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You're reading from  Cassandra High Availability

Product typeBook
Published inDec 2014
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781783989126
Edition1st Edition
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Author (1)
Robbie Strickland
Robbie Strickland
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Robbie Strickland

Robbie Strickland has been involved in the Apache Cassandra project since 2010, and he initially went to production with the 0.5 release. He has made numerous contributions over the years, including work on drivers for C# and Scala and multiple contributions to the core Cassandra codebase. In 2013 he became the very first certified Cassandra developer, and in 2014 DataStax selected him as an Apache Cassandra MVP. Robbie has been an active speaker and writer in the Cassandra community and is the founder of the Atlanta Cassandra Users Group. Other examples of his writing can be found on the DataStax blog, and he has presented numerous webinars and conference talks over the years.
Read more about Robbie Strickland

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How collections are stored


The introduction of collections to CQL addresses some of the concerns that frequently arose regarding Cassandra's primitive data model. They add richer capabilities that give developers more flexibility when modeling certain types of data.

Cassandra supports three collection types: sets, lists, and maps. In this section, we will examine each of these and take a look at how they're stored under the hood. But first, it's important to understand some basic rules regarding collections:

  • The size of each item in a collection must not be more than 64 KB

  • A maximum of 64,000 items may be stored in a single collection

  • Querying a collection always returns the entire collection

  • Collections are best used for relatively small, bounded datasets

With those rules in mind, we can examine each type of collection in detail, starting with sets.

Sets

A set in CQL is very similar to a set in your favorite programming language. It is a unique collection of items. This means that it does not allow...

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Cassandra High Availability
Published in: Dec 2014Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781783989126

Author (1)

author image
Robbie Strickland

Robbie Strickland has been involved in the Apache Cassandra project since 2010, and he initially went to production with the 0.5 release. He has made numerous contributions over the years, including work on drivers for C# and Scala and multiple contributions to the core Cassandra codebase. In 2013 he became the very first certified Cassandra developer, and in 2014 DataStax selected him as an Apache Cassandra MVP. Robbie has been an active speaker and writer in the Cassandra community and is the founder of the Atlanta Cassandra Users Group. Other examples of his writing can be found on the DataStax blog, and he has presented numerous webinars and conference talks over the years.
Read more about Robbie Strickland