The stress tool doesn't support doing multi-CF batches out of the box. Of course you're free to extend it any way you like to more accurately simulate your workload. (That's one reason we've kept stress.py around -- it's less code to customize, than the Java version.)
On Thu, Oct 20, 2011 at 11:31 AM, Jaiswal Neetu <neetu.jais...@opentv.com>wrote: > Hi,**** > > ** ** > > I installed Cassandra 0.8.7 on a single machine having 16GB RAM. **** > > Testing performance using stress tool. Noticed it creates 2 standard column > families and 2 super column families with the default settings.**** > > I want to test for multiple column families. Is there any way to test it > using this tool?**** > > ** ** > > I tried defining super column 4 and number for of columns 50. But from > Cassandra-cli, I noticed it created default column families (two) and super > column families (two).**** > > I am new to Cassandra and evaluating it for future generation of our > product. **** > > Looking for help. **** > > ** ** > > ** ** > > Thanks & Regards**** > > *_______________________________________** > **Neetu Jaiswal** *| Sr. Database Administrator**** > > 485 Clyde Avenue, Mountain View, CA-94043**** > > [image: cid:image001.jpg@01C8C4C6.16DEFBA0] [image: > NagraVision-Logo] **** > > *[image: cid:image002.jpg@01C8C4C6.16DEFBA0]Think Green***** > > ** ** > -- Jonathan Ellis Project Chair, Apache Cassandra co-founder of DataStax, the source for professional Cassandra support http://www.datastax.com
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