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FAQ for Secondary Indexes

  • Q: Are there any limitations beside the hash properties (no range queries), like size, memory, etc.?
    A: No.
  • Q: Are they distributed? If so, how does that work? How are they stored on the nodes?
    A: Each node only indexes data that it holds locally.
  • Q: When you write a new row, when/how does the index get updated? What I would like to know is the atomicity of the operation--is the "index write" part of the "row write"?
    A: The row and index updates are one, atomic operation.
  • Q: Is there a difference between creating a secondary index vs creating an "index" CF manually such as "users_by_country"?
    A: Yes. First, when creating your own index, a node may index data held by another node. Second, updates to the index and data are not atomic.
  • Q: Why is it necessary to always have at least one EQ comparison on secondary indices?
    A: Inequalities on secondary indices are always done in memory, so without at least one EQ on another secondary index you will be loading every row in the database, which with a massive database isn't a good idea. So by requiring at least one EQ on an index, you hopefully limit the set of rows that need to be read into memory to a manageable size. (Although obviously you can still get into trouble with that as well).
  • Q: How does choice of Consistency Level affect cluster availability when using secondary indexes?
    A: Because secondary indexes are distributed, you must have CL nodes available for all token ranges in the cluster in order to complete a query. For example, with RF = 3, when two out of three consecutive nodes in the ring are unavailable, all secondary index queries at CL = QUORUM will fail, however secondary index queries at CL = ONE will succeed. This is true regardless of cluster size.

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