2013-03-19 14 views
5

Bir C# istemcisinden bir VM içinde çalışan bir Ubuntu masaüstünde yüklü DataStax 3.0 kuruluşuna bağlanmaya çalışıyorum (nezaket CassandraSharp). Orada belgelere gereğince CQL İkili Protokolünü Etkinleştirme YAMLException'ı atar: Özellik bulunamadı - ubuntu'daki DataStax 3.0 yüklemesinde

, ( "Cassandra cassandra keskin kullanmak için cassandra.yaml bu özelliği etkinleştirmek için varsayılan olarak CQL İkili Protokolü (1.2-RC2 itibariyle). Sen gelmiş izin vermez") Ben "start_native_transport: true" Bu girdi tanıtıldı cassandra.yaml içine ve ben Ubuntu terminalinden hizmet başlattığınızda, bu hatayı alıyorum:

INFO 02:57:53,734 Loading settings from file:/etc/dse/cassandra/cassandra.yaml ERROR 02:57:55,834 Fatal configuration error error Can't construct a java object for tag:yaml.org,2002:org.apache.cassandra.config.Config; exception=Cannot create property=start_native_transport for [email protected]; Unable to find property 'start_native_transport' on class: org.apache.cassandra.config.Config

bir fikrin nasıl DataStax Cassandra'ya ikili protokolünü etkinleştirmek için? Yoksa yanlış bir şey yapıyorum? Yapılandırma dosyasında belirli bir yer var mı - linux için yeniyim! sorulan burada tam yaml dosyası:

# Cassandra storage config YAML 


# The name of the cluster. This is mainly used to prevent machines in 
# one logical cluster from joining another. 
cluster_name: 'Test Cluster' 

initial_token: 

hinted_handoff_enabled: true 

max_hint_window_in_ms: 3600000 # one hour 

hinted_handoff_throttle_delay_in_ms: 1 



# authentication backend, implementing IAuthenticator; used to identify users 
authenticator: org.apache.cassandra.auth.AllowAllAuthenticator 
#authenticator: com.datastax.bdp.cassandra.auth.PasswordAuthenticator 
#authenticator: com.datastax.bdp.cassandra.auth.KerberosAuthenticator 

# authorization backend, implementing IAuthorizer; used to limit access/provide permissions 
authorizer: org.apache.cassandra.auth.AllowAllAuthorizer 
#authorizer: com.datastax.bdp.cassandra.auth.CassandraAuthorizer 

permissions_validity_in_ms: 2000 

# Replication strategy to use for the auth keyspace. 
auth_replication_strategy: org.apache.cassandra.locator.SimpleStrategy 

# Replication options to use for the auth keyspace. 
auth_replication_options: 
    replication_factor: 1 

# The partitioner is responsible for distributing rows (by key) across 
# nodes in the cluster. Any IPartitioner may be used, including your 
# own as long as it is on the classpath. Out of the box, Cassandra 
# provides org.apache.cassandra.dht.RandomPartitioner 
# org.apache.cassandra.dht.ByteOrderedPartitioner, 
# org.apache.cassandra.dht.OrderPreservingPartitioner (deprecated), 
# and org.apache.cassandra.dht.CollatingOrderPreservingPartitioner 
# (deprecated). 
# 
# - RandomPartitioner distributes rows across the cluster evenly by md5. 
# When in doubt, this is the best option. 
# - ByteOrderedPartitioner orders rows lexically by key bytes. BOP allows 
# scanning rows in key order, but the ordering can generate hot spots 
# for sequential insertion workloads. 
# - OrderPreservingPartitioner is an obsolete form of BOP, that stores 
# - keys in a less-efficient format and only works with keys that are 
# UTF8-encoded Strings. 
# - CollatingOPP colates according to EN,US rules rather than lexical byte 
# ordering. Use this as an example if you need custom collation. 
# 
# See http://wiki.apache.org/cassandra/Operations for more on 
# partitioners and token selection. 
partitioner: org.apache.cassandra.dht.RandomPartitioner 

