What you're wanting really isn't supported/available, but you could
probably extend cassandra to do this with some work.
Doing this at replication time is the wrong point, though - you want to do
it before the mutation is applied locally, so triggers are still the
closest to the right point as it
Looks like you’ve got this thread going on the user & dev ML. This list is the
dev one, and is meant for discussion of the Cassandra project. Would everyone
mind replying to the thread of the same name on the user list instead?
> On Nov 16, 2017, at 1:36 PM, Abdelkrim Fitouri wrote:
>
> ok p
ok please find bellow an example:
Lets suppose that i have a cassandra cluster of 4 nodes / one DC /
replication factor = 4, So in this architecture i have on full copy of the
data on each node.
Imagine now that one node have been hacked and in some way with full access
to cqlsh session, if data
On Fri, Nov 17, 2017 at 9:11 AM, Abdelkrim Fitouri wrote:
> Trigger does not resolve my problem because it is not a format validation
> issue but an integrity constraint ...
>
> My purpose is to check data integrity before replication, by returning an
> error and killing the service, so i am killi
Trigger does not resolve my problem because it is not a format validation
issue but an integrity constraint ...
My purpose is to check data integrity before replication, by returning an
error and killing the service, so i am killing the node that is supposed to
replicate data after a write action
Going to hate myself for this, but check out the trigger interface.
https://github.com/apache/cassandra/blob/cassandra-3.0/src/java/org/apache/cassandra/triggers/ITrigger.java
Pay attention to the note that says the API is in beta and subject to
change. It's had that note for many years, which is
Hi,
You can't prevent the replication because if you manage to return a failure the
other node will keep trying to send the data. What would be more relevant is to
prevent the modification in the first place. You could try to implement a
custom trigger and load it in Cassandra:
http://cassandra