Cassandra would not have access to 'wall' as was is very unix-ish and
Cassandra is written in java so it has to be highly portable across
operating systems.

On Sat, Jan 7, 2012 at 3:01 PM, R. Verlangen <ro...@us2.nl> wrote:

> " The repair will continue even if you ctrl+c  nodetool, it runs on the
> server not the client."
>
> Hmm, didn't know that. Maybe a tweak for the nodetool that just displays a
> message after starting: "Started with ..." and some kind of notication
> (with "wall") when it's done?
>
> 2012/1/7 aaron morton <aa...@thelastpickle.com>
>
>> The repair will continue even if you ctrl+c  nodetool, it runs on the
>> server not the client.
>>
>> Aside from using ops centre you can also look at TP Stats to see when
>> there is nothing left in the AntiEntropyStage or look for a log messages
>> from the StorageService that says…
>>
>> "Repair command #{} completed successfully"
>>
>> Cheers
>>
>>   -----------------
>> Aaron Morton
>> Freelance Developer
>> @aaronmorton
>> http://www.thelastpickle.com
>>
>> On 7/01/2012, at 12:32 PM, Maxim Potekhin wrote:
>>
>> Thanks, so I take it there is no solution outside of Opcenter.
>>
>> I mean of course I can redirect the output, with additional timestamps if
>> needed,
>> to a log file -- which I can access remotely. I just thought there would
>> be some "status"
>> command by chance, to tell me what maintenance the node is doing. Too bad
>> there is not!
>>
>> Maxim
>>
>>
>> On 1/6/2012 5:40 PM, R. Verlangen wrote:
>>
>> You might consider:
>>
>> - installing DataStax OpsCenter (
>> http://www.datastax.com/products/opscenter )
>>
>> - starting the repair in a linux screen (so you can attach to the screen
>> from another location)
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>

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