For a relatively simple way, you could always do a quick COPY
TO/FROM in cqlsh.
Let's say that I have a column family (table) called "emp" for employees.
CREATE TABLE stackoverflow.emp (
id int PRIMARY KEY,
fname text,
lname text,
role text
)
And for the purposes of this example, I have one row in it.
aploetz@cqlsh:stackoverflow> SELECT * FROM emp;
id | fname | lname | role
----+-------+-------+-------------
1 | Angel | Pay | IT Engineer
If I want to re-create Angel with a new id, I can COPY
the table's contents TO
a .csv file:
aploetz@cqlsh:stackoverflow> COPY stackoverflow.emp TO '/home/aploetz/emp.csv';
1 rows exported in 0.036 seconds.
Now, I'll use my favorite editor to change the id of Angel to 2 in emp.csv. Note, that if you have multiple rows in your file (that don't need to be updated) this is your opportunity to remove them:
2,Angel,Pay,IT Engineer
I'll save the file, and then COPY
the updated row back into Cassandra FROM
the file:
aploetz@cqlsh:stackoverflow> COPY stackoverflow.emp FROM '/home/aploetz/emp.csv';
1 rows imported in 0.038 seconds.
Now Angel has two rows in the "emp" table.
aploetz@cqlsh:stackoverflow> SELECT * FROM emp;
id | fname | lname | role
----+-------+-------+-------------
1 | Angel | Pay | IT Engineer
2 | Angel | Pay | IT Engineer
(2 rows)
For more information, check the DataStax doc on COPY.
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