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Cassandra 3.x High Availability

You're reading from   Cassandra 3.x High Availability Achieve scalability and high availability without compromising on performance

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2016
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781786462107
Length 196 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Robbie Strickland Robbie Strickland
Author Profile Icon Robbie Strickland
Robbie Strickland
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Table of Contents (10) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Cassandras Approach to High Availability 2. Data Distribution FREE CHAPTER 3. Replication 4. Data Centers 5. Scaling Out 6. High Availability Features in the Native Java Client 7. Modeling for Availability 8. Anti-Patterns 9. Failing Gracefully

Distributed joins


With relational databases, we write different data entities in their own tables, and then we join them to form the desired view at query time. If we apply this idea to a database like Cassandra, we end up with a distributed join.

New Cassandra developers, especially those who come from a relational database background, are particularly prone to following this pattern. In the last chapter, we mentioned that denormalization is the key to successful data modeling in Cassandra, and our discussion of secondary indices can help explain the reasons for this.

Tip

If you find yourself querying multiple large tables and then joining them in your application based on some shared key, you are performing a distributed join. This should almost always be avoided in favor of a denormalized data model. The only exception is for very small lookup tables that can fit easily in memory. Otherwise, you should always write your data the way you intend to read it.

At this point, you should be familiar...

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