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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-9231?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=14523213#comment-14523213
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Aleksey Yeschenko commented on CASSANDRA-9231:
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I also want to add that if we did choose this way (routing key as part of the 
partition key), I'd vote for {{DESCRIBE}} *not* indicating the routing part if 
it exactly matches the whole partition key.

Most users won't be confused and won't need to know about the distinction 
unless they explicitly use the functionality. It's okay to hide it, it being a 
relatively advanced opt-in feature. 

> Support Routing Key as part of Partition Key
> --------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: CASSANDRA-9231
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-9231
>             Project: Cassandra
>          Issue Type: Wish
>          Components: Core
>            Reporter: Matthias Broecheler
>             Fix For: 3.x
>
>
> Provide support for sub-dividing the partition key into a routing key and a 
> non-routing key component. Currently, all columns that make up the partition 
> key of the primary key are also routing keys, i.e. they determine which nodes 
> store the data. This proposal would give the data modeler the ability to 
> designate only a subset of the columns that comprise the partition key to be 
> routing keys. The non-routing key columns of the partition key identify the 
> partition but are not used to determine where to store the data.
> Consider the following example table definition:
> CREATE TABLE foo (
>   a int,
>   b int,
>   c int,
>   d int,
>   PRIMARY KEY  (([a], b), c ) );
> (a,b) is the partition key, c is the clustering key, and d is just a column. 
> In addition, the square brackets identify the routing key as column a. This 
> means that only the value of column a is used to determine the node for data 
> placement (i.e. only the value of column a is murmur3 hashed to compute the 
> token). In addition, column b is needed to identify the partition but does 
> not influence the placement.
> This has the benefit that all rows with the same routing key (but potentially 
> different non-routing key columns of the partition key) are stored on the 
> same node and that knowledge of such co-locality can be exploited by 
> applications build on top of Cassandra.
> Currently, the only way to achieve co-locality is within a partition. 
> However, this approach has the limitations that: a) there are theoretical and 
> (more importantly) practical limitations on the size of a partition and b) 
> rows within a partition are ordered and an index is build to exploit such 
> ordering. For large partitions that overhead is significant if ordering isn't 
> needed.
> In other words, routing keys afford a simple means to achieve scalable 
> node-level co-locality without ordering while clustering keys afford 
> page-level co-locality with ordering. As such, they address different 
> co-locality needs giving the data modeler the flexibility to choose what is 
> needed for their application.



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