If you are developing mainly in the Microsoft.NET framework 2.0 then
it seems that you have 3 choices for running Lucene.
What are the pros and cons of each choice?
1. Use the C# code from the apache incubator project
Lucene.Net http://incubator.apache.org/projects/lucene.net.html
2. Use the flagship project Lucene Java http://lucene.apache.org/java/docs/index.html
With the Sun java runtime and define some web services in an application such
As Apache Tomcat that you can call from your other .NET framework code.
3. Use the Lucene Java sources as above, but compile it using the J# compiler, such
As illustrated here: http://alum.mit.edu/www/gjc/lucene-java-vjc.html
I am particularly interested in risks associated with choice #3. Is the Microsoft J# compiler to be trusted? Do the people using the gcj compiler have any experience to guide somebody considering the use of a Java compiler not provided by Sun?
This is for a mission-critical application at a high profile internet media company.
it seems that you have 3 choices for running Lucene.
What are the pros and cons of each choice?
1. Use the C# code from the apache incubator project
Lucene.Net http://incubator.apache.org/projects/lucene.net.html
2. Use the flagship project Lucene Java http://lucene.apache.org/java/docs/index.html
With the Sun java runtime and define some web services in an application such
As Apache Tomcat that you can call from your other .NET framework code.
3. Use the Lucene Java sources as above, but compile it using the J# compiler, such
As illustrated here: http://alum.mit.edu/www/gjc/lucene-java-vjc.html
I am particularly interested in risks associated with choice #3. Is the Microsoft J# compiler to be trusted? Do the people using the gcj compiler have any experience to guide somebody considering the use of a Java compiler not provided by Sun?
This is for a mission-critical application at a high profile internet media company.