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Learning Apache Cassandra

You're reading from   Learning Apache Cassandra Build an efficient, scalable, fault-tolerant, and highly-available data layer into your application using Cassandra

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783989201
Length 246 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Matthew Brown Matthew Brown
Author Profile Icon Matthew Brown
Matthew Brown
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Toc

Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Up and Running with Cassandra FREE CHAPTER 2. The First Table 3. Organizing Related Data 4. Beyond Key-Value Lookup 5. Establishing Relationships 6. Denormalizing Data for Maximum Performance 7. Expanding Your Data Model 8. Collections, Tuples, and User-defined Types 9. Aggregating Time-Series Data 10. How Cassandra Distributes Data A. Peeking Under the Hood B. Authentication and Authorization Index

Summary


In this chapter, we confronted and explored the major issues that stem from Cassandra's masterless, distributed, and replicated architecture. Interacting with Cassandra often feels indistinguishable from working with a single-node data store but, when working with any distributed database, we need to think about the tradeoff between consistency and availability. In some situations, we might be willing to read slightly out-of-date data for the sake of performance and failure tolerance; in others, we will tolerate a higher probability of a request failing in order to ensure that the data we're reading is fully up-to-date.

You learned that the partition key for a row determines not only its physical location in storage, but also which nodes within the cluster store copies of the row. This further motivates the practice of designing our table schemas such that most queries are looking for data grouped under a single partition key.

You discovered how, in a distributed database, deletion...

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