El mié, 20-04-2011 a las 23:00 +1200, aaron morton escribió:
> Looks like a bug, I've added a patch
> here https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-2519
>
>
> Aaron
>
That was fast! Thanks Aaron
Looks like a bug, I've added a patch here
https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-2519
Aaron
On 20 Apr 2011, at 13:15, aaron morton wrote:
> Thats what I was looking for, thanks.
>
> At first glance the behaviour looks inconsistent, we count the number of
> columns in the delete muta
Thats what I was looking for, thanks.
At first glance the behaviour looks inconsistent, we count the number of
columns in the delete mutation. But when deleting a row the column count is
zero. I'll try to take a look later.
In the mean time you can force a memtable via JConsole, navigate down
El mié, 20-04-2011 a las 09:08 +1200, aaron morton escribió:
> Yes, I saw that.
>
> Wanted to know what "issue deletes through pelops" means so I can work out
> what command it's sending to cassandra and hopefully I don't waste my time
> looking in the wrong place.
>
> Aaron
>
Oh, sorry. Di
Yes, I saw that.
Wanted to know what "issue deletes through pelops" means so I can work out what
command it's sending to cassandra and hopefully I don't waste my time looking
in the wrong place.
Aaron
On 20 Apr 2011, at 09:04, Héctor Izquierdo Seliva wrote:
> I poste it a couple of messages
I poste it a couple of messages back, but here it is again:
I'm using 0.7.4. I have a file with all the row keys I have to delete
(around 100 million) and I just go through the file and issue deletes
through pelops. Should I manually issue flushes with a cron every x
time?
How do you do the deletes ?
Aaron
On 20 Apr 2011, at 08:39, Héctor Izquierdo Seliva wrote:
> El mar, 19-04-2011 a las 23:33 +0300, shimi escribió:
>> You can use memtable_flush_after_mins instead of the cron
>>
>>
>> Shimi
>>
>
> Good point! I'll try that.
>
> Wouldn't it be better to count
El mar, 19-04-2011 a las 23:33 +0300, shimi escribió:
> You can use memtable_flush_after_mins instead of the cron
>
>
> Shimi
>
Good point! I'll try that.
Wouldn't it be better to count a delete as a one column operation so it
contributes to flush by operations?
> 2011/4/19 Héctor Izquierdo S
You can use memtable_flush_after_mins instead of the cron
Shimi
2011/4/19 Héctor Izquierdo Seliva
>
> El mié, 20-04-2011 a las 08:16 +1200, aaron morton escribió:
> > I think their may be an issue here, we are counting the number of columns
> in the operation. When deleting an entire row we do
El mié, 20-04-2011 a las 08:16 +1200, aaron morton escribió:
> I think their may be an issue here, we are counting the number of columns in
> the operation. When deleting an entire row we do not have a column count.
>
> Can you let us know what version you are using and how you are doing the
>
I think their may be an issue here, we are counting the number of columns in
the operation. When deleting an entire row we do not have a column count.
Can you let us know what version you are using and how you are doing the delete
?
Thanks
Aaron
On 20 Apr 2011, at 04:21, Héctor Izquierdo Sel
Ok, I've read about gc grace seconds, but i'm not sure I understand it
fully. Untill gc grace seconds have passed, and there is a compaction,
the tombstones live in memory? I have to delete 100 million rows and my
insert rate is very low, so I don't have a lot of compactions. What
should I do in th
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