How are write requests accomplished?
The write consistency level determines how many replica nodes must respond with a success acknowledgment in order for the write to be considered successful
The coordinator node sends a write request to all replicas that own the row being written. As long as all replica nodes are available, they will get the write regardless of the consistency level specified by the client. The write consistency level determines how many replica nodes must respond with a success acknowledgment for the write to be considered successful. Success means data was written to the commit log and the memtable.
The coordinator node forwards the write to replicas of that row. After the coordinator node receives write acknowledgements from the number of nodes specified by the consistency level, the coordinator responds to the client.
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If the coordinator cannot write to enough replicas to meet the requested consistency level, it throws an
Unavailable
exception and does not perform any writes. -
If there are enough replicas available but the required writes do not finish within the timeout window, the coordinator throws a
Timeout
exception.
For example, in a single-datacenter, 10-node cluster with a replication factor of 3, an incoming write will go to all three nodes that own the requested row.
If the write consistency level specified by the client is ONE
, the first node to complete the write responds back to the coordinator, which then proxies the success message back to the client.
A consistency level of ONE
means it is possible that two of the three replicas can miss the write if they are down when the request is made.
If a replica misses a write, the row is made consistent later using one of the built-in repair mechanisms: hinted handoff, read repair, or anti-entropy node repair.
- Multiple datacenter write requests
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How write requests work when using multiple datacenters.