Re: AW: AW: How to control location of data?
Hi! ... So actually if you use Cassandra – for the application the actual storage location of the data should not matter. It will be available anywhere in the cluster if it is stored on any reachable node. I suspected it so, that is Cassandra does not provide a mechanism to strictly constrain what nodes in a cluster hold the data for a specific key space because Cassandra is not designed for that purpose. Thank you very much for your effort and detailed explanation. Von: Andreas Rudolph [mailto:andreas.rudo...@spontech-spine.com] Gesendet: Dienstag, 10. Januar 2012 15:06 An: user@cassandra.apache.org Betreff: Re: AW: How to control location of data? Hi! Thank you for your last reply. I'm still wondering if I got you right... ... A partitioner decides into which partition a piece of data belongs Does your statement imply that the partitioner does not take any decisions at all on the (physical) storage location? Or put another way: What do you mean with partition? To quote http://wiki.apache.org/cassandra/ArchitectureInternals: ... AbstractReplicationStrategy controls what nodes get secondary, tertiary, etc. replicas of each key range. Primary replica is always determined by the token ring (...) ... You can select different placement strategies and partitioners for different keyspaces, thereby choosing known data to be stored on known hosts. This is however discouraged for various reasons – i.e. you need a lot of knowledge about your data to keep the cluster balanced. What is your usecase for this requirement? there is probably a more suitable solution. What we want is to partition the cluster with respect to key spaces. That is we want to establish an association between nodes and key spaces so that a node of the cluster holds data from a key space if and only if that node is a *member* of that key space. To our knowledge Cassandra has no built-in way to specify such a membership-relation. Therefore we thought of implementing our own replica placement strategy until we started to assume that the partitioner had to be replaced, too, to accomplish the task. Do you have any ideas? Von: Andreas Rudolph [mailto:andreas.rudo...@spontech-spine.com] Gesendet: Dienstag, 10. Januar 2012 09:53 An: user@cassandra.apache.org Betreff: How to control location of data? Hi! We're evaluating Cassandra for our storage needs. One of the key benefits we see is the online replication of the data, that is an easy way to share data across nodes. But we have the need to precisely control on what node group specific parts of a key space (columns/column families) are stored on. Now we're having trouble understanding the documentation. Could anyone help us with to find some answers to our questions? · What does the term replica mean: If a key is stored on exactly three nodes in a cluster, is it correct then to say that there are three replicas of that key or are there just two replicas (copies) and one original? · What is the relation between the Cassandra concepts Partitioner and Replica Placement Strategy? According to documentation found on DataStax web site and architecture internals from the Cassandra Wiki the first storage location of a key (and its associated data) is determined by the Partitioner whereas additional storage locations are defined by Replica Placement Strategy. I'm wondering if I could completely redefine the way how nodes are selected to store a key by just implementing my own subclass of AbstractReplicationStrategy and configuring that subclass into the key space. · How can I suppress that the Partitioner is consulted at all to determine what node stores a key first? · Is a key space always distributed across the whole cluster? Is it possible to configure Cassandra in such a way that more or less freely chosen parts of a key space (columns) are stored on arbitrarily chosen nodes? Any tips would be very appreciated :-)
AW: How to control location of data?
Hi, i think everything is called a replica so if data is on 3 nodes you have 3 replicas. There is no such thing as an original. A partitioner decides into which partition a piece of data belongs A replica placement strategy decides which partition goes on which node You cannot suppress the partitioner. You can select different placement strategies and partitioners for different keyspaces, thereby choosing known data to be stored on known hosts. This is however discouraged for various reasons - i.e. you need a lot of knowledge about your data to keep the cluster balanced. What is your usecase for this requirement? there is probably a more suitable solution. Von: Andreas Rudolph [mailto:andreas.rudo...@spontech-spine.com] Gesendet: Dienstag, 10. Januar 2012 09:53 An: user@cassandra.apache.org Betreff: How to control location of data? Hi! We're evaluating Cassandra for our storage needs. One of the key benefits we see is the online replication of the data, that is an easy way to share data across nodes. But we have the need to precisely control on what node group specific parts of a key space (columns/column families) are stored on. Now we're having trouble understanding the documentation. Could anyone help us with to find some answers to our questions? * What does the term replica mean: If a key is stored on exactly three nodes in a cluster, is it correct then to say that there are three replicas of that key or are there just two replicas (copies) and one original? * What is the relation between the Cassandra concepts Partitioner and Replica Placement Strategy? According to documentation found on DataStax web site and architecture internals from the Cassandra Wiki the first storage location of a key (and its associated data) is determined by the Partitioner whereas additional storage locations are defined by Replica Placement Strategy. I'm wondering if I could completely redefine the way how nodes are selected to store a key by just implementing my own subclass of AbstractReplicationStrategy and configuring that subclass into the key space. * How can I suppress that the Partitioner is consulted at all to determine what node stores a key first? * Is a key space always distributed across the whole cluster? Is it possible to configure Cassandra in such a way that more or less freely chosen parts of a key space (columns) are stored on arbitrarily chosen nodes? Any tips would be very appreciated :-)
Re: AW: How to control location of data?