# directories where Cassandra should store data on disk. 
data_file_directories: 
    - /var/lib/cassandra/data 

# commit log 
commitlog_directory: /var/lib/cassandra/commitlog 

# Maximum size of the key cache in memory. 
# 
# Each key cache hit saves 1 seek and each row cache hit saves 2 seeks at the 
# minimum, sometimes more. The key cache is fairly tiny for the amount of 
# time it saves, so it's worthwhile to use it at large numbers. 
# The row cache saves even more time, but must store the whole values of 
# its rows, so it is extremely space-intensive. It's best to only use the 
# row cache if you have hot rows or static rows. 
# 
# NOTE: if you reduce the size, you may not get you hottest keys loaded on startup. 
# 
# Default value is empty to make it "auto" (min(5% of Heap (in MB), 100MB)). Set to 0 to disable key cache. 
key_cache_size_in_mb: 

# Duration in seconds after which Cassandra should 
# safe the keys cache. Caches are saved to saved_caches_directory as 
# specified in this configuration file. 
# 
# Saved caches greatly improve cold-start speeds, and is relatively cheap in 
# terms of I/O for the key cache. Row cache saving is much more expensive and 
# has limited use. 
# 
# Default is 14400 or 4 hours. 
key_cache_save_period: 14400 

# Number of keys from the key cache to save 
# Disabled by default, meaning all keys are going to be saved 
# key_cache_keys_to_save: 100 

# Maximum size of the row cache in memory. 
# NOTE: if you reduce the size, you may not get you hottest keys loaded on startup. 
# 
# Default value is 0, to disable row caching. 
row_cache_size_in_mb: 0 

# Duration in seconds after which Cassandra should 
# safe the row cache. Caches are saved to saved_caches_directory as specified 
# in this configuration file. 
# 
# Saved caches greatly improve cold-start speeds, and is relatively cheap in 
# terms of I/O for the key cache. Row cache saving is much more expensive and 
# has limited use. 
# 
# Default is 0 to disable saving the row cache. 
row_cache_save_period: 0 

# Number of keys from the row cache to save 
# Disabled by default, meaning all keys are going to be saved 
# row_cache_keys_to_save: 100 

# The provider for the row cache to use. 
# 
# Supported values are: ConcurrentLinkedHashCacheProvider, SerializingCacheProvider 
# 
# SerializingCacheProvider serialises the contents of the row and stores 
# it in native memory, i.e., off the JVM Heap. Serialized rows take 
# significantly less memory than "live" rows in the JVM, so you can cache 
# more rows in a given memory footprint. And storing the cache off-heap 
# means you can use smaller heap sizes, reducing the impact of GC pauses. 
# 
# It is also valid to specify the fully-qualified class name to a class 
# that implements org.apache.cassandra.cache.IRowCacheProvider. 
# 
# Defaults to SerializingCacheProvider 
row_cache_provider: SerializingCacheProvider 

# saved caches 
saved_caches_directory: /var/lib/cassandra/saved_caches 

# commitlog_sync may be either "periodic" or "batch." 
# When in batch mode, Cassandra won't ack writes until the commit log 
# has been fsynced to disk. It will wait up to 
# commitlog_sync_batch_window_in_ms milliseconds for other writes, before 
# performing the sync. 
# 
# commitlog_sync: batch 
# commitlog_sync_batch_window_in_ms: 50 
# 
# the other option is "periodic" where writes may be acked immediately 
# and the CommitLog is simply synced every commitlog_sync_period_in_ms 
# milliseconds. 
commitlog_sync: periodic 
commitlog_sync_period_in_ms: 10000 

# The size of the individual commitlog file segments. A commitlog 
# segment may be archived, deleted, or recycled once all the data 
# in it (potentally from each columnfamily in the system) has been 
# flushed to sstables. 
# 
# The default size is 32, which is almost always fine, but if you are 
# archiving commitlog segments (see commitlog_archiving.properties), 
# then you probably want a finer granularity of archiving; 8 or 16 MB 
# is reasonable. 
commitlog_segment_size_in_mb: 32 

