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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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Summary


In this chapter, we discussed some common data modeling patterns to avoid. However, it would be impossible to cover every bad choice a user might make, so it's important to focus on understanding the fundamentals of sound design. This will give you a foundation that will allow you to make correct data modeling decisions on whatever problem you may encounter.

As we have also seen in this chapter, sometimes Cassandra isn't the right tool for the problem at hand. Hopefully, you can now recognize when this is the case, and choose the right tool for the right job.

It is now time to wrap up this book by taking a look at ways in which things can go wrong when running Cassandra. While it is a highly fault-tolerant system, you will rest easy if you know what to do when the unexpected happens.

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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