On Mon, Aug 3, 2009 at 3:39 PM, Ivan Chang wrote:
> Is this going to be an inherent limitation of Cassandra?
If someone writes a patch that adds multi-version support without
compromising single-version performance then I don't see any reasons
to turn it down.
-Jonathan
You can support this at the domain level with custom comparators, I
think. It doesn't need to be in Cassandra itself as a first-class
operation.
Evan
On Mon, Aug 3, 2009 at 1:39 PM, Ivan Chang wrote:
> Is this going to be an inherent limitation of Cassandra?
>
> There is no doubt many application
Is this going to be an inherent limitation of Cassandra?
There is no doubt many applications will benefit from db with build-in
support for mutliple versions of the same data - features that allow
reversal of operations, applications that require historical data maintained
(e.g. credit/debit appli
It's not moderated (click the login link to get to a signup form).
Changes are sent to the -commits list where anyone interested (like me
:) can review them.
-Jonathan
P.S. sorry for the signup captcha questions -- someone apparently
thought they were cute, but they typically take a bit of googli
Cool. There are a few things I've found out recently that should
probably go into the wiki (this, the fact that get_columns_since
silently returns no results if your column family isn't ordered by
time)... is it moderated at all? Should I run changes by the mailing
list?
On Mon, Aug 3, 2009 at 1
On Mon, Aug 3, 2009 at 12:12 PM, Mark McBride wrote:
> Thanks, that makes sense. Is it an ok general rule that the
> timestamps should be set to
>
> 1) The time that the data to be mutated was generated
> 2) The current system time if the time the data was mutated isn't available
Yes.
> Looking
Strictly speaking, no; timestamp is client-provided.
But in the sense that "you'd better use ntpd on your clients," yes.
On Mon, Aug 3, 2009 at 12:10 PM, Wilson Mar wrote:
> So if different servers are not synchronized in time (to a Tier 1 time
> server), then updates from slower server will not
Thanks, that makes sense. Is it an ok general rule that the
timestamps should be set to
1) The time that the data to be mutated was generated
2) The current system time if the time the data was mutated isn't available
Looking around at code it seems like time 0 is used a lot, which seems
pretty
So if different servers are not synchronized in time (to a Tier 1 time
server), then updates from slower server will not be updated on faster
servers?
It's there for the same reason as the other timestamps: it lets
cassandra ignore obsolete operations. So if you do a delete at time X
and an insert at time Y where X < Y, the insert will not be deleted by
mistake even if a node is down temporarily and gets the delete later.
-Jonathan
On Mon, Aug
If this is the case, what does the timestamp passed in to the remove
call do? I assumed you had to have it match up with a specific
version...
On Mon, Aug 3, 2009 at 9:53 AM, wrote:
> I always thought cassandra had free multiple versions and we needed to
> manually delete the older versions
>
>
I always thought cassandra had free multiple versions and we needed to
manually delete the older versions
On Mon, Aug 3, 2009 at 8:56 AM, Jonathan Ellis wrote:
> On Mon, Aug 3, 2009 at 10:49 AM, Jun Rao wrote:
> > Ivan,
> >
> > The original cassandra keeps multiple versions of the column data.
>
On Mon, Aug 3, 2009 at 10:49 AM, Jun Rao wrote:
> Ivan,
>
> The original cassandra keeps multiple versions of the column data.
No, it didn't. (It had versioning-related bugs but multiple versions
a la Bigtable was never part of the design.)
-Jonathan
versioning support back.
Jun
IBM Almaden Research Center
K55/B1, 650 Harry Road, San Jose, CA 95120-6099
jun...@almaden.ibm.com
Ivan Chang ---08/03/2009 08:24:50 AM---Does Cassandra
support MVCC? I am building an application with concurrent updates
(add, update, dele
From:
Ivan Chang
-|
|08/03/2009 08:24 AM
|
>--|
|>
| Subject: |
|>
>--
Does Cassandra support MVCC?
I am building an application with concurrent updates (add, update, delete)
and one of the requirements is to be able to run audits that reproduce all
the update histories and the data objects in different versions. What's the
best way to go about this in Cass
16 matches
Mail list logo