# any class that implements the SeedProvider interface and has a 
# constructor that takes a Map<String, String> of parameters will do. 
seed_provider: 
    # Addresses of hosts that are deemed contact points. 
    # Cassandra nodes use this list of hosts to find each other and learn 
    # the topology of the ring. You must change this if you are running 
    # multiple nodes! 
    - class_name: org.apache.cassandra.locator.SimpleSeedProvider 
     parameters: 
      # seeds is actually a comma-delimited list of addresses. 
      # Ex: "<ip1>,<ip2>,<ip3>" 
      - seeds: "127.0.0.1" 

# emergency pressure valve: each time heap usage after a full (CMS) 
# garbage collection is above this fraction of the max, Cassandra will 
# flush the largest memtables. 
# 
# Set to 1.0 to disable. Setting this lower than 
# CMSInitiatingOccupancyFraction is not likely to be useful. 
# 
# RELYING ON THIS AS YOUR PRIMARY TUNING MECHANISM WILL WORK POORLY: 
# it is most effective under light to moderate load, or read-heavy 
# workloads; under truly massive write load, it will often be too 
# little, too late. 
flush_largest_memtables_at: 0.75 

# emergency pressure valve #2: the first time heap usage after a full 
# (CMS) garbage collection is above this fraction of the max, 
# Cassandra will reduce cache maximum _capacity_ to the given fraction 
# of the current _size_. Should usually be set substantially above 
# flush_largest_memtables_at, since that will have less long-term 
# impact on the system. 
# 
# Set to 1.0 to disable. Setting this lower than 
# CMSInitiatingOccupancyFraction is not likely to be useful. 
reduce_cache_sizes_at: 0.85 
reduce_cache_capacity_to: 0.6 

# For workloads with more data than can fit in memory, Cassandra's 
# bottleneck will be reads that need to fetch data from 
# disk. "concurrent_reads" should be set to (16 * number_of_drives) in 
# order to allow the operations to enqueue low enough in the stack 
# that the OS and drives can reorder them. 
# 
# On the other hand, since writes are almost never IO bound, the ideal 
# number of "concurrent_writes" is dependent on the number of cores in 
# your system; (8 * number_of_cores) is a good rule of thumb. 
concurrent_reads: 32 
concurrent_writes: 32 

# Total memory to use for memtables. Cassandra will flush the largest 
# memtable when this much memory is used. 
# If omitted, Cassandra will set it to 1/3 of the heap. 
# memtable_total_space_in_mb: 2048 

# Total space to use for commitlogs. Since commitlog segments are 
# mmapped, and hence use up address space, the default size is 32 
# on 32-bit JVMs, and 1024 on 64-bit JVMs. 
# 
# If space gets above this value (it will round up to the next nearest 
# segment multiple), Cassandra will flush every dirty CF in the oldest 
# segment and remove it. So a small total commitlog space will tend 
# to cause more flush activity on less-active columnfamilies. 
# commitlog_total_space_in_mb: 4096 

# This sets the amount of memtable flush writer threads. These will 
# be blocked by disk io, and each one will hold a memtable in memory 
# while blocked. If you have a large heap and many data directories, 
# you can increase this value for better flush performance. 
# By default this will be set to the amount of data directories defined. 
#memtable_flush_writers: 1 

# the number of full memtables to allow pending flush, that is, 
# waiting for a writer thread. At a minimum, this should be set to 
# the maximum number of secondary indexes created on a single CF. 
memtable_flush_queue_size: 4 

# Whether to, when doing sequential writing, fsync() at intervals in 
# order to force the operating system to flush the dirty 
# buffers. Enable this to avoid sudden dirty buffer flushing from 
# impacting read latencies. Almost always a good idea on SSD:s; not 
# necessarily on platters. 
trickle_fsync: false 
trickle_fsync_interval_in_kb: 10240 

# TCP port, for commands and data 
storage_port: 7000 

# SSL port, for encrypted communication. Unused unless enabled in 
# encryption_options 
ssl_storage_port: 7001 

# Address to bind to and tell other Cassandra nodes to connect to. You 
# _must_ change this if you want multiple nodes to be able to 
# communicate! 
# 
# Leaving it blank leaves it up to InetAddress.getLocalHost(). This 
# will always do the Right Thing *if* the node is properly configured 
# (hostname, name resolution, etc), and the Right Thing is to use the 
# address associated with the hostname (it might not be). 
# 
# Setting this to 0.0.0.0 is always wrong. 
#listen_address: localhost -- commented by nachi 19Mar2013 
listen_address: 192.168.42.236 

