What are the core architectural differences between these technologies?
Also, what use cases are generally more appropriate for each?
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Update
Now that the question scope has been corrected, I might add something in this regard as well:
There are many comparisons between Apache Solr and Elasticsearch available, so I’ll reference those I found most useful myself, i.e. covering the most important aspects:
Bob Yoplait already linked kimchy’s answer to ElasticSearch, Sphinx, Lucene, Solr, Xapian. Which fits for which usage?, which summarizes the reasons why he went ahead and created ElasticSearch, which in his opinion provides a much superior distributed model and ease of use in comparison to Solr.
Ryan Sonnek’s Realtime Search: Solr vs Elasticsearch provides an insightful analysis/comparison and explains why he switched from Solr to ElasticSeach, despite being a happy Solr user already – he summarizes this as follows:
Initial Answer
They are completely different technologies addressing completely different use cases, thus cannot be compared at all in any meaningful way:
Apache Solr – Apache Solr offers Lucene’s capabilities in an easy to use, fast search server with additional features like faceting, scalability and much more
Amazon ElastiCache – Amazon ElastiCache is a web service that makes it easy to deploy, operate, and scale an in-memory cache in the cloud.
Please note that Amazon ElastiCache is protocol-compliant with Memcached, a widely adopted memory object caching system, so code, applications, and popular tools that you use today with existing Memcached environments will work seamlessly with the service (see Memcached for details).
[emphasis mine]
Maybe this has been confused with the following two related technologies one way or another:
Elasticsearch – It is an Open Source (Apache 2), Distributed, RESTful, Search Engine built on top of Apache Lucene.
Amazon CloudSearch – Amazon CloudSearch is a fully-managed search service in the cloud that allows customers to easily integrate fast and highly scalable search functionality into their applications.
The Solr and Elasticsearch offerings sound strikingly similar at first sight, and both use the same backend search engine, namely Apache Lucene.
While Solr is older, quite versatile and mature and widely used accordingly, ElasticSearch has been developed specifically to address Solr shortcomings with scalability requirements in modern cloud environments, which are hard(er) to address with Solr.
As such it would probably be most useful to compare ElasticSearch with the recently introduced Amazon CloudSearch (see the introductory post Start Searching in One Hour for Less Than $100 / Month), because both claim to cover the same use cases in principle.