Hi Ricardo,
Thank you, the nodes are indeed configured like this. /etc/hosts contains
both the line you mention AND another one with the general IP. But both
with the nodes' names. Guess it's time to ask our responsible guys why this
is the case.
At least now I know what to look for. I'll play ar
Hi that's very likely because of:
>
> empty the listen_address entry
and
# Leaving it blank leaves it up to InetAddress.getLocalHost(). This
# will always do the Right Thing _if_ the node is properly configured
# (hostname, name resolution, etc), and the Right Thing is to use the
# address asso
Hi guys,
Thanks for the responses. I'm running the cqlsh commands directly on one of
the nodes, so should that really make a difference?
Anyway, as for Carlos' questions:
- We're using Cassandra 2.2.6.
- nodetool status on first node:
Datacenter: datacenter1
===
Status=Up/
If Ryan answer doesn't help, post Cassandra version. There is a bug with
cql and some python version that would lead to that error.
Also, please post "nodetool status".
Regards,
Carlos Juzarte Rolo
Cassandra Consultant / Datastax Certified Architect / Cassandra MVP
Pythian - Love your data
rol
instead of 127.0.0.1 have you tried just passing the IP of the one of the
nodes.
On Mon, Aug 22, 2016 at 9:45 AM Raimund Klein wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> Sorry for reposting this, but I didn't receive any response. Can someone
> help please?
>
> -- Forwarded message --
> From: Raim