[ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-8299?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel ]
Tyler Hobbs reassigned CASSANDRA-8299: -------------------------------------- Assignee: T Jake Luciani (was: Tyler Hobbs) > cassandra-stress unique keys > ---------------------------- > > Key: CASSANDRA-8299 > URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-8299 > Project: Cassandra > Issue Type: Bug > Components: Tools > Environment: Centos 6.5 Cassandra version 2.1.1 > Reporter: Edgardo Vega > Assignee: T Jake Luciani > > In the old stress tool you could use -n 10000 and get 10000 unique keys in > the keyspace. > In the new stress tool there doesn't seem to be a way to do this. For example > if I have the following definition: > table_definition: | > CREATE TABLE table( > key uuid PRIMARY KEY, > col1 text, > col2 text, > col3 text > ) WITH comment='A table' > ### Column Distribution Specifications ### > columnspec: > - name: key > size: fixed(36) > population: uniform(1..100B) > - name: col1 > size: fixed(100) > - name: col2 > size: fixed(100) > - name: col3 > size: fixed(100) > and then run > cassandra-stress user n=10000 profile=stress.yaml ops\(insert=1\) > If you look at the keyspace was only 59000 keys. The new tool needs to be > able to generated unique ids. In our tested we want to see how the number of > keys effects the cluster when doing queries. -- This message was sent by Atlassian JIRA (v6.3.4#6332)