Hello,

Having Cassandra in Docker is nice because you don't have anything to
install.

Cassandra can be installed in multiple ways but this is tarball and as such
not for windows.

The Docker hub website is very detailed about what are the options you can
usem which ports to open  (as stated by Rhys)
https://hub.docker.com/_/cassandra/#!

I would propose you to go with docker-compose in a file where everyhing is
already defined for you.

I have attached 2 files. One for a single node and one for 1 dc and 3 nodes
for Cassandra 3.

docker-compose -f cassandra3-1dc-1node.yaml

docker exec -it `docker ps | grep cassandra-node1 | cut -b 1-12` cqlsh

Cheers

On Wed, Jun 3, 2020 at 8:53 AM Erick Ramirez <erick.rami...@datastax.com>
wrote:

> Personally, I'd recommend learning Docker on its own or Cassandra on its
> own. I wouldn't try to do it at the same time if you're new to both
> technologies. It's hard enough as it is for experienced users. If you're
> using both and you run into issues, you will find it difficult to know
> whether the problem is Docker, Cassandra, or both. As always, YMMV. Good
> luck. Cheers!
>
>>

-- 
Cedrick Lunven
e. cedrick.lun...@datastax.com
w. www.datastax.com

Attachment: cassandra3-1dc-3nodes.yaml
Description: application/yaml

Attachment: cassandra3-1dc-1node.yaml
Description: application/yaml

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