Remove non-ascii characters from cassandra.yaml introduced by CASSANDRA-13090
patch by Ariel Weisberg; reviewed by Jason Brown for CASSANDRA-13219 Project: http://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf/cassandra/repo Commit: http://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf/cassandra/commit/9a80f803 Tree: http://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf/cassandra/tree/9a80f803 Diff: http://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf/cassandra/diff/9a80f803 Branch: refs/heads/cassandra-3.0 Commit: 9a80f803c2ec9a4a74cb8a99293dc81ef3dc183d Parents: 5725e2c Author: Ariel Weisberg <aweisb...@apple.com> Authored: Tue Feb 14 15:09:20 2017 -0500 Committer: Ariel Weisberg <aweisb...@apple.com> Committed: Tue Feb 14 15:09:20 2017 -0500 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- conf/cassandra.yaml | 6 +++--- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- http://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf/cassandra/blob/9a80f803/conf/cassandra.yaml ---------------------------------------------------------------------- diff --git a/conf/cassandra.yaml b/conf/cassandra.yaml index ddb7927..41c1fb1 100644 --- a/conf/cassandra.yaml +++ b/conf/cassandra.yaml @@ -892,10 +892,10 @@ windows_timer_interval: 1 # Coalescing Strategies # # Coalescing multiples messages turns out to significantly boost message processing throughput (think doubling or more). -# On bare metal, the floor for packet processing throughput is high enough that many applications wonât notice, but in +# On bare metal, the floor for packet processing throughput is high enough that many applications won't notice, but in # virtualized environments, the point at which an application can be bound by network packet processing can be -# surprisingly low compared to the throughput of task processing that is possible inside a VM. Itâs not that bare metal -# doesnât benefit from coalescing messages, itâs that the number of packets a bare metal network interface can process +# surprisingly low compared to the throughput of task processing that is possible inside a VM. It's not that bare metal +# doesn't benefit from coalescing messages, it's that the number of packets a bare metal network interface can process # is sufficient for many applications such that no load starvation is experienced even without coalescing. # There are other benefits to coalescing network messages that are harder to isolate with a simple metric like messages # per second. By coalescing multiple tasks together, a network thread can process multiple messages for the cost of one