Definitely not weekend, I thought about a year of hard development. I went throw Cassandra code, and can see a lot of work.

------ Original Message ------
From: "Michael Kjellman" <[email protected]>
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>; "Roman Vasilyev" <[email protected]>
Cc: "Brandon Williams" <[email protected]>
Sent: 12/19/2013 11:38:54 AM
Subject: Re: Re[2]: C* engine

You seem to think something like this is akin to a weekend project. I would recommend you actually read some of the Cassandra source code and better understand how it is architected.

On Dec 19, 2013, at 11:30 AM, "Roman Vasilyev" <[email protected]> wrote:

 I'm not talking to throw away currently working code. Just port it to
 C/C++, and have option to run Java based or "native" binary.

 ------ Original Message ------
 From: "Brandon Williams" <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]; "Roman Vasilyev" <[email protected]>
 Sent: 12/19/2013 11:26:21 AM
 Subject: Re: C* engine

 Let's ask what we'll lose here.

4 years of work, tons of debugging, loads of instrumentation, for what
 gain? Almost nil.


On Thu, Dec 19, 2013 at 1:22 PM, Roman Vasilyev <[email protected]>
 wrote:
 Hello,

 Don't want to rise "holy war". Just let me share my crazy thoughts.
 I believe it could improve Cassandra speed and robustness.

What people will say if I propose to have Cassandra engine written in
 C/C++, and this engine will give you ability to run extensions in
 Java, Groovy and bunch other languages like Perl/Python/Ruby?

I just want to understand for myself does this solution will be useful
 or I'm looking in wrong direction?

 Thank you for reading.

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