Yeah, I meant the down node can’t participate in repairs
Regards,
Nitan
Cell: 510 449 9629
> On May 27, 2020, at 2:09 PM, Leon Zaruvinsky wrote:
>
>
> Yep, Jeff is right, the intention would be to run a repair limited to the
> available nodes.
>
>> On Wed, May 27, 2020 at 2:59 PM Jeff Jirs
Yep, Jeff is right, the intention would be to run a repair limited to the
available nodes.
On Wed, May 27, 2020 at 2:59 PM Jeff Jirsa wrote:
> The "-hosts " flag tells cassandra to only compare trees/run repair on the
> hosts you specify, so if you have 3 replicas, but 1 replica is down, you
> c
The "-hosts " flag tells cassandra to only compare trees/run repair on the
hosts you specify, so if you have 3 replicas, but 1 replica is down, you
can provide -hosts with the other two, and it will make sure those two are
in sync (via merkle trees, etc), but ignore the third.
On Wed, May 27, 20
Jeff,
If Cassandra is down how will it generate merkle tree to compare?
Regards,
Nitan
Cell: 510 449 9629
> On May 27, 2020, at 11:15 AM, Jeff Jirsa wrote:
>
>
> You definitely can repair with a node down by passing `-hosts specific_hosts`
>
>> On Wed, May 27, 2020 at 9:06 AM Nitan Kainth
You definitely can repair with a node down by passing `-hosts
specific_hosts`
On Wed, May 27, 2020 at 9:06 AM Nitan Kainth wrote:
> I didn't get you Leon,
>
> But, the simple thing is just to follow the steps and you will be fine.
> You can't run the repair if the node is down.
>
> On Wed, May 2
I didn't get you Leon,
But, the simple thing is just to follow the steps and you will be fine. You
can't run the repair if the node is down.
On Wed, May 27, 2020 at 10:34 AM Leon Zaruvinsky
wrote:
> Hey Jeff/Nitan,
>
> 1) this concern should not be a problem if the repair happens before the
> c
Hey Jeff/Nitan,
1) this concern should not be a problem if the repair happens before the
corrupted node is brought back online, right?
2) in this case, is option (3) equivalent to replacing the node? where we
repair the two live nodes and then bring up the third node with no data
Leon
On Tue, Ma
There’s two problems with this approach if you need strict correctness
1) after you delete the sstable and before you repair you’ll violate
consistency, so you’ll potentially serve incorrect data for a while
2) The sstable May have a tombstone past gc grace that’s shadowing data in
another sst
Stop the node
Delete as per option 2
Run repair
Regards,
Nitan
Cell: 510 449 9629
> On May 26, 2020, at 6:46 PM, Leon Zaruvinsky wrote:
>
>
> Hi all,
>
> I'm looking to understand Cassandra's behavior in an sstable corruption
> scenario, and what the minimum amount of work is that needs t