>From my point of view an other problem with using the "standard column
family" for counting is transactions. Cassandra lacks of them, so if you're
multithreaded updating counters, how will you keep track of that? Yes, I'm
aware of software like Zookeeper to do that, however I'm not sure whether
that's the best option.

I think you should stick with Cassandra counter column families.

Best regards,

Robin Verlangen
*Software engineer*
*
*
W http://www.robinverlangen.nl
E ro...@us2.nl

<http://goo.gl/Lt7BC>

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2012/9/25 Roshni Rajagopal <roshni_rajago...@hotmail.com>

>  Thanks for the reply and sorry for being bull - headed.
>
> Once  you're past the stage where you've decided its distributed, and
> NoSQL and cassandra out of all the NoSQL options,
> Now to count something, you can do it in different ways in cassandra.
> In all the ways you want to use cassandra's best features of availability,
> tunable consistency , partition tolerance etc.
>
> Given this, what are the performance tradeoffs of using counters vs a
> standard column family for counting. Because as I see if the counter number
> in a counter column family becomes wrong, it will not be 'eventually
> consistent' - you will need intervention to correct it. So the key aspect
> is how much faster would be a counter column family, and at what numbers do
> we start seing a difference.
>
>
>
>
>
> ------------------------------
> Date: Tue, 25 Sep 2012 07:57:08 +0200
> Subject: Re: Cassandra Counters
> From: oleksandr.pet...@gmail.com
> To: user@cassandra.apache.org
>
>
> Maybe I'm missing the point, but counting in a standard column family
> would be a little overkill.
>
> I assume that "distributed counting" here was more of a map/reduce
> approach, where Hadoop (+ Cascading, Pig, Hive, Cascalog) would help you a
> lot. We're doing some more complex counting (e.q. based on sets of rules)
> like that. Of course, that would perform _way_ slower than counting
> beforehand. On the other side, you will always have a consistent result for
> a consistent dataset.
>
> On the other hand, if you use things like AMQP or Storm (sorry to put up
> my sentence together like that, as tools are mostly either orthogonal or
> complementary, but I hope you get my point), you could build a topology
> that makes fault-tolerant writes independently of your original write. Of
> course, it would still have a consistency tradeoff, mostly because of race
> conditions and different network latencies etc.
>
> So I would say that building a data model in a distributed system often
> depends more on your problem than on the common patterns, because
> everything has a tradeoff.
>
> Want to have an immediate result? Modify your counter while writing the
> row.
> Can sacrifice speed, but have more counting opportunities? Go with offline
> distributed counting.
> Want to have kind of both, dispatch a message and react upon it, having
> the processing logic and writes decoupled from main application, allowing
> you to care less about speed.
>
> However, I may have missed the point somewhere (early morning, you know),
> so I may be wrong in any given statement.
> Cheers
>
>
> On Tue, Sep 25, 2012 at 6:53 AM, Roshni Rajagopal <
> roshni_rajago...@hotmail.com> wrote:
>
>  Thanks Milind,
>
> Has anyone implemented counting in a standard col family in cassandra,
> when you can have increments and decrements to the count.
> Any comparisons in performance to using counter column families?
>
> Regards,
> Roshni
>
>
> ------------------------------
> Date: Mon, 24 Sep 2012 11:02:51 -0700
> Subject: RE: Cassandra Counters
> From: milindpar...@gmail.com
> To: user@cassandra.apache.org
>
>
> IMO
> You would use Cassandra Counters (or other variation of distributed
> counting) in case of having determined that a centralized version of
> counting is not going to work.
> You'd determine the non_feasibility of centralized counting by figuring
> the speed at which you need to sustain writes and reads and reconcile that
> with your hard disk seek times (essentially).
> Once you have "proved" that you can't do centralized counting, the second
> layer of arsenal comes into play; which is distributed counting.
> In distributed counting , the CAP theorem comes into life. & in Cassandra,
> Availability and Network Partitioning trumps over Consistency.
>
> So yes, you sacrifice strong consistency for availability and partion
