Ryan,
Thanks for the quick response.

I did see that jira before posting my question on this list. However, I didn’t 
see any information about why 5kb+ data will cause instability. 5kb or even 
50kb seems too small. For example, if each mutation is 1000+ bytes, then with 
just 5 mutations, you will hit that threshold.

In addition, Patrick is saying that he does not recommend more than 100 
mutations per batch. So why not warn users just on the # of mutations in a 
batch?

Mohammed

From: Ryan Svihla [mailto:rsvi...@datastax.com]
Sent: Thursday, December 11, 2014 12:56 PM
To: user@cassandra.apache.org
Subject: Re: batch_size_warn_threshold_in_kb

Nothing magic, just put in there based on experience. You can find the story 
behind the original recommendation here

https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-6487

Key reasoning for the desire comes from Patrick McFadden:

"Yes that was in bytes. Just in my own experience, I don't recommend more than 
~100 mutations per batch. Doing some quick math I came up with 5k as 100 x 50 
byte mutations.

Totally up for debate."

It's totally changeable, however, it's there in no small part because so many 
people confuse the BATCH keyword as a performance optimization, this helps flag 
those cases of misuse.

On Thu, Dec 11, 2014 at 2:43 PM, Mohammed Guller 
<moham...@glassbeam.com<mailto:moham...@glassbeam.com>> wrote:
Hi –
The cassandra.yaml file has property called batch_size_warn_threshold_in_kb.
The default size is 5kb and according to the comments in the yaml file, it is 
used to log WARN on any batch size exceeding this value in kilobytes. It says 
caution should be taken on increasing the size of this threshold as it can lead 
to node instability.

Does anybody know the significance of this magic number 5kb? Why would a higher 
number (say 10kb) lead to node instability?

Mohammed


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Ryan Svihla

Solution Architect

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