that the Java Script code
443 uses the prefix given for it.
447 <example id="installation.apache2proxy.example">
448 <title>Apache 2 proxy configuration</title>
450 If Pazpar2 is running on port 8004 and the portal is using
451 <filename>search.pz2</filename> inside portal in directory
452 <filename>/myportal/</filename> we could use the following
453 Apache 2 configuration:
456 <IfModule mod_proxy.c>
460 AddDefaultCharset off
465 ProxyPass /myportal/search.pz2 http://localhost:8004/search.pz2
476 <title>Using Pazpar2</title>
478 This chapter provides a general introduction to the use and
479 deployment of Pazpar2.
482 <section id="architecture">
483 <title>Pazpar2 and your systems architecture</title>
485 Pazpar2 is designed to provide asynchronous, behind-the-scenes
486 metasearching functionality to your application, exposing this
487 functionality using a simple webservice API that can be accessed
488 from any number of development environments. In particular, it is
489 possible to combine Pazpar2 either with your server-side dynamic
490 website scripting, with scripting or code running in the browser, or
491 with any combination of the two. Pazpar2 is an excellent tool for
492 building advanced, Ajax-based user interfaces for metasearch
493 functionality, but it isn't a requirement -- you can choose to use
494 Pazpar2 entirely as a backend to your regular server-side scripting.
495 When you do use Pazpar2 in conjunction
496 with browser scripting (JavaScript/Ajax, Flash, applets,
497 etc.), there are special considerations.
501 Pazpar2 implements a simple but efficient HTTP server, and it is
502 designed to interact directly with scripting running in the browser
503 for the best possible performance, and to limit overhead when
504 several browser clients generate numerous webservice requests.
505 However, it is still desirable to use a conventional webserver,
506 such as Apache, to serve up graphics, HTML documents, and
507 server-side scripting. Because the security sandbox environment of
508 most browser-side programming environments only allows communication
509 with the server from which the enclosing HTML page or object
510 originated, Pazpar2 is designed so that it can act as a transparent
511 proxy in front of an existing webserver (see <xref
512 linkend="pazpar2_conf"/> for details).
513 In this mode, all regular
514 HTTP requests are transparently passed through to your webserver,
515 while Pazpar2 only intercepts search-related webservice requests.
519 If you want to expose your combined service on port 80, you can
520 either run your regular webserver on a different port, a different
521 server, or a different IP address associated with the same server.
525 Pazpar2 can also work behind
526 a reverse Proxy. Refer to <xref linkend="installation.apache2proxy"/>)
527 for more information.
528 This allows your existing HTTP server to operate on port 80 as usual.
529 Pazpar2 can be started on another (internal) port.
533 Sometimes, it may be necessary to implement functionality on your
534 regular webserver that makes use of search results, for example to
535 implement data import functionality, emailing results, history
536 lists, personal citation lists, interlibrary loan functionality,
537 etc. Fortunately, it is simple to exchange information between
538 Pazpar2, your browser scripting, and backend server-side scripting.
539 You can send a session ID and possibly a record ID from your browser
540 code to your server code, and from there use Pazpar2s webservice API
541 to access result sets or individual records. You could even 'hide'
542 all of Pazpar2s functionality between your own API implemented on
543 the server-side, and access that from the browser or elsewhere. The
544 possibilities are just about endless.
548 <section id="data_model">
549 <title>Your data model</title>
551 Pazpar2 does not have a preconceived model of what makes up a data
552 model. There are no assumptions that records have specific fields or
553 that they are organized in any particular way. The only assumption
554 is that data comes packaged in a form that the software can work
555 with (presently, that means XML or MARC), and that you can provide
556 the necessary information to massage it into Pazpar2's internal
561 Handling retrieval records in Pazpar2 is a two-step process. First,
562 you decide which data elements of the source record you are
563 interested in, and you specify any desired massaging or combining of
564 elements using an XSLT stylesheet (MARC records are automatically
565 normalized to <ulink url="&url.marcxml;">MARCXML</ulink> before this step).
566 If desired, you can run multiple XSLT stylesheets in series to accomplish
567 this, but the output of the last one should be a representation of the
568 record in a schema that Pazpar2 understands.
572 The intermediate, internal representation of the record looks like
575 <record xmlns="http://www.indexdata.com/pazpar2/1.0"
576 mergekey="title The Shining author King, Stephen">
578 <metadata type="title">The Shining</metadata>
580 <metadata type="author">King, Stephen</metadata>
582 <metadata type="kind">ebook</metadata>
584 <!-- ... and so on -->
588 As you can see, there isn't much to it. There are really only a few
589 important elements to this file.
