Or, do a full repair after bootstrapping completes?


On Dec 5, 2017 4:43 PM, "Jeff Jirsa" <jji...@gmail.com> wrote:

> You cant ask cassandra to stream from the node with the "most recent
> data", because for some rows B may be most recent, and for others C may be
> most recent - you'd have to stream from both (which we don't support).
>
> You'll need to repair (and you can repair before you do the replace to
> avoid the window of time where you violate consistency - use the -hosts
> option to allow repair with a down host, you'll repair A+C, so when B
> starts it'll definitely have all of the data).
>
>
> On Tue, Dec 5, 2017 at 1:38 PM, Fd Habash <fmhab...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Assume I have cluster of 3 nodes (A,B,C). Row x was written with CL=LQ to
>> node A and B. Before it was written to C, node B crashes. I replaced B and
>> it bootstrapped data from node C.
>>
>>
>>
>> Now, row x is missing from C and B.  If node A crashes, it will be
>> replaced and it will bootstrap from either C or B. As such, row x is now
>> completely gone from the entire ring.
>>
>>
>>
>> Is this scenario possible at all (at least in C* < 3.0).
>>
>>
>>
>> How can a newly replaced node be forced to bootstrap from the node in the
>> replica set that has the most recent data?
>>
>>
>>
>> Otherwise, we have to repair a node immediately after bootstrapping it
>> for a node replacement.
>>
>>
>>
>> Thank you
>>
>>
>>
>
>

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