By default this will go in Keyspace1 Standard1.

All the best,


[image: datastax_logo.png] <http://www.datastax.com/>

Sebastián Estévez

Solutions Architect | 954 905 8615 | sebastian.este...@datastax.com

[image: linkedin.png] <https://www.linkedin.com/company/datastax> [image:
facebook.png] <https://www.facebook.com/datastax> [image: twitter.png]
<https://twitter.com/datastax> [image: g+.png]
<https://plus.google.com/+Datastax/about>
<http://feeds.feedburner.com/datastax>
<http://goog_410786983>


<http://www.datastax.com/gartner-magic-quadrant-odbms>

DataStax is the fastest, most scalable distributed database technology,
delivering Apache Cassandra to the world’s most innovative enterprises.
Datastax is built to be agile, always-on, and predictably scalable to any
size. With more than 500 customers in 45 countries, DataStax is the
database technology and transactional backbone of choice for the worlds
most innovative companies such as Netflix, Adobe, Intuit, and eBay.

On Fri, Oct 30, 2015 at 12:07 AM, Arun Sandu <arunsandu...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Hi,
>
> I am currently working on load testing my cluster. When we write 100000 to
> cassandra, where does the writes data gets stored in Cassandra and the same
> for read operation too.
>
> ./cassandra-stress write n=100000 -rate threads=100 -node 10.34.100.13
>
> ./cassandra-stress read n=100000 -node 10.34.100.13
>
>
> --
> Thanks
> Arun
>

Reply via email to