Community Documentation

Step 7 of 10 Connecting first & second remote Ubuntu Server

Last updated April 22, 2010. Created by Francewhoa on June 28, 2009.
Edited by bertboerland. Log in to edit this page.

We are now going to connect your first remote Ubuntu Server with your second remote Ubuntu Server.

Navigating to ADMINISTER > SITE CONFIGURATION > APACHE SOLR
Fill the following field.

SOLR HOST NAME: 10.1.2.3

Note: You must replace above 10.1.2.3 by the IP address of you remote Ubuntu Server IP address. If unsure ask your hosting provider.

Leave other fields to their default setting.

Click on SAVE button.

If successful Drupal should returns the following green text inside the message area located at the top of the page. Ignore the other error message(s) if any for now.

* The configuration options have been saved.

Click on your browser REFRESH button.

If successful Drupal should returns the following green text inside the message area located at the top of the page.

* Your site has contacted the Apache Solr server.

If you don't have any content in your Drupal site you must create a few pages under
CREATE CONTENT > CREATE PAGE

If you don't have any vocabulary (taxonomy/category) in your Drupal site you must create a few vocabularies under
ADMINISTER > CONTENT MANAGEMENT > TAXONOMY > ADD TAXONOMY button.

Tips: If your Drupal site is empty an easy way to create dummy content is the Devel Drupal module. This module contain a sub-module called 'Generate content'. It can quickly create hundreds of dummy pages and vocabularies in a few clicks.

You have successfully connected your first remote Ubuntu Server with your second remote Ubuntu Server.

Page status

No known problems

Log in to edit this page

About this page

Drupal version
Drupal 6.x
Audience
Developers and coders, Documentation contributors, Site administrators

Site Building Guide

Drupal’s online documentation is © 2000-2012 by the individual contributors and can be used in accordance with the Creative Commons License, Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0. PHP code is distributed under the GNU General Public License. Comments on documentation pages are used to improve content and then deleted.
nobody click here