593 Elements should belong to the namespace
594 <literal>http://www.indexdata.com/pazpar2/1.0</literal>.
595 If the root node contains the
596 attribute 'mergekey', then every record that generates the same
597 merge key (normalized for case differences, white space, and
598 truncation) will be joined into a cluster. In other words, you
599 decide how records are merged. If you don't include a merge key,
600 records are never merged. The 'metadata' elements provide the meat
601 of the elements -- the content. the 'type' attribute is used to
602 match each element against processing rules that determine what
603 happens to the data element next.
607 The next processing step is the extraction of metadata from the
608 intermediate representation of the record. This is governed by the
609 'metadata' elements in the 'service' section of the configuration
610 file. See <xref linkend="config-server"/> for details. The metadata
611 in the retrieval record ultimately drives merging, sorting, ranking,
612 the extraction of browse facets, and display, all configurable.
616 <section id="client">
617 <title>Client development overview</title>
619 You can use Pazpar2 from any environment that allows you to use
620 webservices. The initial goal of the software was to support
621 Ajax-based applications, but there literally are no limits to what
622 you can do. You can use Pazpar2 from Javascript, Flash, Java, etc.,
623 on the browser side, and from any development environment on the
624 server side, and you can pass session tokens and record IDs freely
625 around between these environments to build sophisticated applications.
626 Use your imagination.
630 The webservice API of Pazpar2 is described in detail in <xref
631 linkend="pazpar2_protocol"/>.
635 In brief, you use the 'init' command to create a session, a
636 temporary workspace which carries information about the current
637 search. You start a new search using the 'search' command. Once the
638 search has been started, you can follow its progress using the
639 'stat', 'bytarget', 'termlist', or 'show' commands. Detailed records
640 can be fetched using the 'record' command.
646 <section id="nonstandard">
647 <title>Connecting to non-standard resources</title>
649 Pazpar2 uses Z39.50 as its switchboard language -- i.e. as far as it
650 is concerned, all resources speak Z39.50, its webservices derivatives,
651 SRU/SRW and SOLR servers exposing Lucene indexes. It is, however, equipped
652 to handle a broad range of different server behavior, through
653 configurable query mapping and record normalization. If you develop
654 configuration, stylesheets, etc., for a new type of resources, we
655 encourage you to share your work. But you can also use Pazpar2 to
656 connect to hundreds of resources that do not support standard
661 For a growing number of resources, Z39.50 is all you need. Over the
662 last few years, a number of commercial, full-text resources have
663 implemented Z39.50. These can be used through Pazpar2 with little or
664 no effort. Resources that use non-standard record formats will
665 require a bit of XSLT work, but that's all.
669 But what about resources that don't support Z39.50 at all? Some resources might
670 support OpenSearch, private, XML/HTTP-based protocols, or something
671 else entirely. Some databases exist only as web user interfaces and
672 will require screen-scraping. Still others exist only as static
673 files, or perhaps as databases supporting the OAI-PMH protocol.
674 There is hope! Read on.
678 Index Data continues to advocate the support of open standards. We
679 work with database vendors to support standards, so you don't have
680 to worry about programming against non-standard services. We also
681 provide tools (see <ulink
682 url="http://www.indexdata.com/simpleserver">SimpleServer</ulink>)
683 which make it comparatively easy to build gateways against servers
684 with non-standard behavior. Again, we encourage you to share any
685 work you do in this direction.
689 But the bottom line is that working with non-standard resources in
690 metasearching is really, really hard. If you want to build a
691 project with Pazpar2, and you need access to resources with
692 non-standard interfaces, we can help. We run gateways to more than
693 2,000 popular, commercial databases and other resources,
695 to plug them directly into Pazpar2. For a small annual fee per
696 database, we can help you establish connections to your licensed
697 resources. Meanwhile, you can help! If you build your own
698 standards-compliant gateways, host them for others, or share the
699 code! And tell your vendors that they can save everybody money and
700 increase the appeal of their resources by supporting standards.