Hi! Thank you for your last reply. I'm still wondering if I got you right... ... A partitioner decides into which partition a piece of data belongs Does your statement imply that the partitioner does not take any decisions at all on the (physical) storage location? Or put another way: What do you mean with partition? To quote http://wiki.apache.org/cassandra/ArchitectureInternals: ... AbstractReplicationStrategy controls what nodes get secondary, tertiary, etc. replicas of each key range. Primary replica is always determined by the token ring (...) ... You can select different placement strategies and partitioners for different keyspaces, thereby choosing known data to be stored on known hosts. This is however discouraged for various reasons – i.e. you need a lot of knowledge about your data to keep the cluster balanced. What is your usecase for this requirement? there is probably a more suitable solution. What we want is to partition the cluster with respect to key spaces. That is we want to establish an association between nodes and key spaces so that a node of the cluster holds data from a key space if and only if that node is a *member* of that key space. To our knowledge Cassandra has no built-in way to specify such a membership-relation. Therefore we thought of implementing our own replica placement strategy until we started to assume that the partitioner had to be replaced, too, to accomplish the task. Do you have any ideas? Von: Andreas Rudolph [mailto:andreas.rudo...@spontech-spine.com] Gesendet: Dienstag, 10. Januar 2012 09:53 An: user@cassandra.apache.org Betreff: How to control location of data? Hi! We're evaluating Cassandra for our storage needs. One of the key benefits we see is the online replication of the data, that is an easy way to share data across nodes. But we have the need to precisely control on what node group specific parts of a key space (columns/column families) are stored on. Now we're having trouble understanding the documentation. Could anyone help us with to find some answers to our questions? · What does the term replica mean: If a key is stored on exactly three nodes in a cluster, is it correct then to say that there are three replicas of that key or are there just two replicas (copies) and one original? · What is the relation between the Cassandra concepts Partitioner and Replica Placement Strategy? According to documentation found on DataStax web site and architecture internals from the Cassandra Wiki the first storage location of a key (and its associated data) is determined by the Partitioner whereas additional storage locations are defined by Replica Placement Strategy. I'm wondering if I could completely redefine the way how nodes are selected to store a key by just implementing my own subclass of AbstractReplicationStrategy and configuring that subclass into the key space. · How can I suppress that the Partitioner is consulted at all to determine what node stores a key first? · Is a key space always distributed across the whole cluster? Is it possible to configure Cassandra in such a way that more or less freely chosen parts of a key space (columns) are stored on arbitrarily chosen nodes? Any tips would be very appreciated :-)
R: Re: AW: How to control location of data?
In each node of the ring has a unique Token which representing the node's logical position in the cluster. When you perform an operation on a row is calculated a token based on this row ... the node-token closest to the row-token will store the data (and also the RF-1 remaining nodes) -- this tecnique should guarantee that data are balanced among the cluster (if you use the Random Partitioner) Regards,Carlo Messaggio originale Da: andreas.rudo...@spontech-spine.com Data: 10/01/2012 15.05 A: user@cassandra.apache.orguser@cassandra.apache.org Ogg: Re: AW: How to control location of data? --Hi! Thank you for your last reply. I'm still wondering if I got you right... ... A partitioner decides into which partition a piece of data belongsDoes your statement imply that the partitioner does not take any decisions at all on the (physical) storage location? Or put another way: What do you mean with partition? To quote http://wiki.apache.org/cassandra/ArchitectureInternals: ... AbstractReplicationStrategy controls what nodes get secondary, tertiary, etc. replicas of each key range. Primary replica is always determined by the token ring (...) ... You can select different placement strategies and partitioners for different keyspaces, thereby choosing known data to be stored on known hosts.This is however discouraged for various reasons – i.e. you need a lot of knowledge about your data to keep the cluster balanced. What is your usecase for this requirement? there is probably a more suitable solution. What we want is to partition the cluster with respect to key spaces.That is we want to establish an association between nodes and key spaces so that a node of the cluster holds data from a key space if and only if that node is a *member* of that key space. To our knowledge Cassandra has no built-in way to specify such a membership-relation. Therefore we thought of implementing our own replica placement strategy until we started to assume that the partitioner had to be replaced, too, to accomplish the task. Do you have any ideas? Von: Andreas Rudolph [mailto:andreas.rudo...@spontech-spine.com] Gesendet: Dienstag, 10. Januar 2012 09:53 An: user@cassandra.apache.org Betreff: How to control location of data? Hi! We're evaluating Cassandra for our storage needs. One of the key benefits we see is the online replication of the data, that is an easy way to share data across nodes. But we have the need to precisely control on what node group specific parts of a key space (columns/column families) are stored on. Now we're having trouble understanding the documentation. Could anyone help us with to find some answers to our questions?· What does the term replica mean: If a key is stored on exactly three nodes in a cluster, is it correct then to say that there are three replicas of that key or are there just two replicas (copies) and one original?