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Caution
You're viewing documentation for a previous version of ScyllaDB Open Source. Switch to the latest stable version.
Added in version 5.0.
This tool allows you to examine raw values obtained from SStables, logs, coredumps, etc., by performing operations on them,
such as print
, compare
, or validate
. See Supported Operations for details.
Run scylla types --help
for additional information about the tool and the operations.
The command syntax is as follows:
scylla types <operation> [options] <hex_value1> [hex_value2]
Provide the values in the hex form without a leading 0x prefix.
You must specify the type of the provided values. See Specifying the Value Type.
The number of provided values depends on the operation. See Supported Operations for details.
The scylla types
operations come with additional options. See Additional Options for the list of options.
You must specify the type of the value(s) you want to examine by adding the -t [type name]
option to the operation.
Specify the type by providing its Cassandra class name (the prefix can be omitted, for example, you can provide Int32Type
instead of org.apache.cassandra.db.marshal.Int32Type
). See https://github.com/scylladb/scylla/blob/master/docs/design-notes/cql3-type-mapping.md for a mapping of cql3 types to Cassandra type class names.
If you provide more than one value, all of the values must share the same type. For example:
scylla types print -t Int32Type b34b62d4 00783562
Compounds
A compound is a single value that is composed of multiple values of possibly different types. An example of a compound value is a clustering key or a partition key.
You can use the --prefix-compound
or --full-compound
options to indicate that the provided value is a compound
(see Additional Options) for details.
When a value is a compound, you can specify a different type for each value making up the compound, respectively (i.e., the order of the types on the command line must be the same as the order in the compound). For example:
scylla types print --prefix-compound -t TimeUUIDType -t Int32Type 0010d00819896f6b11ea00000000001c571b000400000010
print
- Deserializes and prints the provided value in a human-readable form. Required arguments: 1 or more serialized values.
compare
- Compares two values and print the result. Required arguments: 2 serialized values.
validate
- Verifies if the value is valid for the type, according to the requirements of the type. Required arguments: 1 or more serialized values.
You can run scylla types [operation] --help
for additional information on a given operation.
-h
( or --help
) - Prints the help message.
--help-seastar
- Prints the help message about the Seastar options.
--help-loggers
- Prints a list of logger names.
-t
( or --type
) - Specifies the type of the provided value. See Specifying the Value Type.
--prefix-compound
- Indicates that the value is a prefixable compound (e.g., clustering key) composed of multiple values of possibly different types.
--full-compound
- Indicates that the value is a full compound (e.g., partition key) composed of multiple values of possibly different types.
--value arg
- Specifies the value to process (if not provided as a positional argument).
Deserializing and printing a value of type Int32Type:
scylla types print -t Int32Type b34b62d4
Output:
-1286905132
Validating a value of type Int32Type:
scylla types validate -t Int32Type b34b62d4
Output:
b34b62d4: VALID - -1286905132
Comparing two values of ReversedType(TimeUUIDType):
scylla types compare -t 'ReversedType(TimeUUIDType)' b34b62d46a8d11ea0000005000237906 d00819896f6b11ea00000000001c571b
Output:
b34b62d4-6a8d-11ea-0000-005000237906 > d0081989-6f6b-11ea-0000-0000001c571b
Deserializing and printing a compound value:
scylla types print --prefix-compound -t TimeUUIDType -t Int32Type 0010d00819896f6b11ea00000000001c571b000400000010
Output:
(d0081989-6f6b-11ea-0000-0000001c571b, 16)
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