# Address to broadcast to other Cassandra nodes 
# Leaving this blank will set it to the same value as listen_address 
# broadcast_address: 1.2.3.4 

# The address to bind the Thrift RPC service to -- clients connect 
# here. Unlike ListenAddress above, you *can* specify 0.0.0.0 here if 
# you want Thrift to listen on all interfaces. 
# 
# Leaving this blank has the same effect it does for ListenAddress, 
# (i.e. it will be based on the configured hostname of the node). 
#rpc_address: 0.0.0.0 -- commented by nachi on 19Mar2013 
rpc_address: 192.168.42.236 
# port for Thrift to listen for clients on 
rpc_port: 9160 

# enable or disable keepalive on rpc connections 
rpc_keepalive: true 

# Cassandra provides three options for the RPC Server: 
# 
# sync -> One connection per thread in the rpc pool (see below). 
#   For a very large number of clients, memory will be your limiting 
#   factor; on a 64 bit JVM, 128KB is the minimum stack size per thread. 
#   Connection pooling is very, very strongly recommended. 
# 
# async -> Nonblocking server implementation with one thread to serve 
#   rpc connections. This is not recommended for high throughput use 
#   cases. Async has been tested to be about 50% slower than sync 
#   or hsha and is deprecated: it will be removed in the next major release. 
# 
# hsha -> Stands for "half synchronous, half asynchronous." The rpc thread pool 
#   (see below) is used to manage requests, but the threads are multiplexed 
#   across the different clients. 
# 
# The default is sync because on Windows hsha is about 30% slower. On Linux, 
# sync/hsha performance is about the same, with hsha of course using less memory. 
rpc_server_type: sync 

# Uncomment rpc_min|max|thread to set request pool size. 
# You would primarily set max for the sync server to safeguard against 
# misbehaved clients; if you do hit the max, Cassandra will block until one 
# disconnects before accepting more. The defaults for sync are min of 16 and max 
# unlimited. 
# 
# For the Hsha server, the min and max both default to quadruple the number of 
# CPU cores. 
# 
# This configuration is ignored by the async server. 
# 
# rpc_min_threads: 16 
# rpc_max_threads: 2048 

# uncomment to set socket buffer sizes on rpc connections 
# rpc_send_buff_size_in_bytes: 
# rpc_recv_buff_size_in_bytes: 

# Frame size for thrift (maximum field length). 
# 0 disables TFramedTransport in favor of TSocket. This option 
# is deprecated; we strongly recommend using Framed mode. 
thrift_framed_transport_size_in_mb: 15 
start_native_transport: true 
# added by nac to enable binary protocol that suppofrts async stuff 


# The max length of a thrift message, including all fields and 
# internal thrift overhead. 
thrift_max_message_length_in_mb: 16 

# Set to true to have Cassandra create a hard link to each sstable 
# flushed or streamed locally in a backups/ subdirectory of the 
# Keyspace data. Removing these links is the operator's 
# responsibility. 
incremental_backups: false 

# Whether or not to take a snapshot before each compaction. Be 
# careful using this option, since Cassandra won't clean up the 
# snapshots for you. Mostly useful if you're paranoid when there 
# is a data format change. 
snapshot_before_compaction: false 

# Whether or not a snapshot is taken of the data before keyspace truncation 
# or dropping of column families. The STRONGLY advised default of true 
# should be used to provide data safety. If you set this flag to false, you will 
# lose data on truncation or drop. 
auto_snapshot: true 

# Add column indexes to a row after its contents reach this size. 
# Increase if your column values are large, or if you have a very large 
# number of columns. The competing causes are, Cassandra has to 
# deserialize this much of the row to read a single column, so you want 
# it to be small - at least if you do many partial-row reads - but all 
# the index data is read for each access, so you don't want to generate 
# that wastefully either. 
column_index_size_in_kb: 64 

# Size limit for rows being compacted in memory. Larger rows will spill 
# over to disk and use a slower two-pass compaction process. A message 
# will be logged specifying the row key. 
in_memory_compaction_limit_in_mb: 64 

