druid/examples/cassandra
fjy ac330f72bb first set of changes to standarize the naming convention we use in druid 2013-10-03 16:36:48 -07:00
..
schema Added puller. 2013-05-06 23:14:18 -04:00
README.md first set of changes to standarize the naming convention we use in druid 2013-10-03 16:36:48 -07:00
client.sh Working Push & Pull. 2013-05-07 11:35:14 -04:00
query Examples for the cassandra storage. 2013-05-06 23:41:58 -04:00

README.md

Introduction

Druid can use Cassandra as a deep storage mechanism. Segments and their metadata are stored in Cassandra in two tables: index_storage and descriptor_storage. Underneath the hood, the Cassandra integration leverages Astyanax. The index storage table is a Chunked Object repository. It contains compressed segments for distribution to historical nodes. Since segments can be large, the Chunked Object storage allows the integration to multi-thread the write to Cassandra, and spreads the data across all the nodes in a cluster. The descriptor storage table is a normal C* table that stores the segment metadatak.

Schema

Below are the create statements for each:

CREATE TABLE index_storage ( key text, chunk text, value blob, PRIMARY KEY (key, chunk)) WITH COMPACT STORAGE;

CREATE TABLE descriptor_storage ( key varchar, lastModified timestamp, descriptor varchar, PRIMARY KEY (key) ) WITH COMPACT STORAGE;

Getting Started

First create the schema above. (I use a new keyspace called druid)

Then, add the following properties to your properties file to enable a Cassandra backend.

druid.storage.cassandra=true
druid.storage.cassandra.host=localhost:9160
druid.storage.cassandra.keyspace=druid

Use the druid-development@googlegroups.com mailing list if you have questions, or feel free to reach out directly: bone@alumni.brown.edu.