3

I have a table with the following column,

name text, //partition key
tags map<text, text>

I also have a secondary index on "tags" column. Now I want to query like,

select * from <table_name> where tags contains {'a':'b','x':'y'}
  1. Is it possible? If not, can I query with only "contains {'a':'b'}"?
  2. Is this a bad design? If yes, how to rectify this? (note: name has 1->n relation with tags)
0

1 Answer 1

9

Question 1

For map collections Cassandra allows creation of an index on keys, values or entries (this is available only for maps).

So, first you would create your index on the map:

CREATE INDEX <index_name> ON <table_name> (ENTRIES(<map_column>));

Then you could query:

SELECT * FROM <table_name> WHERE <map_column>['<map_key>'] = '<map_value>';

Another solution would be to froze your collection and create an index on it:

CREATE INDEX <index_name> ON table (FULL(<map_column>));

Then you could query for values with:

SELECT * FROM <table_name> WHERE <map_column> = ['<value>'...];

I think the above solutions are not very good since you could easily scan your whole cluster. Your access type will use and index and not a partition key.


Question 2

Another solution would be to create a table like this:

CREATE TABLE <table_name> ( key TEXT, value TEXT, name TEXT, PRIMARY KEY ((key, value), name));

Key and value columns will hold the values for the tags. They will also be partition key so you could query your data like:

SELECT * FROM <table_name> WHERE key = 'key' AND value = 'value';

You will need to run several queries in order to search for all tags, but you can aggregate the result at the application level.

0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge that you have read and understand our privacy policy and code of conduct.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.