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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-7304?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=14051522#comment-14051522
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Oded Peer commented on CASSANDRA-7304:
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bq. Do note that this is specific to the Java driver, not a server issue.
Let me verify your intent: you want to change the Java driver to throw an 
exception if not all the bind variables are set, then change the Cassandra code 
to make unset variables a no-op and finally change the Java driver code to 
allow unset variables.
IMHO this addresses safety in the java driver for a very short time period. I 
would skip the exception-throwing phase and go straight to implementing unset 
variables in the Java driver and add it to the release notes.


> Ability to distinguish between NULL and UNSET values in Prepared Statements
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: CASSANDRA-7304
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-7304
>             Project: Cassandra
>          Issue Type: Improvement
>            Reporter: Drew Kutcharian
>              Labels: cql
>         Attachments: 7304.patch
>
>
> Currently Cassandra inserts tombstones when a value of a column is bound to 
> NULL in a prepared statement. At higher insert rates managing all these 
> tombstones becomes an unnecessary overhead. This limits the usefulness of the 
> prepared statements since developers have to either create multiple prepared 
> statements (each with a different combination of column names, which at times 
> is just unfeasible because of the sheer number of possible combinations) or 
> fall back to using regular (non-prepared) statements.
> This JIRA is here to explore the possibility of either:
> A. Have a flag on prepared statements that once set, tells Cassandra to 
> ignore null columns
> or
> B. Have an "UNSET" value which makes Cassandra skip the null columns and not 
> tombstone them
> Basically, in the context of a prepared statement, a null value means delete, 
> but we don’t have anything that means "ignore" (besides creating a new 
> prepared statement without the ignored column).
> Please refer to the original conversation on DataStax Java Driver mailing 
> list for more background:
> https://groups.google.com/a/lists.datastax.com/d/topic/java-driver-user/cHE3OOSIXBU/discussion



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