[ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-8345?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel ]
Sylvain Lebresne resolved CASSANDRA-8345. ----------------------------------------- Resolution: Won't Fix While we could do this in theory, having driver do an extra query to get the details is really not a big deal so I don't think it's worth the additional complexity for the binary protocol. > Client notifications should carry the entire delta of the information that > changed > ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- > > Key: CASSANDRA-8345 > URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-8345 > Project: Cassandra > Issue Type: Improvement > Reporter: Michaël Figuière > Labels: protocolv4 > > Currently when the schema changes, a {{SCHEMA_CHANGE}} notification is sent > to the client to let it know that a modification happened in a specific table > or keyspace. If the client register for these notifications, this is likely > that it actually cares to have an up to date version of this information, so > the next step is logically for the client to query the {{system}} keyspace to > retrieve the latest version of the schema for the particular element that was > mentioned in the notification. > The same thing happen with the {{TOPOLOGY_CHANGE}} notification as the client > will follow up with a query to retrieve the details that changed in the > {{system.peers}} table. > It would be interesting to send the entire delta of the information that > changed within the notification. I see several advantages with this: > * This would ensure that the data that are sent to the client are as small as > possible as such a delta will always be smaller than the resultset that would > eventually be received for a formal query on the {{system}} keyspace. > * This avoid the Cassandra node to receive plenty of query after it issue a > notification but rather to prepare a delta once and send it to everybody. > * This should improve the overall behaviour when dealing with very large > schemas with frequent changes (typically due to a tentative of implementing > multitenancy through separate keyspaces), as it has been observed that the > the notifications and subsequent queries traffic can become non negligible in > this case. > * This would eventually simplify the driver design by removing the need for > an extra asynchronous operation to follow up with, although the benefit of > this point will be real only once the previous versions of the protocols are > far behind. -- This message was sent by Atlassian JIRA (v6.3.4#6332)