. (This is for on-prem hardware, not a
cloud-there’s-always-a-spare model.)
Sean Durity
*From:* Jeff Jirsa
*Sent:* Wednesday, January 20, 2021 11:59 AM
*To:* cassandra
*Subject:* [EXTERNAL] Re: Node Size
Not going to give a number other than to say that 1TB/instance is
probably super super super
: Jeff Jirsa
Sent: Wednesday, January 20, 2021 11:59 AM
To: cassandra
Subject: [EXTERNAL] Re: Node Size
Not going to give a number other than to say that 1TB/instance is probably
super super super conservative in 2021. The modern number is likely
considerably higher. But let's look at this from
nding it is for use cases with massive needs for disk, but low to
> moderate throughput (ie, where node expansion is only for disk, not
> additional traffic).
>
>
>
> Sean Durity
>
>
>
> *From:* Yakir Gibraltar
> *Sent:* Wednesday, January 20, 2021 9:21 AM
> *To:* us
with massive needs for disk,
but low to moderate throughput (ie, where node expansion is only for
disk, not additional traffic).
Sean Durity
*From:* Yakir Gibraltar
*Sent:* Wednesday, January 20, 2021 9:21 AM
*To:* user@cassandra.apache.org
*Subject:* [EXTERNAL] Re: Node Size
It possible to use
From: Yakir Gibraltar
Sent: Wednesday, January 20, 2021 9:21 AM
To: user@cassandra.apache.org
Subject: [EXTERNAL] Re: Node Size
It possible to use large nodes and it will work, the problem of large nodes
will be:
* Maintenance like join/remove nodes will take more time.
* Larger heap
It possible to use large nodes and it will work, the problem of large nodes
will be:
- Maintenance like join/remove nodes will take more time.
- Larger heap
- etc.
On Wed, Jan 20, 2021 at 3:54 PM Joe Obernberger <
joseph.obernber...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Anyone know where I could find
Anyone know where I could find out more information on this?
Thanks!
-Joe
On 1/13/2021 8:42 AM, Joe Obernberger wrote:
Reading the documentation on Cassandra 3.x there is recommendations
that node size should be ~1TByte of data. Modern servers can have 24
SSDs, each at 2TBytes in size for