Yes, that does help,

So, in the link I provided:

http://www.datastax.com/docs/1.0/references/cql/UPDATE

It states:

You can specify these options:

Consistency level
Time-to-live (TTL)
Timestamp for the written columns.

Where timestamp is a link to "Working with dates and times" and mentions the 
64bit millisecond value.  Is that incorrect?

-Mike

On Apr 28, 2013, at 11:42 AM, Michael Theroux wrote:

> Hello,
> 
> Just wondering if I can get a quick clarification on some simple CQL.  We 
> utilize Thrift CQL Queries to access our cassandra setup.  As clarified in a 
> previous question I had, when using CQL and Thrift, timestamps on the 
> cassandra column data is assigned by the server, not the client, unless "AND 
> TIMESTAMP" is utilized in the query, for example:
> 
> http://www.datastax.com/docs/1.0/references/cql/UPDATE
> 
> According to the Datastax documentation, this timestamp should be:
> 
> "Values serialized with the timestamp type are encoded as 64-bit signed 
> integers representing a number of milliseconds since the standard base time 
> known as the epoch: January 1 1970 at 00:00:00 GMT."
> 
> However, my testing showed that updates didn't work when I used a timestamp 
> of this format.  Looking at the Cassandra code, it appears that cassandra 
> will assign a timestamp of System.currentTimeMillis() * 1000 when a timestamp 
> is not specified, which would be the number of nanoseconds since the stand 
> base time.  In my test environment, setting the timestamp to be the current 
> time * 1000 seems to work.  It seems that if you have an older installation 
> without TIMESTAMP being specified in the CQL,   or a mixed environment, the 
> timestamp should be * 1000.
> 
> Just making sure I'm reading everything properly... improperly setting the 
> timestamp could cause us some serious damage.
> 
> Thanks,
> -Mike
> 
> 

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