The most common, and most cost-effective is to use a cylinder with two heat exchange coils. The coils are arranged one above the other, with the solar coil at the bottom.
Because the coils heat by convection, the boiler can only heat the top part of the cylinder, where a zone of hot water will float on top of the cooler water at the bottom, a pheonomenon called stratification. This means that irrespective of the boiler controls, the solar always has a volume that it can heat.
On good solar energy days, the solar panel will heat the whole tank up to a useable temperature, and the cylinder thermostat will not call for heat from the boiler. On less good solar days, the cylinder thermostat will call for heat and the boiler will top up solar energy.
The boiler controls can be completely independent of the solar system.
See the next section for a more detailed explanation of the Twin Coil Cylinder.

A combi boiler heats water "on demand". A solar heated cylinder can be installed upstream of the combi boiler so that the boiler recieves warm water rather than cold as an input, and so has to use less fuel to heat up the water to the required temperature. A tempering valve is normally required to ensure that the temperature of the infeed water to the boiler is not too hot, as many boilers cannot accept incoming water that is too hot.
Next: Plumbing Systems for Solar Heating