Re: JMX CF Beans
thanks. both of you. Nicolas Le 25 janv. 2013 à 19:05, Tyler Hobbs ty...@datastax.com a écrit : On Fri, Jan 25, 2013 at 8:07 AM, Nicolas Lalevée nicolas.lale...@hibnet.org wrote: Just a quick question about the attributes exposed via JMX. I have some doc [1] but it doesn't help about CF beans. The BloomFilterFalseRatio, is that the ratio of found vs missed, or the ratio of false positive vs the number of tests, or something else ? False positives. You should be aware of this bug, though: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-4043 The ReadCount and WriteCount, how do they count regarding the replication factor ? As far as I understand, the read and write on the StorageProxy is the actual number of requests coming from clients. So judging that the sum on all cf of the read and write is near equal to the replication factor multiply by the number of read and write on the StorageProxy, I am guessing that the read and write per cf are the replicas one. Am I right ? StorageProxy read/write counts should equal the number of client requests. ColumnFamily read/write counts correspond to actual, local data reads, so the sum of this number across all nodes will be approximately RF * the StorageProxy counts. -- Tyler Hobbs DataStax
Issue when deleting Cassandra rowKeys.
Hi all, When I delete some rowkeys programmatically I can see two rowkeys remains in the column family. I think it is due to tombstones. Is there a way to remove it when deleting rowkeys. Can I run compaction programmatically after deletion? will it remove all these remaining rowkeys. Thanks, Kasun.
Re: Issue when deleting Cassandra rowKeys.
What is your gc_grace set to? Are your findings before or after this time after the deletion? From: Kasun Weranga kas...@wso2.commailto:kas...@wso2.com Reply-To: user@cassandra.apache.orgmailto:user@cassandra.apache.org user@cassandra.apache.orgmailto:user@cassandra.apache.org Date: Saturday, January 26, 2013 10:33 AM To: user@cassandra.apache.orgmailto:user@cassandra.apache.org user@cassandra.apache.orgmailto:user@cassandra.apache.org, d...@cassandra.apache.orgmailto:d...@cassandra.apache.org d...@cassandra.apache.orgmailto:d...@cassandra.apache.org Subject: Issue when deleting Cassandra rowKeys. Hi all, When I delete some rowkeys programmatically I can see two rowkeys remains in the column family. I think it is due to tombstones. Is there a way to remove it when deleting rowkeys. Can I run compaction programmatically after deletion? will it remove all these remaining rowkeys. Thanks, Kasun.
Re: Issue when deleting Cassandra rowKeys.
Make sure the timestamp on your delete is then timestamp of the data. On Sat, Jan 26, 2013 at 1:33 PM, Kasun Weranga kas...@wso2.com wrote: Hi all, When I delete some rowkeys programmatically I can see two rowkeys remains in the column family. I think it is due to tombstones. Is there a way to remove it when deleting rowkeys. Can I run compaction programmatically after deletion? will it remove all these remaining rowkeys. Thanks, Kasun.
why set replica placement strategy at keyspace level ?
Although I've got to know Cassandra for quite a while, this question only has occurred to me recently: Why are the replica placement strategy and replica factors set at the keyspace level? Would setting them at the column family level offers more flexibility? Is this because it's easier for user to manage an application? Or related to internal implementation? Or it's just that I've overlooked something?