Prevent rate-limiting errors for Azure Cosmos DB for Apache Cassandra operations
APPLIES TO: Cassandra
The cost of all database operations is normalized by Azure Cosmos DB and is expressed by Request Units (RU). Request unit is a performance currency abstracting the system resources such as CPU, IOPS, and memory that are required to perform the database operations supported by Azure Cosmos DB.
Azure Cosmos DB for Apache Cassandra operations may fail with rate-limiting (OverloadedException/429) errors if they exceed a table's throughput limit (RUs). This can be handled by client side as described here. If the client retry policy cannot be implemented to handle the failure due to rate limiting error, then we can make use of the Server-side retry (SSR) feature where operations that exceed a table's throughput limit will be retried automatically after a short delay. This is an account level setting and applies to all Key spaces and Tables in the account.
Use the Azure portal
Sign in to the Azure portal.
Navigate to your Azure Cosmos DB for Apache Cassandra account.
Go to the Features pane underneath the Settings section.
Select Server-Side Retry.
Click Enable to enable this feature for all collections in your account.
Use the Azure CLI
Check if SSR is already enabled for your account:
az cosmosdb show --name accountname --resource-group resourcegroupname
Enable SSR for all tables in your database account. It may take up to 15 min for this change to take effect.
az cosmosdb update --name accountname --resource-group resourcegroupname --capabilities EnableCassandra DisableRateLimitingResponses
The following command will Disable server-side retry for all tables in your database account by removing
DisableRateLimitingResponses
from the capabilities list. It may take up to 15 min for this change to take effect.az cosmosdb update --name accountname --resource-group resourcegroupname --capabilities EnableCassandra
Frequently asked questions
How are requests retried?
Requests are retried continuously (over and over again) until a 60-second timeout is reached. If the timeout is reached, the client will receive read or write timeout error accordingly
When is SSR most beneficial?
Server-side retry (SSR) is most beneficial when there is a sudden spike for a short duration of less than 1 minute where in throttling errors can be avoided. If the work load has increased and would stay constantly above the specified RU, then SSR will not help much. The suggestion is to increase the RU appropriately.
Suggested client-side settings?
After SSR is enabled, the client app should increase read timeout beyond the server retry 60-second setting. We recommend 90 seconds to be on the safer side.
Code Sample Driver3
SocketOptions socketOptions = new SocketOptions()
.setReadTimeoutMillis(90000);
Code Sample Driver4
ProgrammaticDriverConfigLoaderBuilder configBuilder = DriverConfigLoader.programmaticBuilder()
.withDuration(DefaultDriverOption.REQUEST_TIMEOUT, Duration.ofSeconds(90));
How can I monitor the effects of a server-side retry?
You can view the rate limiting errors (429) that are retried server-side in the Azure Cosmos DB Metrics pane. These errors don't go to the client when SSR is enabled, since they are handled and retried server-side.
You can search for log entries containing estimatedDelayFromRateLimitingInMilliseconds in your Azure Cosmos DB resource logs.
Will server-side retry affect my consistency level?
Server-side retry does not affect a consistency levels. Requests are retried server-side if they are rate limited (Error 429).
Does server-side retry affect any type of error that my client might receive?
No, server-side retry only affects rate limiting errors (429) by retrying them server-side. This feature prevents you from having to handle rate-limiting errors in the client application. All other errors will go to the client.
Next steps
To learn more about troubleshooting common errors, see this article:
See the following articles to learn about throughput provisioning in Azure Cosmos DB: