Hi Maki,
Thanks for the reply. Yes, I understand that snapshots are hard links. However, my understanding is that removing any hard-linked files just removes the link (decrementing the link counter of the file on disk) -- it does not delete the file itself nor remove any other links which may be pointing at the file. To confirm my understanding, I tested this in Windows by terminating Cassandra and then deleting all files in the snapshot dir. None of the corresponding files in the parent keyspace directory were removed.
Regards, Jim On 3/13/2012 9:29 PM, Maki Watanabe wrote:
snapshot files are "hardlink"s of the original sstables. As you know, on windows, you can't delete files opened by other process. If you try to delete the "hardlink", windows thinks you try to delete the sstables in production. maki 2012/3/14 Jim Newsham<[email protected]>:Hi, I'm using Cassandra 1.0.8, on Windows 7. When I take a snapshot of the database, I find that I am unable to delete the snapshot directory (i.e., dir named "{datadir}\{keyspacename}\snapshots\{snapshottag}") while Cassandra is running: "The action can't be completed because the folder or a file in it is open in another program. Close the folder or file and try again". If I terminate Cassandra, then I can delete the directory with no problem. Is there a reason why Cassandra must hold onto these files? Thanks, Jim
