backbone of choice for the worlds
most innovative companies such as Netflix, Adobe, Intuit, and eBay.
On Sun, Dec 20, 2015 at 3:45 PM, John Wong wrote:
> Hi.
>
> We are using the open source version of OpsCenter. We find it useful, but
> the disk space for OpsCenter metrics has been i
Hi.
We are using the open source version of OpsCenter. We find it useful, but
the disk space for OpsCenter metrics has been increasing and can sometime
outgrow to 30-50G in a matter of a day or two. We do have a lot of
keyspaces and column families.
Usually this dev cluster is quiet on the
Thanks Nick for the pointer !
On Thu, Jan 2, 2014 at 10:31 PM, Nick Bailey wrote:
> I believe the answer to your similar question on server fault should
> answer this:
>
>
> http://serverfault.com/questions/564107/what-does-opscenters-write-requests-count-shown-as-ops-sec-exactly-mean
>
> On Tu
I believe the answer to your similar question on server fault should answer
this:
http://serverfault.com/questions/564107/what-does-opscenters-write-requests-count-shown-as-ops-sec-exactly-mean
On Tue, Dec 31, 2013 at 12:55 AM, Arun Kumar K wrote:
> Hi guys,
>
> I am using YCSB and using thrift
Hi guys,
I am using YCSB and using thrift based *client.batch_mutate()* call.
Now say opscenter reports the "write requests" as say 1000 *operations*/sec
when a record count is say 1 records.
OpsCenter API docs say 'Write Requests" as "requests per second"
1> What does an 'operation or requ