# Number of simultaneous compactions to allow, NOT including 
# validation "compactions" for anti-entropy repair. Simultaneous 
# compactions can help preserve read performance in a mixed read/write 
# workload, by mitigating the tendency of small sstables to accumulate 
# during a single long running compactions. The default is usually 
# fine and if you experience problems with compaction running too 
# slowly or too fast, you should look at 
# compaction_throughput_mb_per_sec first. 
# 
# This setting has no effect on LeveledCompactionStrategy. 
# 
# concurrent_compactors defaults to the number of cores. 
# Uncomment to make compaction mono-threaded, the pre-0.8 default. 
#concurrent_compactors: 1 

# Multi-threaded compaction. When enabled, each compaction will use 
# up to one thread per core, plus one thread per sstable being merged. 
# This is usually only useful for SSD-based hardware: otherwise, 
# your concern is usually to get compaction to do LESS i/o (see: 
# compaction_throughput_mb_per_sec), not more. 
multithreaded_compaction: false 

# Throttles compaction to the given total throughput across the entire 
# system. The faster you insert data, the faster you need to compact in 
# order to keep the sstable count down, but in general, setting this to 
# 16 to 32 times the rate you are inserting data is more than sufficient. 
# Setting this to 0 disables throttling. Note that this account for all types 
# of compaction, including validation compaction. 
compaction_throughput_mb_per_sec: 16 

# Track cached row keys during compaction, and re-cache their new 
# positions in the compacted sstable. Disable if you use really large 
# key caches. 
compaction_preheat_key_cache: true 

# Throttles all outbound streaming file transfers on this node to the 
# given total throughput in Mbps. This is necessary because Cassandra does 
# mostly sequential IO when streaming data during bootstrap or repair, which 
# can lead to saturating the network connection and degrading rpc performance. 
# When unset, the default is 400 Mbps or 50 MB/s. 
# stream_throughput_outbound_megabits_per_sec: 400 

# Time to wait for a reply from other nodes before failing the command 
rpc_timeout_in_ms: 10000 

# Enable socket timeout for streaming operation. 
# When a timeout occurs during streaming, streaming is retried from the start 
# of the current file. This *can* involve re-streaming an important amount of 
# data, so you should avoid setting the value too low. 
# Default value is 0, which never timeout streams. 
# streaming_socket_timeout_in_ms: 0 

# phi value that must be reached for a host to be marked down. 
# most users should never need to adjust this. 
# phi_convict_threshold: 8 

# endpoint_snitch -- Set this to a class that implements 
# IEndpointSnitch. The snitch has two functions: 
# - it teaches Cassandra enough about your network topology to route 
# requests efficiently 
# - it allows Cassandra to spread replicas around your cluster to avoid 
# correlated failures. It does this by grouping machines into 
# "datacenters" and "racks." Cassandra will do its best not to have 
# more than one replica on the same "rack" (which may not actually 
# be a physical location) 
# 
# IF YOU CHANGE THE SNITCH AFTER DATA IS INSERTED INTO THE CLUSTER, 
# YOU MUST RUN A FULL REPAIR, SINCE THE SNITCH AFFECTS WHERE REPLICAS 
# ARE PLACED. 
# 
# Out of the box, Cassandra provides 
# - SimpleSnitch: 
# Treats Strategy order as proximity. This improves cache locality 
# when disabling read repair, which can further improve throughput. 
# Only appropriate for single-datacenter deployments. 
# - PropertyFileSnitch: 
# Proximity is determined by rack and data center, which are 
# explicitly configured in cassandra-topology.properties. 
# - GossipingPropertyFileSnitch 
# The rack and datacenter for the local node are defined in 
# cassandra-rackdc.properties and propagated to other nodes via gossip. If 
# cassandra-topology.properties exists, it is used as a fallback, allowing 
# migration from the PropertyFileSnitch. 
# - RackInferringSnitch: 
# Proximity is determined by rack and data center, which are 
# assumed to correspond to the 3rd and 2nd octet of each node's 
# IP address, respectively. Unless this happens to match your 
# deployment conventions (as it did Facebook's), this is best used 
# as an example of writing a custom Snitch class. 
# - Ec2Snitch: 
# Appropriate for EC2 deployments in a single Region. Loads Region 
# and Availability Zone information from the EC2 API. The Region is 
# treated as the Datacenter, and the Availability Zone as the rack. 
# Only private IPs are used, so this will not work across multiple 
# Regions. 
# - Ec2MultiRegionSnitch: 
# Uses public IPs as broadcast_address to allow cross-region 
# connectivity. (Thus, you should set seed addresses to the public 
# IP as well.) You will need to open the storage_port or 
# ssl_storage_port on the public IP firewall. (For intra-Region 
# traffic, Cassandra will switch to the private IP after 
# establishing a connection.) 
# DataStax Enterprise provides 
# - com.datastax.bdp.snitch.DseDelegateSnitch: 
# Proximity is determined by the settings in dse.yaml:delegated_snitch to 
# allow DSE to add location aware functionality. This is required for DSE. 
# 
# You can use a custom Snitch by setting this to the full class name 
# of the snitch, which will be assumed to be on your classpath. 
endpoint_snitch: com.datastax.bdp.snitch.DseDelegateSnitch 

