On Fri, Mar 14, 2014 at 7:59 PM, Panagiotis Garefalakis
wrote:
>
> Hello all,
>
> I am running some tests in my cluster and I wanted to try some of the new
> features of Cassandra like lightweight transactions and Serial Writes.
> Surprisingly I found out that Serial writes are not supported by th
thanks for sharing that info. I haven't needed to use CAS yet and haven't
bothered to look at it. I'll have to document that for hector.
On Sat, Mar 15, 2014 at 5:45 AM, Sylvain Lebresne wrote:
> On Fri, Mar 14, 2014 at 7:59 PM, Panagiotis Garefalakis <
> panga...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>>
>> Hello
Hi Guys,
How do Atomic Batches and Consistency Level relate to each other? More
specifically:
- Is consistency level set/applicable per statement in the batch or the batch
as a whole?
- Say if I write a Logged Batch at QUORUM and read it back at QUORUM, what can
I expect at normal, single nod
Hi all,
I am building a system using the Play 2 Framework with Scala and wonder what
driver I should use or whether I should wrap the Datastax java-driver myself?
Can you share any experience with the available drivers? I have looked a
Phantom briefly which seems to use java-driver internally -
Hi,
You can use one of following libs:
* https://github.com/Shimi/cascal
* https://github.com/newzly/phantom
On 15/03/14 21:42, NORD SC wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I am building a system using the Play 2 Framework with Scala and wonder what
> driver I should use or whether I should wrap the Datas
Here is an example wrapper how to use the DataStax java driver in scala
https://github.com/stealthly/scala-cassandra
/***
Joe Stein
Founder, Principal Consultant
Big Data Open Source Security LLC
http://www.stealth.ly
Twitter: @allthingshadoop
***
Thanks for all your replies. I was thinking to modify YCSB to support
lightweight transactions in order to measure the overhead introduced.
Since YCSB extends thrift api this is the only way to do it. I am not quite
sure how to use CAS but I am now looking at it.
If there is an easier way to measur
Hello,
Yes for the first query the server can be slow but no matter what is should not
take 10 seconds to get one key from a column family. I can see this happening
if I have times like 20 ms for some queries and let's say 300 ms for uncached
ones. But I have responses that take from 8 to 20 ms
Post the server logs and traces of one of the lengthy queries?
On 15 Mar 2014 20:49, "Batranut Bogdan" wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Yes for the first query the server can be slow but no matter what is
> should not take 10 seconds to get one key from a column family. I can see
> this happening if I have ti
WhooopsÂ
On one of the nodes when running my tests I found an exception
java FileNotFoundException : file -Data.db not found
at
org.apache.cassandra.io.compress.CompressedThrottledReader.open(CompressedThrottledReader.java:52
also got another one coming from
java.io.RandomAccessFile.o
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