· What is the relation between the Cassandra concepts Partitioner and Replica Placement Strategy? According to documentation found on DataStax web site and architecture internals from the Cassandra Wiki the first storage location of a key (and its associated data) is determined by the Partitioner whereas additional storage locations are defined by Replica Placement Strategy. I'm wondering if I could completely redefine the way how nodes are selected to store a key by just implementing my own subclass of AbstractReplicationStrategy and configuring that subclass into the key space.· How can I suppress that the Partitioner is consulted at all to determine what node stores a key first?· Is a key space always distributed across the whole cluster? Is it possible to configure Cassandra in such a way that more or less freely chosen parts of a key space (columns) are stored on arbitrarily chosen nodes? Any tips would be very appreciated :-)
AW: AW: How to control location of data?
Each node in the cluster is assigned a token (can be done automatically - but usually should not) The token of a node is the start token of the partition it is responsible for (and the token of the next node is the end token of the current tokens partition) Assume you have the following nodes/tokens (which are usually numbers but for the example I will use letters) N1/A N2/D N3/M N4/X This means that N1 is responsible (primary) for [A-D) N2 for [D-M) N3 for [M-X) And N4 for [X-A) If you have a replication factor of 1 data will go on the nodes like this: B - N1 E-N2 X-N4 And so on If you have a higher replication factor, the placement strategy decides which node will take replicas of which partition (becoming secondary node for that partition) Simple strategy will just put the replica on the next node in the ring So same example as above but RF of 2 and simple strategy: B- N1 and N2 E - N2 and N3 X - N4 and N1 Other strategies can factor in things like put data in another datacenter or put data in another rack or such things. Even though the terms primary and secondary imply some means of quality or consistency, this is not the case. If a node is responsible for a piece of data, it will store it. But placement of the replicas is usually only relevant for availability reasons (i.e. disaster recovery etc.) Actual location should mean nothing to most applications as you can ask any node for the data you want and it will provide it to you (fetching it from the responsible nodes). This should be sufficient in almost all cases. So in the above example again, you can ask N3 what data is available and it will tell you: B, E and X, or you could ask it give me X and it will fetch it from N4 or N1 or both of them depending on consistency configuration and return the data to you. So actually if you use Cassandra - for the application the actual storage location of the data should not matter. It will be available anywhere in the cluster if it is stored on any reachable node. Von: Andreas Rudolph [mailto:andreas.rudo...@spontech-spine.com] Gesendet: Dienstag, 10. Januar 2012 15:06 An: user@cassandra.apache.org Betreff: Re: AW: How to control location of data? Hi! Thank you for your last reply. I'm still wondering if I got you right... ... A partitioner decides into which partition a piece of data belongs Does your statement imply that the partitioner does not take any decisions at all on the (physical) storage location? Or put another way: What do you mean with partition? To quote http://wiki.apache.org/cassandra/ArchitectureInternals: ... AbstractReplicationStrategy controls what nodes get secondary, tertiary, etc. replicas of each key range. Primary replica is always determined by the token ring (...) ... You can select different placement strategies and partitioners for different keyspaces, thereby choosing known data to be stored on known hosts. This is however discouraged for various reasons - i.e. you need a lot of knowledge about your data to keep the cluster balanced. What is your usecase for this requirement? there is probably a more suitable solution. What we want is to partition the cluster with respect to key spaces. That is we want to establish an association between nodes and key spaces so that a node of the cluster holds data from a key space if and only if that node is a *member* of that key space. To our knowledge Cassandra has no built-in way to specify such a membership-relation. Therefore we thought of implementing our own replica placement strategy until we started to assume that the partitioner had to be replaced, too, to accomplish the task. Do you have any ideas? Von: Andreas Rudolph [mailto:andreas.rudo...@spontech-spine.com] Gesendet: Dienstag, 10. Januar 2012 09:53 An: user@cassandra.apache.orgmailto:user@cassandra.apache.org Betreff: How to control location of data? Hi! We're evaluating Cassandra for our storage needs. One of the key benefits we see is the online replication of the data, that is an easy way to share data across nodes. But we have the need to precisely control on what node group specific parts of a key space (columns/column families) are stored on. Now we're having trouble understanding the documentation. Could anyone help us with to find some answers to our questions? * What does the term replica mean: If a key is stored on exactly three nodes in a cluster, is it correct then to say that there are three replicas of that key or are there just two replicas (copies) and one original? * What is the relation between the Cassandra concepts Partitioner and Replica Placement Strategy? According to documentation found on DataStax web site and architecture internals from the Cassandra Wiki the first storage location of a key (and its associated data) is determined by the Partitioner whereas additional storage locations are defined by Replica Placement Strategy. I'm wondering if I could
Re: AW: How to control location of data?
