Hi Bowen,

Thank you for your help!

So given that we would need to run both incremental and full repair for a
given cluster, is it safe to have both types of repair running for the same
token ranges at the same time? Would it not create a race condition?

Thanks,
Kristijonas

On Fri, Feb 2, 2024 at 3:36 PM Bowen Song via user <
user@cassandra.apache.org> wrote:

> Hi Kristijonas,
>
> To answer your questions:
>
> 1. It's still necessary to run full repair on a cluster on which
> incremental repair is run periodically. The frequency of full repair is
> more of an art than science. Generally speaking, the less reliable the
> storage media, the more frequently full repair should be run. The
> documentation on this topic is available here
> <https://cassandra.apache.org/doc/stable/cassandra/operating/repair.html#incremental-and-full-repairs>
>
> 2. Run incremental repair for the first time on an existing cluster does
> cause Cassandra to re-compact all SSTables, and can lead to disk usage
> spikes. This can be avoided by following the steps mentioned here
> <https://docs.datastax.com/en/cassandra-oss/3.0/cassandra/operations/opsRepairNodesMigration.html>
>
> I hope that helps.
>
> Cheers,
> Bowen
> On 02/02/2024 20:57, Kristijonas Zalys wrote:
>
> Hi folks,
>
> I am working on switching from full to incremental repair in Cassandra
> v4.0.6 (soon to be v4.1.3) and I have a few questions.
>
>
>    1.
>
>    Is it necessary to run regular full repair on a cluster if I already
>    run incremental repair? If yes, what frequency would you recommend for full
>    repair?
>    2.
>
>    Has anyone experienced disk usage spikes while using incremental
>    repair? I have noticed temporary disk footprint increases of up to 2x (from
>    ~15 GiB to ~30 GiB) caused by anti-compaction while testing and am
>    wondering how likely that is to happen in bigger real world use cases?
>
>
> Thank you all in advance!
>
> Kristijonas
>
>

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