# controls how often to perform the more expensive part of host score 
# calculation 
dynamic_snitch_update_interval_in_ms: 100 
# controls how often to reset all host scores, allowing a bad host to 
# possibly recover 
dynamic_snitch_reset_interval_in_ms: 600000 
# if set greater than zero and read_repair_chance is < 1.0, this will allow 
# 'pinning' of replicas to hosts in order to increase cache capacity. 
# The badness threshold will control how much worse the pinned host has to be 
# before the dynamic snitch will prefer other replicas over it. This is 
# expressed as a double which represents a percentage. Thus, a value of 
# 0.2 means Cassandra would continue to prefer the static snitch values 
# until the pinned host was 20% worse than the fastest. 
dynamic_snitch_badness_threshold: 0.1 

# request_scheduler -- Set this to a class that implements 
# RequestScheduler, which will schedule incoming client requests 
# according to the specific policy. This is useful for multi-tenancy 
# with a single Cassandra cluster. 
# NOTE: This is specifically for requests from the client and does 
# not affect inter node communication. 
# org.apache.cassandra.scheduler.NoScheduler - No scheduling takes place 
# org.apache.cassandra.scheduler.RoundRobinScheduler - Round robin of 
# client requests to a node with a separate queue for each 
# request_scheduler_id. The scheduler is further customized by 
# request_scheduler_options as described below. 
request_scheduler: org.apache.cassandra.scheduler.NoScheduler 

# Scheduler Options vary based on the type of scheduler 
# NoScheduler - Has no options 
# RoundRobin 
# - throttle_limit -- The throttle_limit is the number of in-flight 
#      requests per client. Requests beyond 
#      that limit are queued up until 
#      running requests can complete. 
#      The value of 80 here is twice the number of 
#      concurrent_reads + concurrent_writes. 
# - default_weight -- default_weight is optional and allows for 
#      overriding the default which is 1. 
# - weights -- Weights are optional and will default to 1 or the 
#    overridden default_weight. The weight translates into how 
#    many requests are handled during each turn of the 
#    RoundRobin, based on the scheduler id. 
# 
# request_scheduler_options: 
# throttle_limit: 80 
# default_weight: 5 
# weights: 
#  Keyspace1: 1 
#  Keyspace2: 5 

# request_scheduler_id -- An identifer based on which to perform 
# the request scheduling. Currently the only valid option is keyspace. 
# request_scheduler_id: keyspace 

# index_interval controls the sampling of entries from the primrary 
# row index in terms of space versus time. The larger the interval, 
# the smaller and less effective the sampling will be. In technicial 
# terms, the interval coresponds to the number of index entries that 
# are skipped between taking each sample. All the sampled entries 
# must fit in memory. Generally, a value between 128 and 512 here 
# coupled with a large key cache size on CFs results in the best trade 
# offs. This value is not often changed, however if you have many 
# very small rows (many to an OS page), then increasing this will 
# often lower memory usage without a impact on performance. 
index_interval: 128 

