It's a little more involved than that. I suggest inserting a single row in a test table, then looking at the sstabledump output as a first step, then compare with two rows in a single partition. Then you can code dive to see what sstabledump is actually doing if you really need the byte-level detail.
On Wed, Jun 15, 2016 at 9:30 AM, Deepak Goel <deic...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hey > > Namaskara~Nalama~Guten Tag~Bonjour > > I tried searching for the fileformat of how cassandra stores its data, but > I couldn't find any... > > Suppose I have a database structure of the following format: > > RowID: Name: Age > 1: Deepak : 33 > 2: Deepak1: 34 > 3: Deepak2: 35 > > How would this data actually stored in the data file of Cassandra? > > Would it be something like this: > Deepak:1:33 > Deepak1:2:34 > Deepak2:3:35 > > Or, would it be: > 1:Deepak :33 > 2:Deepak1:34 > 3:Deepak2:35 > > Thanks > Deepak > > > > -- > Keigu > > Deepak > 73500 12833 > www.simtree.net, dee...@simtree.net > deic...@gmail.com > > LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/deicool > Skype: thumsupdeicool > Google talk: deicool > Blog: http://loveandfearless.wordpress.com > Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/deicool > > "Contribute to the world, environment and more : > http://www.gridrepublic.org > " > -- Jonathan Ellis Project Chair, Apache Cassandra co-founder, http://www.datastax.com @spyced