Hi Ryan,
The version of cassandra is 3.0.6 and java version "1.8.0_91" Yuan On Thu, Jul 7, 2016 at 3:11 PM, Ryan Svihla <r...@foundev.pro> wrote: > what version of cassandra and java? > > Regards, > > Ryan Svihla > > On Jul 7, 2016, at 4:51 PM, Yuan Fang <y...@kryptoncloud.com> wrote: > > Yes, here is my stress test result: > Results: > op rate : 12200 [WRITE:12200] > partition rate : 12200 [WRITE:12200] > row rate : 12200 [WRITE:12200] > latency mean : 16.4 [WRITE:16.4] > latency median : 7.1 [WRITE:7.1] > latency 95th percentile : 38.1 [WRITE:38.1] > latency 99th percentile : 204.3 [WRITE:204.3] > latency 99.9th percentile : 465.9 [WRITE:465.9] > latency max : 1408.4 [WRITE:1408.4] > Total partitions : 1000000 [WRITE:1000000] > Total errors : 0 [WRITE:0] > total gc count : 0 > total gc mb : 0 > total gc time (s) : 0 > avg gc time(ms) : NaN > stdev gc time(ms) : 0 > Total operation time : 00:01:21 > END > > On Thu, Jul 7, 2016 at 2:49 PM, Ryan Svihla <r...@foundev.pro> wrote: > >> Lots of variables you're leaving out. >> >> Depends on write size, if you're using logged batch or not, what >> consistency level, what RF, if the writes come in bursts, etc, etc. >> However, that's all sort of moot for determining "normal" really you need a >> baseline as all those variables end up mattering a huge amount. >> >> I would suggest using Cassandra stress as a baseline and go from there >> depending on what those numbers say (just pick the defaults). >> >> Sent from my iPhone >> >> On Jul 7, 2016, at 4:39 PM, Yuan Fang <y...@kryptoncloud.com> wrote: >> >> yes, it is about 8k writes per node. >> >> >> >> On Thu, Jul 7, 2016 at 2:18 PM, daemeon reiydelle <daeme...@gmail.com> >> wrote: >> >>> Are you saying 7k writes per node? or 30k writes per node? >>> >>> >>> *.......* >>> >>> >>> >>> *Daemeon C.M. ReiydelleUSA (+1) 415.501.0198 >>> <%28%2B1%29%20415.501.0198>London (+44) (0) 20 8144 9872 >>> <%28%2B44%29%20%280%29%2020%208144%209872>* >>> >>> On Thu, Jul 7, 2016 at 2:05 PM, Yuan Fang <y...@kryptoncloud.com> wrote: >>> >>>> writes 30k/second is the main thing. >>>> >>>> >>>> On Thu, Jul 7, 2016 at 1:51 PM, daemeon reiydelle <daeme...@gmail.com> >>>> wrote: >>>> >>>>> Assuming you meant 100k, that likely for something with 16mb of >>>>> storage (probably way small) where the data is more that 64k hence will >>>>> not >>>>> fit into the row cache. >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> *.......* >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> *Daemeon C.M. ReiydelleUSA (+1) 415.501.0198 >>>>> <%28%2B1%29%20415.501.0198>London (+44) (0) 20 8144 9872 >>>>> <%28%2B44%29%20%280%29%2020%208144%209872>* >>>>> >>>>> On Thu, Jul 7, 2016 at 1:25 PM, Yuan Fang <y...@kryptoncloud.com> >>>>> wrote: >>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> I have a cluster of 4 m4.xlarge nodes(4 cpus and 16 gb memory and >>>>>> 600GB ssd EBS). >>>>>> I can reach a cluster wide write requests of 30k/second and read >>>>>> request about 100/second. The cluster OS load constantly above 10. Are >>>>>> those normal? >>>>>> >>>>>> Thanks! >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> Best, >>>>>> >>>>>> Yuan >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>> >>>> >>> >> >