# Enable or disable inter-node encryption 
# Default settings are TLS v1, RSA 1024-bit keys (it is imperative that 
# users generate their own keys) TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA as the cipher 
# suite for authentication, key exchange and encryption of the actual data transfers. 
# NOTE: No custom encryption options are enabled at the moment 
# The available internode options are : all, none, dc, rack 
# 
# If set to dc cassandra will encrypt the traffic between the DCs 
# If set to rack cassandra will encrypt the traffic between the racks 
# 
# The passwords used in these options must match the passwords used when generating 
# the keystore and truststore. For instructions on generating these files, see: 
# http://download.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/technotes/guides/security/jsse/JSSERefGuide.html#CreateKeystore 
# 
encryption_options: 
    internode_encryption: none 
    keystore: resources/dse/conf/.keystore 
    keystore_password: tomcat 
    truststore: resources/dse/conf/.truststore 
    truststore_password: tomcat 
    # More advanced defaults below: 
    # protocol: TLS 
    # algorithm: SunX509 
    # store_type: JKS 
    # cipher_suites: [TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA,TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA] 
    # require_client_auth: false [1]: https://github.com/pchalamet/cassandra-sharp/wiki/Having-troubles 
+1

datastax forumunda bu soruyu daha iyi soruyorsunuz www.datastax.com/support-forums/forum/datastax-enterprise – abhi

+0

@Steve McMohan tam cassanda.YAML dosyanızı ekleyebilir misiniz lütfen? –

+0

Tam dosyayı referans için yanıt bölümüne ekledim ve zaten sorulan soru –

cevap

4

Ben Çalıştırdığınız Cassandra sürümü ve uygulanmasını istediği konfigürasyon arasında bir uyumsuzluk olduğunu düşünüyorum. hinted_handoff_throttle_delay_in_ms seçenek cassandra 1.2.x çıkarıldı (varsayılan olarak etkindir cassandra CQL önceki bir sürümünü çalıştırıyorsanız

. cassandra 1.1.x ama not 1.2.x için datastax belgelerinde seçeneği bulabilirsiniz (ama bilirsin bu dayalı Sorunuzun yorum) Ancak sizin de yapılandırma ayarlarından bazılarını cassandra bir eski sürümü vardır. Ayrıca

, başka potansiyel sorun ben Datastax topluluğunun 3.0 üzerinde this yapılandırma test olsa da özellikle cassandra v1, native_transport_port eksik olmasıdır .2.2 sunucu mutlu bir şekilde çalışıyordu:

INFO 15:15:17,242 Cassandra version: 1.2.2 
INFO 15:15:17,243 Thrift API version: 19.35.0 
INFO 15:15:17,243 CQL supported versions: 2.0.0,3.0.1 (default: 3.0.1) 
INFO 15:15:17,264 Loading persisted ring state 
INFO 15:15:17,266 Starting up server gossip 
... 
INFO 15:15:17,661 Node /127.0.0.1 state jump to normal 
INFO 15:15:17,665 Startup completed! Now serving reads. 
INFO 15:15:17,709 Starting listening for CQL clients on /0.0.0.0:9042... 
INFO 15:15:17,721 Binding thrift service to /0.0.0.0:9160 
INFO 15:15:17,739 Using TFramedTransport with a max frame size of 15728640 bytes. 
INFO 15:15:17,745 Using synchronous/threadpool thrift server on 0.0.0.0 : 9160 
INFO 15:15:17,746 Listening for thrift clients... 
6

Lyuben doğru, Cassandra 1.1.9.3 üzerinde Cassandra 1.2+ özelliğini ayarlıyorsunuz.

http://www.datastax.com/doc-source/pdf/dse30.pdf - 'Bileşenler' bölümüne bakınız.

'start_native_transport' ayarlamaya çalıştığınız özellik yalnızca Cassandra 1.2+ sürümünde kullanılabilir. En son Datastax Topluluk Sürümü, bu yardımcı olursa Cassandra 1.2.3'ü içerir.

Nasıl öğrenebilirim? Ayrıca yeni Datastax CQL3 sürücüsünü (https://github.com/datastax/java-driver/tree/master/driver-core) kullanmaya çalışıyorsunuz, ön koşullara bakın, Cassandra 1.2.

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