Thanks Martijn, the documentation for Async IO was also indicating the same and that's what prompted me to post this question here. ~ Karthik
On Mon, Jun 12, 2023 at 7:45 PM Martijn Visser <martijnvis...@apache.org> wrote: > Hi Karthik, > > In my opinion, it makes more sense to use a sink to leverage Scylla over > using Async IO. The primary use case for Async IO is enrichment, not for > writing to a sync. > > Best regards, > > Martijn > > On Mon, Jun 12, 2023 at 4:10 PM Karthik Deivasigamani <karthi...@gmail.com> > wrote: > >> Thanks Martijn for your response. >> One thing I did not mention was that we are in the process of moving away >> from Cassandra to Scylla and would like to use the Scylla Java Driver for >> the following reason : >> >>> The Scylla Java driver is shard aware and contains extensions for a >>> tokenAwareHostPolicy. Using this policy, the driver can select a >>> connection to a particular shard based on the shard’s token. As a result, >>> latency is significantly reduced because there is no need to pass data >>> between the shards. >>> >> We were considering writing our own Sink to leverage Scylla Java Driver >> once the migration is done. >> ~ >> Karthik >> >> >> On Mon, Jun 12, 2023 at 4:56 PM Martijn Visser <martijnvis...@apache.org> >> wrote: >> >>> Hi, >>> >>> Why wouldn't you just use the Flink Kafka connector and the Flink >>> Cassandra connector for your use case? >>> >>> Best regards, >>> >>> Martijn >>> >>> On Mon, Jun 12, 2023 at 12:03 PM Karthik Deivasigamani < >>> karthi...@gmail.com> wrote: >>> >>>> Hi, >>>> I have a use case where I need to read messages from a Kafka topic, >>>> parse it and write it to a database (Cassandra). Since Cassandra supports >>>> async APIs I was considering using Async IO operator for my writes. I do >>>> not need exactly-once semantics for my use-case. >>>> Is it okay to leverage the Async IO operator as a Sink (writing data >>>> into a DB)? >>>> ~ >>>> Karthik >>>> >>>