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Learning Apache Cassandra

You're reading from   Learning Apache Cassandra Managing fault-tolerant, scalable data with high performance

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2017
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781787127296
Length 360 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Sandeep Yarabarla Sandeep Yarabarla
Author Profile Icon Sandeep Yarabarla
Sandeep Yarabarla
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Up and Running with Cassandra FREE CHAPTER 2. The First Table 3. Organizing Related Data 4. Beyond Key-Value Lookup 5. Establishing Relationships 6. Denormalizing Data for Maximum Performance 7. Expanding Your Data Model 8. Collections, Tuples, and User-Defined Types 9. Aggregating Time-Series Data 10. How Cassandra Distributes Data 11. Cassandra Multi-Node Cluster 12. Application Development Using the Java Driver 13. Peeking under the Hood 14. Authentication and Authorization

Using cassandra-cli

To explore the Thrift API, we'll use a new tool called cassandra-cli. Like cqlsh, cassandra-cli is a command-line interface to Cassandra, but it does not provide a CQL interface. Instead, cassandra-cli uses a small, purpose-built query language that allows us to interact directly with column families. Some cassandra-cli commands resemble their CQL equivalents, but it's merely a resemblance, not a relationship.

In recent versions of Cassandra, cassandra-cli is deprecated and will be removed from Cassandra 3.0. This should serve to underscore the fact that CQL is considered the way to interact with Cassandra: the Thrift interface is merely a curiosity, not a viable tool to interact with Cassandra in our applications.

Your installation of Cassandra should have the cassandra-cli executable in the same directory as cqlsh. Once we start it up, we should see something like this:

Just as in...

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