Book Image

Mastering Apache Cassandra 3.x - Third Edition

By : Aaron Ploetz, Tejaswi Malepati, Nishant Neeraj
Book Image

Mastering Apache Cassandra 3.x - Third Edition

By: Aaron Ploetz, Tejaswi Malepati, Nishant Neeraj

Overview of this book

With ever-increasing rates of data creation, the demand for storing data fast and reliably becomes a need. Apache Cassandra is the perfect choice for building fault-tolerant and scalable databases. Mastering Apache Cassandra 3.x teaches you how to build and architect your clusters, configure and work with your nodes, and program in a high-throughput environment, helping you understand the power of Cassandra as per the new features. Once you’ve covered a brief recap of the basics, you’ll move on to deploying and monitoring a production setup and optimizing and integrating it with other software. You’ll work with the advanced features of CQL and the new storage engine in order to understand how they function on the server-side. You’ll explore the integration and interaction of Cassandra components, followed by discovering features such as token allocation algorithm, CQL3, vnodes, lightweight transactions, and data modelling in detail. Last but not least you will get to grips with Apache Spark. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to analyse big data, and build and manage high-performance databases for your application.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)

Other performance considerations

In addition to the performance-tuning options mentioned in the preceding section, there are additional configuration settings that can be adjusted, depending on workload type. Also, it is important to understand that there are use cases for which Apache Cassandra is just not a good fit, and is not likely to perform well regardless of performance tuning. Similarly, there are some parts of the overall platform architecture that may have a direct impact on Apache Cassandra's performance, and little can be done to remedy this.

JVM configuration

In Chapter 4, Configuring a Cluster, configuration of the java virtual machine (specifically, garbage collection) was covered at length. While we won...