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James Taylor commented on PHOENIX-2221: --------------------------------------- I still feel the same way - use the INDEX_RECOVERY_FAILURE_POLICY_KEY for what it was designed for - setting up a new failure policy. You can always wrap PhoenixIndexFailurePolicy as a delegate and call the original methods (or slightly less ideal, make the private methods protected). > Option to make data regions not writable when index regions are not available > ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- > > Key: PHOENIX-2221 > URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/PHOENIX-2221 > Project: Phoenix > Issue Type: Improvement > Reporter: Devaraj Das > Assignee: Alicia Ying Shu > Attachments: PHOENIX-2221.patch > > > In one usecase, it was deemed better to not accept writes when the index > regions are unavailable for any reason (as opposed to disabling the index and > the queries doing bigger data-table scans). > The idea is that the index regions are kept consistent with the data regions, > and when a query runs against the index regions, one can be reasonably sure > that the query ran with the most recent data in the data regions. When the > index regions are unavailable, the writes to the data table are rejected. > Read queries off of the index regions would have deterministic performance > (and on the other hand if the index is disabled, then the read queries would > have to go to the data regions until the indexes are rebuilt, and the queries > would suffer). -- This message was sent by Atlassian JIRA (v6.3.4#6332)