Needed to run schematool, and it clicked into place. Command for future
reference:

bin/schematool localhost 8080 import

--David

On Mon, Nov 8, 2010 at 3:03 PM, Aaron Morton <aa...@thelastpickle.com>wrote:

> Check that the nodes all have the same view of the schema, for a small
> cluster it's easy enough to just use jconsole.
>
> Then turn up the logging and see what happening server side.
>
> Aaron
>
>
> On 09 Nov, 2010,at 08:55 AM, David Replogle <
> david.replo...@steketeegreiner.com> wrote:
>
> With Python I'm using the fantastic Pycassa library by Tyler (who
> previously responded). Now I'm getting a "keyspace does not exist error"
> which I'm trying to sort out right now... because, well, it does exist. I
> added the following catch:
>
>  catch (org::apache::cassandra::InvalidRequestException &ire) {
>         cout << "InvalidRequestException: " << ire.why << endl;
>     }
>
> And now I get this output:
>
> InvalidRequestException: Keyspace does not exist
>
> On Mon, Nov 8, 2010 at 2:32 PM, Aaron Morton <aa...@thelastpickle.com>wrote:
>
>> Not sure if this is the problem but the default in 0.7* is to used framed
>> transport, which means creating the TFramedTransport rather than
>> TBufferedTransport
>>
>> How are you connecting with python? Is it using framed transport?
>>
>> Hope that helps.
>> Aaron
>>
>>
>> On 09 Nov, 2010,at 07:55 AM, David Replogle <
>> david.replo...@steketeegreiner.com> wrote:
>>
>> I'm using Cassandra 0.7beta3 and it's running on localhost:9160 and Python
>> works with it just fine. So, I go to run C++ against the system and I get:
>>
>> TTransportException: No more data to read.
>>
>> I did the thrift --gen cpp interface/cassandra.thrift in my 0.7beta3
>> folder
>> then included those files in the C++ code, and it builds fine, and runs.
>>
>> It bombs out on the set_keyspace call... the code is short so I'll paste
>> it here (not counting includes and using calls):
>>
>> ---
>>
>> const string host("localhost");
>> const int port= 9160;
>>
>> int main()
>> {
>>     try {
>>         boost::shared_ptr<TSocket> socket(new TSocket(host, port));
>>         boost::shared_ptr<TTransport> transport(new
>> TBufferedTransport(socket));
>>         boost::shared_ptr<TProtocol> protocol(new
>> TBinaryProtocol(transport));
>>
>>         CassandraClient client(protocol);
>>         transport->open();
>>
>>         string version;
>>         client.set_keyspace("Crawldata");
>>         transport->close();
>>     } catch (apache::thrift::transport::TTransportException &tte) {
>>         cout << "TTransportException: " << tte.what() << endl;
>>     }
>>     return 0;
>> }
>>
>> ---
>>
>> It throws this same error with a series of other calls. This is probably
>> (hopefully) something stupid I'm missing. Do I really need to run the C++
>> server component (which seems superfluous since it's not actually my
>> Cassandra instance) as detailed here:
>> http://wiki.apacheorg/thrift/ThriftUsageC%2B%2B<http://wiki.apache.org/thrift/ThriftUsageC%2B%2B>
>>
>> --
>> David Replogle | Senior Programmer Analyst
>>
>> Catalyst SGC
>> 44 Grandville Ave SW, Ste. 270, Grand Rapids, MI 49503
>> Office: 616.855.5522 x204 | Mobile: 616.293.2788
>>
>>
>
>
> --
> David Replogle | Senior Programmer Analyst
>
> Catalyst SGC
> 44 Grandville Ave SW, Ste. 270, Grand Rapids, MI 49503
> Office: 616.855.5522 x204 | Mobile: 616.293.2788
>
>


-- 
David Replogle | Senior Programmer Analyst

Catalyst SGC
44 Grandville Ave SW, Ste. 270, Grand Rapids, MI 49503
Office: 616.855.5522 x204 | Mobile: 616.293.2788

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