Thanks Anil. We are using hbase on s3. Yes, I understand 18000 is very high. We are in the process of reducing it.
If I have a snapshot and I restore the table from this snapshot. Let's call this table t1. I then clone another table from the same snapshot, call it t2. If I reduce the max versions of t2 and run a major compaction on t2, will I see the decrease in table size for t2? If I compare the size of t2 and t1, I should see a smaller size for t2? Thanks. Antonio. On Sun, Aug 26, 2018 at 3:33 PM Anil Gupta <[email protected]> wrote: > You will need to do major compaction on table for the table to > clean/delete up extra version. > Btw, 18000 max version is a unusually high value. > > Are you using hbase on s3 or hbase on hdfs? > > Sent from my iPhone > > > On Aug 26, 2018, at 2:34 PM, Antonio Si <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > Hello, > > > > I have a hbase table whose definition has a max number of versions set to > > 36000. > > I have verified that there are rows which have more than 20000 versions > > saved. > > > > Now, I change the definition of the table and reduce the max number of > > versions to 18000. Will I see the size of the table being reduced as I am > > not seeing that? > > > > Also, after I reduce the max number of versions, I try to create a > > snapshot, but I am getting a > > com.amazon.ws.emr.hadoop.fs.shaded.com.amazonaws.services.s3.mo > > > > del.AmazonS3Exception: Not Found (Service: Amazon S3; Status Code: 404; > > Error Code: 404 Not Found; > > > > > > What may be the cause of that? > > > > I am using s3 as my storage. > > > > > > Thanks in advance for your suggestions. > > > > > > Antonio. >