Small correction: The token range for each node is (Previous_token, My_Token]. ( means exclusive and ] means inclusive. So N1 is responsible from X+1 to A in following case. maki 2012/1/11 Roland Gude roland.g...@yoochoose.com: Each node in the cluster is assigned a token (can be done automatically – but usually should not) The token of a node is the start token of the partition it is responsible for (and the token of the next node is the end token of the current tokens partition) Assume you have the following nodes/tokens (which are usually numbers but for the example I will use letters) N1/A N2/D N3/M N4/X This means that N1 is responsible (primary) for [A-D) N2 for [D-M) N3 for [M-X) And N4 for [X-A) If you have a replication factor of 1 data will go on the nodes like this: B - N1 E-N2 X-N4 And so on If you have a higher replication factor, the placement strategy decides which node will take replicas of which partition (becoming secondary node for that partition) Simple strategy will just put the replica on the next node in the ring So same example as above but RF of 2 and simple strategy: B- N1 and N2 E - N2 and N3 X - N4 and N1 Other strategies can factor in things like “put data in another datacenter” or “put data in another rack” or such things. Even though the terms primary and secondary imply some means of quality or consistency, this is not the case. If a node is responsible for a piece of data, it will store it. But placement of the replicas is usually only relevant for availability reasons (i.e. disaster recovery etc.) Actual location should mean nothing to most applications as you can ask any node for the data you want and it will provide it to you (fetching it from the responsible nodes). This should be sufficient in almost all cases. So in the above example again, you can ask N3 “what data is available” and it will tell you: B, E and X, or you could ask it “give me X” and it will fetch it from N4 or N1 or both of them depending on consistency configuration and return the data to you. So actually if you use Cassandra – for the application the actual storage location of the data should not matter. It will be available anywhere in the cluster if it is stored on any reachable node. Von: Andreas Rudolph [mailto:andreas.rudo...@spontech-spine.com] Gesendet: Dienstag, 10. Januar 2012 15:06 An: user@cassandra.apache.org Betreff: Re: AW: How to control location of data? Hi! Thank you for your last reply. I'm still wondering if I got you right... ... A partitioner decides into which partition a piece of data belongs Does your statement imply that the partitioner does not take any decisions at all on the (physical) storage location? Or put another way: What do you mean with partition? To quote http://wiki.apache.org/cassandra/ArchitectureInternals: ... AbstractReplicationStrategy controls what nodes get secondary, tertiary, etc. replicas of each key range. Primary replica is always determined by the token ring (...) ... You can select different placement strategies and partitioners for different keyspaces, thereby choosing known data to be stored on known hosts. This is however discouraged for various reasons – i.e. you need a lot of knowledge about your data to keep the cluster balanced. What is your usecase for this requirement? there is probably a more suitable solution. What we want is to partition the cluster with respect to key spaces. That is we want to establish an association between nodes and key spaces so that a node of the cluster holds data from a key space if and only if that node is a *member* of that key space. To our knowledge Cassandra has no built-in way to specify such a membership-relation. Therefore we thought of implementing our own replica placement strategy until we started to assume that the partitioner had to be replaced, too, to accomplish the task. Do you have any ideas? Von: Andreas Rudolph [mailto:andreas.rudo...@spontech-spine.com] Gesendet: Dienstag, 10. Januar 2012 09:53 An: user@cassandra.apache.org Betreff: How to control location of data? Hi! We're evaluating Cassandra for our storage needs. One of the key benefits we see is the online replication of the data, that is an easy way to share data across nodes. But we have the need to precisely control on what node group specific parts of a key space (columns/column families) are stored on. Now we're having trouble understanding the documentation. Could anyone help us with to find some answers to our questions? · What does the term replica mean: If a key is stored on exactly three nodes in a cluster, is it correct then to say that there are three replicas of that key or are there just two replicas (copies) and one original? · What is the relation between the Cassandra concepts Partitioner and Replica