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ScyllaDB Java Driver is available under the Apache v2 License. ScyllaDB Java Driver is a fork of DataStax Java Driver. See Copyright here.
Low-level binary format. Mostly irrelevant for everyday use, only governs whether certain features are available.
setting the version:
automatically negotiated during the connection (improved algorithm in driver 4, no longer an issue in mixed clusters).
or force with advanced.protocol.version
in the configuration.
reading the version: session.getContext().getProtocolVersion().
The native protocol defines the format of the binary messages exchanged between the driver and Cassandra over TCP. As a driver user, you don’t need to know the fine details (although the protocol spec is available if you’re curious); the most visible aspect is that some features are only available with specific protocol versions.
Java driver 4 supports protocol versions 3 to 5. By default, the version is negotiated with the first node the driver connects to:
Cassandra version | Negotiated protocol version with driver 4 ¹ |
---|---|
2.1.x | v3 |
2.2.x | v4 |
3.x | v4 |
4.x ² | v5 |
(1) for previous driver versions, see the 3.x documentation
(2) at the time of writing, Cassandra 4 is not released yet. Protocol v5 support is still in beta, and must be enabled explicitly (negotiation will yield v4).
Since version 4.5.0, the driver can also use DSE protocols when all nodes are running a version of DSE. The table below shows the protocol matrix for these cases:
DSE version | Negotiated protocol version with driver 4 |
---|---|
4.7/4.8 | v3 |
5.0 | v4 |
5.1 | DSE_V1 ³ |
6.0/6.7/6.8 | DSE_V2 ³ |
(3) DSE Protocols are chosen before other Cassandra native protocols.
To find out which version you’re currently using, use the following:
ProtocolVersion currentVersion = session.getContext().getProtocolVersion();
The protocol version cannot be changed at runtime. However, you can force a particular version in the configuration:
datastax-java-driver {
advanced.protocol {
version = v3
}
}
If you force a version that is too high for the server, you’ll get an error:
Exception in thread "main" com.datastax.oss.driver.api.core.AllNodesFailedException:
All 1 node tried for the query failed (showing first 1 nodes, use getAllErrors() for more:
/127.0.0.1:9042: com.datastax.oss.driver.api.core.UnsupportedProtocolVersionException:
[/127.0.0.1:9042] Host does not support protocol version V5)
It’s possible to have heterogeneous Cassandra versions in your cluster, in particular during a rolling upgrade. This used to be a problem with previous driver versions, which would negotiate a version with the first contacted node that might not work with others.
Starting with driver 4, protocol negotiation uses an improved strategy to prevent those issues:
the driver negotiates with the first node for the initial connection (for example, v4 for Cassandra 3);
right after connecting, it queries the system.peers
table to find out the Cassandra version of
the other nodes (for example, node2 → Cassandra 3, node3 → Cassandra 2.1);
it infers the highest supported protocol version for each node (node2 → v4, node3 → v3);
it selects the minimum of those protocol versions (v3). If that is lower than the initially negotiated version, the first connection is closed and reopened;
the connection to the rest of the nodes proceeds with the possibly downgraded protocol version.
Thanks to this approach, automatic negotiation works even with mixed clusters, you don’t need to force the protocol version manually anymore.
You can observe the negotiation process in the logs.
The versions tried while negotiating with the first node are logged at level DEBUG
in the category
com.datastax.oss.driver.internal.core.channel.ChannelFactory
:
DEBUG ChannelFactory - Failed to connect with protocol v4, retrying with v3
If a mixed cluster renegotiation happens, it is logged at level INFO
in the category
com.datastax.oss.driver.internal.core.session.DefaultSession
:
INFO DefaultSession - Negotiated protocol version v4 for the initial contact point, but other nodes
only support v3, downgrading
If you want to see the details of mixed cluster negotiation, enable DEBUG
level for the category
com.datastax.oss.driver.internal.core.CassandraProtocolVersionRegistry
.
improved prepared statement resilience in the face of schema changes
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ScyllaDB Java Driver is available under the Apache v2 License. ScyllaDB Java Driver is a fork of DataStax Java Driver. See Copyright here.