Sybase Search is administered through a J2EE Web application; therefore, you can administer Sybase Search from any machine that runs a Web browser. From the Sybase Search administration pages, you can view the distributed Sybase Search installation and administer it.
Before accessing the administration pages, make sure
that the Sybase Search has been started and is running properly.
Accessing the Sybase Search administration pages
Open a Web browser.
In the address bar of the Web browser enter:
http://hostname:port/omniq
where:
hostname is the name or IP address of the machine hosting the Sybase Search Web application.
port is the port number for the J2EE application server hosting the Sybase Search Web application. The default port number is 8111.
In the Sybase Search login page, enter the administrator password you provided during the Sybase Search installation and click Login. The Sybase Search Home page appears.
If there is no activity in the Sybase Search Web administration
page for 30 minutes, the application logs off and you are prompted
to log in again to access the Sybase Search Web administration page.
To change the login timeout
duration, change the value of the session-timeout tag
in the web.xml file available in the install_location\webapp\WEB-INF directory.
The Sybase Search administration pages consist of a home page and the following pages:
Search – lets you search across all documents that you have indexed in Sybase Search.
System – lets you view the distributed setup. From the System page, you can view environment details, memory usage, and events for all containers within the Sybase Search installation. You can also schedule tasks.
Document Management – lets you add, update, and remove documents from Sybase Search indexes. You can also create and manage document stores, organize document stores into groups, and create document categories.
Configuration – allows you to set up your metadata and language configuration for search optimization. You can add, edit, and remove metadata fields, metadata parsers, synonyms, acronyms, preserved terms, and stopwords.