Hello Tony, This came out recently
http://www.datastax.com/doc-source/developer/java-driver/index.html I can't vouch for performance but the documentation is ok and it works. I'm using it on a side project myself. There is also astyanax by netflix and it also supports CQL 3 https://github.com/Netflix/astyanax/wiki/Getting-Started Thanks Jabbar Azam On 24 June 2013 15:34, Tony Anecito <adanec...@yahoo.com> wrote: > Hi Jabbar, > > I am using JDBC driver because almost no examples exist about what you > mention. Even most of the JDBC examples I find do not work because they are > incomplete or out of date. If you have a good reference about what you > mentioned I can try it. > > As I menioned I got selects to work now I am trying to get inserts to work > via JDBC. Running into issues there also but I will work at it till I get > them to work. > > Regards, > -Tony > > *From:* Jabbar Azam <aja...@gmail.com> > *To:* user@cassandra.apache.org > *Cc:* Tony Anecito <adanec...@yahoo.com> > *Sent:* Monday, June 24, 2013 3:26 AM > > *Subject:* Re: Cassandra driver performance question... > > Hello tony, > I couldnt reply earlier because I've been decorating over the weekend so > have been a bit busy. > Let me know what's happens. > Out of couriosity why are you using and not a cql3 native driver? > Thanks > Jabbar Azam > On 24 Jun 2013 00:32, "Tony Anecito" <adanec...@yahoo.com> wrote: > > Hi Jabbar, > > I was able to get the performance issue resolved by reusing the > connection object. It will be interesting to see what happens when I use a > connection pool from a app server. > > I still think it would be a good idea to have a minimal mode for metadata. > It is rare I use metadata. > > Regards, > -Tony > > *From:* Tony Anecito <adanec...@yahoo.com> > *To:* "user@cassandra.apache.org" <user@cassandra.apache.org>; Tony > Anecito <adanec...@yahoo.com> > *Sent:* Friday, June 21, 2013 9:33 PM > *Subject:* Re: Cassandra driver performance question... > > Hi Jabbar, > > I think I know what is going on. I happened accross a change mentioned by > the jdbc driver developers regarding metadata caching. Seems the metadata > caching was moved from the connection object to the preparedStatement > object. So I am wondering if the time difference I am seeing on the second > preparedStatement object is because of the Metadata is cached then. > > So my question is how to test this theory? Is there a way to stop the > metadata from coming accross from Cassandra? A 20x performance improvement > would be nice to have. > > Thanks, > -Tony > > *From:* Tony Anecito <adanec...@yahoo.com> > *To:* "user@cassandra.apache.org" <user@cassandra.apache.org> > *Sent:* Friday, June 21, 2013 8:56 PM > *Subject:* Re: Cassandra driver performance question... > > Thanks Jabbar, > > I ran nodetool as suggested and it 0 latency for the row count I have. > > I also ran cli list command for the table hit by my JDBC perparedStatement > and it was slow like 121msecs the first time I ran it and second time I ran > it it was 40msecs versus jdbc call of 38msecs to start with unless I run it > twice also and get 1.5-2.5msecs for executeQuery the second time the > preparedStatement is called. > > I ran describe from cli for the table and it said caching is "ALL" which > is correct. > > A real mystery and I need to understand better what is going on. > > Regards, > -Tony > > *From:* Jabbar Azam <aja...@gmail.com> > *To:* user@cassandra.apache.org; Tony Anecito <adanec...@yahoo.com> > *Sent:* Friday, June 21, 2013 3:32 PM > *Subject:* Re: Cassandra driver performance question... > > Hello Tony, > > I would guess that the first queries data is put into the row cache and > the filesystem cache. The second query gets the data from the row cache and > or the filesystem cache so it'll be faster. > > If you want to make it consistently faster having a key cache will > definitely help. The following advice from Aaron Morton will also help > > "You can also see what it looks like from the server side. > > nodetool proxyhistograms will show you full request latency recorded by the > coordinator. > nodetool cfhistograms will show you the local read latency, this is just the > time it takes > to read data on a replica and does not include network or wait times. > > If the proxyhistograms is showing most requests running faster than your app > says it's your > app." > > > http://mail-archives.apache.org/mod_mbox/cassandra-user/201301.mbox/%3ce3741956-c47c-4b43-ad99-dad8afc3a...@thelastpickle.com%3E > > > > Thanks > > Jabbar Azam > > > On 21 June 2013 21:29, Tony Anecito <adanec...@yahoo.com> wrote: > > Hi All, > I am using jdbc driver and noticed that if I run the same query twice the > second time it is much faster. > I setup the row cache and column family cache and it not seem to make a > difference. > > I am wondering how to setup cassandra such that the first query is always > as fast as the second one. The second one was 1.8msec and the first 28msec > for the same exact paremeters. I am using preparestatement. > > Thanks! > > > > > > > > > > >