You can do a describe table to see the table layout and you can select to
see some sample rows. Stress is pretty powerful though.

I just dropped a blog post tonight on doing more targeted benchmarking /
sizing with stress and my data modeler. Take a look:

http://www.sestevez.com/data-modeler/
On Oct 30, 2015 1:01 AM, "Arun Sandu" <arunsandu...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Thanks . Can I know, the format of the data that gets stored? Can you
> please suggest me some ways to perform load testing? I need a big picture
> of all the statistics.
>
> Thanks again
> Arun
>
> On Thu, Oct 29, 2015 at 9:41 PM, Sebastian Estevez <
> sebastian.este...@datastax.com> wrote:
>
>> 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
>>>
>>
>>
>
>
> --
> Thanks&Regards
> Arun Kumar S
> 816-699-3039
>
> *"This Moment Is Not Permanent...!!"*
>

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