> tolerance; for eventual consistency.
> On Sep 24, 2012 10:28 AM, "Roshni Rajagopal" <roshni_rajago...@hotmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>  Hi folks,
>
>    I looked at my mail below, and Im rambling a bit, so Ill try to
> re-state my queries pointwise.
>
> a) what are the performance tradeoffs on reads & writes between creating a
> standard column family and manually doing the counts by a lookup on a key,
> versus using counters.
>
> b) whats the current state of counters limitations in the latest version
> of apache cassandra?
>
> c) with there being a possibilty of counter values getting out of sync,
> would counters not be recommended where strong consistency is desired. The
> normal benefits of cassandra's tunable consistency would not be applicable,
> as re-tries may cause overstating. So the normal use case is high
> performance, and where consistency is not paramount.
>
> Regards,
> roshni
>
>
>
> ------------------------------
> From: roshni_rajago...@hotmail.com
> To: user@cassandra.apache.org
> Subject: Cassandra Counters
> Date: Mon, 24 Sep 2012 16:21:55 +0530
>
>  Hi ,
>
> I'm trying to understand if counters are a good fit for my use case.
> Ive watched http://blip.tv/datastax/counters-in-cassandra-5497678 many
> times over now...
> and still need help!
>
> Suppose I have a list of items- to which I can add or delete a set of
> items at a time,  and I want a count of the items, without considering
> changing the database  or additional components like zookeeper,
> I have 2 options_ the first is a counter col family, and the second is a
> standard one
>   1. List_Counter_CF    TotalItems    ListId 50        2.List_Std_CF
>
>     TimeUUID1 TimeUUID2 TimeUUID3 TimeUUID4 TimeUUID5  ListId 3 70 -20 3
> -6
>
> And in the second I can add a new col with every set of items added or
> deleted. Over time this row may grow wide.
> To display the final count, Id need to read the row, slice through all
> columns and add them.
>
> In both cases the writes should be fast, in fact standard col family
> should be faster as there's no read, before write. And for CL ONE write the
> latency should be same.
> For reads, the first option is very good, just read one column for a key
>
> For the second, the read involves reading the row, and adding each column
> value via application code. I dont think there's a way to do math via CQL
> yet.
> There should be not hot spotting, if the key is sharded well. I could even
> maintain the count derived from the List_Std_CF in a separate column family
> which is a standard col family with the final number, but I could do that
> as a separate process  immediately after the write to List_Std_CF
> completes, so that its not blocking.  I understand cassandra is faster for
> writes than reads, but how slow would Reading by row key be...? Is there
> any number around after how many columns the performance starts
> deteriorating, or how much worse in performance it would be?
>
> The advantage I see is that I can use the same consistency rules as for
> the rest of column families. If quorum for reads & writes, then you get
> strongly consistent values.
> In case of counters I see that in case of timeout exceptions because the
> first replica is down or not responding, there's a chance of the values
> getting messed up, and re-trying can mess it up further. Its not idempotent
> like a standard col family design can be.
>
> If it gets messed up, it would need administrator's help (is there a a
> document on how we could resolve counter values going wrong?)
>
> I believe the rest of the limitations still hold good- has anything
> changed in recent versions? In my opinion, they are not as major as the
> consistency question.
> -removing a counter & then modifying value - behaviour is undetermined
> -special process for counter col family sstable loss( need to remove all
> files)
> -no TTL support
> -no secondary indexes
>
>
> In short, I can recommend counters can be used for analytics or while
> dealing with data where the exact numbers are not important, or
> when its ok to take some time to fix the mismatch, and the performance
> requirements are most important.
> However where the numbers should match , its better to use a std column
> family and a manual implementation.
>
> Please share your thoughts on this.
>
> Regards,
> roshni
>
>
>
>
>
> --
> alex p
>

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