704 There are those who will ask us why we are using Z39.50 as our
705 switchboard language rather than a different protocol. Basically,
706 we believe that Z39.50 is presently the most widely implemented
707 information retrieval protocol that has the level of functionality
708 required to support a good metasearching experience (structured
709 searching, structured, well-defined results). It is also compact and
710 efficient, and there is a very broad range of tools available to
715 <section id="unicode">
716 <title>Unicode Compliance</title>
718 Pazpar2 is Unicode compliant and language and locale aware but relies
719 on character encoding for the targets to be specified correctly if
720 the targets themselves are not UTF-8 based (most aren't).
721 Just a few bad behaving targets can spoil the search experience
722 considerably if for example Greek, Russian or otherwise non 7-bit ASCII
723 search terms are entered. In these cases some targets return
724 records irrelevant to the query, and the result screens will be
725 cluttered with noise.
728 While noise from misbehaving targets can not be removed, it can
729 be reduced using truly Unicode based ranking. This is an
730 option which is available to the system administrator if ICU
731 support is compiled into Pazpar2, see
732 <xref linkend="installation"/> for details.
735 In addition, the ICU tokenization and normalization rules must
736 be defined in the master configuration file described in
737 <xref linkend="config-server"/>.
741 <section id="load_balancing">
742 <title>Load balancing</title>
744 Just like any web server, Pazpar2, can be load balanced by a standard hardware or software load balancer as long as the session stickiness is ensured. If you are already running the Apache2 web server in front of Pazpar2 and use the apache mod_proxy module to 'relay' client requests to Pazpar2, this set up can be easily extended to include load balancing capabilites. To do so you need to enable the <ulink url="http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/mod/mod_proxy_balancer.html">
746 </ulink> module in your Apache2 installation.
750 On a Debian based Apache 2 system, the relevant modules can
753 sudo a2enmod proxy_http
758 The mod_proxy_balancer can pass all 'sessionsticky' requests to the same backend worker as long as the requests are marked with the originating worker's ID (called 'route'). If the Pazpar2 serverID is configured (by setting an 'id' attribute on the 'server' element in the Pazpar2 configuration file) Pazpar2 will append it to the 'session' element returned during the 'init' in a mod_proxy_balancer compatible manner. Since the 'session' is then re-sent by the client (for all pazpar2 request besides 'init'), the balancer can use the marker to pass the request to the right route. To do so the balancer needs to be configured to inspect the 'session' parameter.
761 <example id="load_balancing.example">
762 <title>Apache 2 load balancing configuration</title>
764 Having 4 Pazpar2 instances running on the same host, port range of 8004-8007 and serverIDs of: pz1, pz2, pz3 and pz4 respectively we could use the following Apache 2 configuration to expose a single pazpar2 'endpoint' on a standard (<filename>/pazpar2/search.pz2</filename>) location:
768 AddDefaultCharset off
774 # 'route' has to match the configured pazpar2 server ID
775 <Proxy balancer://pz2cluster>
776 BalancerMember http://localhost:8004 route=pz1
777 BalancerMember http://localhost:8005 route=pz2
778 BalancerMember http://localhost:8006 route=pz3
779 BalancerMember http://localhost:8007 route=pz4
782 # route is resent in the 'session' param which has the form:
783 # 'sessid.serverid', understandable by the mod_proxy_load_balancer
784 # this is not going to work if the client tampers with the 'session' param
785 ProxyPass /pazpar2/search.pz2 balancer://pz2cluster lbmethod=byrequests stickysession=session nofailover=On]]></screen>
787 The 'ProxyPass' line sets up a reverse proxy for request ‘/pazpar2/search.pz2’ and delegates all requests to the load balancer (virtual worker) with name ‘pz2cluster’. Sticky sessions are enabled and implemented using the ‘session’ parameter. The ‘Proxy’ section lists all the servers (real workers) which the load balancer can use.
795 </chapter> <!-- Using Pazpar2 -->
797 <reference id="reference">
798 <title>Reference</title>
799 <partintro id="reference-introduction">
801 The material in this chapter is drawn directly from the individual
808 <appendix id="license"><title>License</title>
812 Copyright © ©right-year; Index Data.
816 Pazpar2 is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
817 the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free
818 Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any later
823 Pazpar2 is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
824 WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
825 FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
830 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
831 along with Pazpar2; see the file LICENSE. If not, write to the
832 Free Software Foundation,
833 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA
842 <!-- Keep this comment at the end of the file
847 sgml-minimize-attributes:nil
848 sgml-always-quote-attributes:t
851 sgml-parent-document: nil
852 sgml-local-catalogs: nil
853 sgml-namecase-general:t