Also any suggestions on a tool to orchestrate the incremental repair? Like say most commonly used
Sent from my iPhone > On Oct 19, 2016, at 9:54 AM, Alexander Dejanovski <a...@thelastpickle.com> > wrote: > > Hi Kant, > > subrange is a form of full repair, so it will just split the repair process > in smaller yet sequential pieces of work (repair is started giving a start > and end token). Overall, you should not expect improvements other than having > less overstreaming and better chances of success if your cluster is dense. > > You can try to use incremental repair if you know what the caveats are and > use a proper tool to orchestrate it, that would save you from repairing all > 10TB each time. > CASSANDRA-12580 might help too as Romain showed us : > https://www.mail-archive.com/user@cassandra.apache.org/msg49344.html > > Cheers, > > > > On Wed, Oct 19, 2016 at 6:42 PM Kant Kodali <k...@peernova.com> wrote: > Another question on a same note would be what would be the fastest way to do > repairs of size 10TB cluster ? Full repairs are taking days. So among repair > parallel or repair sub range which is faster in the case of say adding a new > node to the cluster? > > Sent from my iPhone > >> On Oct 19, 2016, at 9:30 AM, Sean Bridges <sean.brid...@globalrelay.net> >> wrote: >> >> Hey, >> >> We are upgrading from cassandra 2.1 to cassandra 2.2. >> >> With cassandra 2.1 we would periodically repair all nodes, using the -pr >> flag. >> >> With cassandra 2.2, the same repair takes a very long time, as cassandra >> does an anti compaction after the repair. This anti compaction causes most >> (all?) the sstables to be rewritten. Is there a way to do full repairs >> without continually anti compacting? If we do a full repair on each node >> with the -pr flag, will subsequent full repairs also force anti >> compacting most (all?) sstables? >> >> Thanks, >> >> Sean > > -- > ----------------- > Alexander Dejanovski > France > @alexanderdeja > > Consultant > Apache Cassandra Consulting > http://www.thelastpickle.com