Patricia, Thanks for the info. So are you saying that the *whole* data is being written on disk in the commit log, not just some sort of a summary/digest? I'm writing 10MB objects and I'm noticing high latency (250 milliseconds even with ANY consistency), so I guess that explains my high delays?
Thanks, Mohammad On Fri, Jul 19, 2013 at 2:17 PM, Patricia Gorla <gorla.patri...@gmail.com>wrote: > Kanwar, > > This is because writes are appends to the commit log, which is stored on > disk, not memory. The commit log is then flushed to the memtable (in > memory), before being written to an sstable on disk. > > So, most of the actions in sending out a write are writing to disk. > > Also see: http://www.datastax.com/docs/1.2/dml/about_writes > > Patricia > > > On Fri, Jul 19, 2013 at 1:05 PM, Kanwar Sangha <kan...@mavenir.com> wrote: > >> “Insert-heavy workloads will actually be CPU-bound in Cassandra before >> being memory-bound”**** >> >> ** ** >> >> Can someone explain why the internals of why writes are CPU bound ?**** >> >> ** ** >> >> ** ** >> > > -- *Mohammad Hajjat* *Ph.D. Student* *Electrical and Computer Engineering* *Purdue University*