Yeah, I didn't mean "normal" as in "what most people use". I meant that
they are not "strange" like Tyler mentions.


2013/3/28 aaron morton <aa...@thelastpickle.com>

> The cleanup operation took several minutes though. This doesn't seem
> normal then
>
> It read all the data and made sure the node was a replica for it. Since a
> single node cluster replicas all data, there was not a lot to throw away.
>
> My replication settings should be very normal (simple strategy and
> replication factor 1).
>
> Most people use the Network Topology Strategy and RF 3, even if they dont
> have multiple DC's.
>
> Cheers
>
> -----------------
> Aaron Morton
> Freelance Cassandra Consultant
> New Zealand
>
> @aaronmorton
> http://www.thelastpickle.com
>
> On 28/03/2013, at 3:34 AM, Joel Samuelsson <samuelsson.j...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
> I see. The cleanup operation took several minutes though. This doesn't
> seem normal then? My replication settings should be very normal (simple
> strategy and replication factor 1).
>
>
> 2013/3/26 Tyler Hobbs <ty...@datastax.com>
>
>>
>> On Tue, Mar 26, 2013 at 5:39 AM, Joel Samuelsson <
>> samuelsson.j...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Sorry. I failed to mention that all my CFs had a gc_grace_seconds of 0
>>> since it's a 1 node cluster. I managed to accomplish what I wanted by first
>>>  running cleanup and then compact. Is there any logic to this or should my
>>> tombstones be cleared by just running compact?
>>
>>
>> There's nothing for cleanup to do on a single node cluster (unless you've
>> changed your replication settings in a strange way, like setting no
>> replicas for a keyspace).  Just doing a major compaction will take care of
>> tombstones that are gc_grace_seconds old.
>>
>>
>> --
>> Tyler Hobbs
>> DataStax <http://datastax.com/>
>>
>
>
>

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