This was described in good detail here:

http://thelastpickle.com/2011/04/28/Forces-of-Write-and-Read/

On Tue, Jan 22, 2013 at 9:41 AM, Brian Tarbox <tar...@cabotresearch.com>wrote:

> Thank you!   Since this is a very non-standard way to display data it
> might be worth a better explanation in the various online documentation
> sets.
>
> Thank you again.
>
> Brian
>
>
> On Tue, Jan 22, 2013 at 9:19 AM, Mina Naguib <mina.nag...@adgear.com>wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> On 2013-01-22, at 8:59 AM, Brian Tarbox <tar...@cabotresearch.com> wrote:
>>
>> > The output of this command seems to make no sense unless I think of it
>> as 5 completely separate histograms that just happen to be displayed
>> together.
>> >
>> > Using this example output should I read it as: my reads all took either
>> 1 or 2 sstable.  And separately, I had write latencies of 3,7,19.  And
>> separately I had read latencies of 2, 8,69, etc?
>> >
>> > In other words...each row isn't really a row...i.e. on those 16033
>> reads from a single SSTable I didn't have 0 write latency, 0 read latency,
>> 0 row size and 0 column count.  Is that right?
>>
>> Correct.  A number in any of the metric columns is a count value bucketed
>> in the offset on that row.  There are no relationships between other
>> columns on the same row.
>>
>> So your first row says "16033 reads were satisfied by 1 sstable".  The
>> other metrics (for example, latency of these reads) is reflected in the
>> histogram under "Read Latency", under various other bucketed offsets.
>>
>> >
>> > Offset      SSTables     Write Latency      Read Latency          Row
>> Size      Column Count
>> > 1              16033             0                            0
>>                    0                 0
>> > 2                303               0                            0
>>                      0                 1
>> > 3                  0                 0                            0
>>                        0                 0
>> > 4                  0                 0                            0
>>                        0                 0
>> > 5                  0                 0                            0
>>                        0                 0
>> > 6                  0                 0                            0
>>                        0                 0
>> > 7                  0                 0                            0
>>                        0                 0
>> > 8                  0                 0                            2
>>                        0                 0
>> > 10                 0                 0                            0
>>                        0              6261
>> > 12                 0                 0                            2
>>                        0               117
>> > 14                 0                 0                            8
>>                        0                 0
>> > 17                 0                 3                           69
>>                        0               255
>> > 20                 0                 7                          163
>>                        0                 0
>> > 24                 0                19                         1369
>>                        0                 0
>> >
>>
>>
>

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