How to configure cassandra for remote connection

Alternate solution to Kat. Worked with Ubuntu 16.04

  1. ssh into server server_user@**.**.**.**
  2. Stop cassandra if running:

    • Check if running with ps aux | grep cassandra
    • If running, will output a large block of commands / flags, e.g.

      ubuntu 14018 4.6 70.1 2335692 712080 pts/2 Sl+ 04:15 0:11 java -Xloggc:./../logs/gc.log ........

      Note 14018 in the example is the process id

    • Stop with kill <process_id> (in this case 14018)
  3. edit cassandra.yaml file to be the following

    • rpc_address: 0.0.0.0
    • broadcast_rpc_address: **.**.**.** <- your server's IP (cannot be set to 0.0.0.0)
  4. Restart cassandra ./bin/cassandra -f (from within cassandra root)
  5. Open another terminal on local machine & connect via cqlsh **.**.**.** (your server's IP) to test.

The ./bin/nodetool status address reported my localhost IP (127.0.0.1), but cqlsh remotely still worked despite that.


How about this:

Make these changes in the cassandra.yaml config file:

start_rpc: true

rpc_address: 0.0.0.0

broadcast_rpc_address: [node-ip]

listen_address: [node-ip]

seed_provider:
  - class_name: ...
    - seeds: "[node-ip]"

reference: https://gist.github.com/andykuszyk/7644f334586e8ce29eaf8b93ec6418c4


Remote access to Cassandra is via its thrift port for Cassandra 2.0. In Cassandra 2.0.x, the default cqlsh listen port is 9160 which is defined in cassandra.yaml by the rpc_port parameter. By default, Cassandra 2.0.x and earlier enables Thrift by configuring start_rpc to true in the cassandra.yaml file.

In Cassandra 2.1, the cqlsh utility uses the native protocol. In Cassandra 2.1, which uses the Datastax python driver, the default cqlsh listen port is 9042.

The cassandra node should be bound to the IP address of your server's network card - it shouldn't be 127.0.0.1 or localhost which is the loopback interface's IP, binding to this will prevent direct remote access. To configure the bound address, use the rpc_address parameter in cassandra.yaml. Setting this to 0.0.0.0 will listen on all network interfaces.

Have you checked that the remote machine can connect to the Cassandra node? Is there a firewall between the machines? You can try these steps to test this out:

1) Ensure you can connect to that IP from the server you are on:

$ ssh [email protected]

2) Check the node's status and also confirm it shows the same IP:

$nodetool status

3) Run the command to connect with the IP (only specify the port if you are not using the default):

$ cqlsh xxx.xxx.xx.xx