I'm afraid we can't see your images. (likely the ML is stripping it?) When you create a new service you should see "/" znode. "/zookeeper" is special and exists for the system to provide you information.
You can create "/foo" and children of "/foo" such as "/foo/bar" or just create "/bar", it's up to you. Perhaps I'm misunderstanding given I can't see the images to which you refer. I'm not sure the question you need answered, perhaps you can rephrase? Regards, Patrick On Tue, Oct 29, 2013 at 8:47 AM, Techy Teck <[email protected]> wrote: > Can anyone help me on this question? Thanks for the help.. > > > On Mon, Oct 28, 2013 at 8:53 PM, Techy Teck <[email protected]> wrote: > >> Attaching an image on this email thread, if image is not clear on my >> earlier email.. >> >> >> On Mon, Oct 28, 2013 at 8:49 PM, Techy Teck <[email protected]>wrote: >> >>> I recently started working with Zookeeper so I am trying to clear my >>> understanding on znodes and zookeeper as well.. I am trying to create znode >>> architecture something like in my below image - >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> I am wondering what does black color slash means here? It's the top znode >>> in the Zookeeper? Whenever I start the zkConsole, and I do `ls /`, I always >>> see [zookeeper] in the list of znodes.. So this black color slash is the >>> zookeeper node here, which I always get when I do `ls /` ? >>> >>> Secondly, when we create znodes, how do I create persistent znodes? >>> something like this should be fine for creating persistent nodes - >>> >>> create /te >>> >>> And here in my diagram I have children of `te` as `v1` and `colo`, so I >>> will be creating znodes as `/te/v1` and `/te/colo`? If yes, then why not, >>> we can create znodes as `/v1` and `/colo`, why we always prepend the parent >>> names with child nodes here?sx >>> >>> Sorry if I am asking dumb question here.. I have already read zookeeper >>> tutorial so I got some basic question on it.. Any help will be appreciated >>> on this.. Thanks.. >>> >> >>
