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NoSQL Databases

NoSQL Databases. Cloudant & Redis. Nikolay Tomitov Technical Trainer SoftAcad Training Center. Schema-free Databases. Documental Databases. Relational Databases. JSON Data Format. www.softacad.bg. Meet Cloudant.

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NoSQL Databases

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  1. NoSQL Databases Cloudant & Redis Nikolay Tomitov Technical Trainer SoftAcad Training Center www.softacad.bg

  2. Schema-freeDatabases Documental Databases Relational Databases www.softacad.bg

  3. JSON Data Format www.softacad.bg

  4. Meet Cloudant Cloudant == managed installation of Apache CouchDB in the cloud www.softacad.bg

  5. Global Data Network • Cloudantscales within & between data centers • Global networks of servers • Built-in replication and sync • Push the data closer to the user & application • Disaster recovery www.softacad.bg

  6. Nice Features • Eliminates data layer-related complexity, delay, cost, and risk • Performance & scale with no worries • Build epic apps, easily • Enables advanced app features and analytics • Full-text search, off-line computing, replication, incremental MapReduce, code and data • distribution... • Accelerates release cycles (reduces time to value) • Start for free, pay as you grow www.softacad.bg

  7. Developingwith Cloudant • Provision Signup is free, and access is immediate • Define No schema, usually just JSON • Access RESTful API • View Define data views via Javascript • Search Integrated, Lucene-like full-text search • Analyze Incremental, chainable MapReduce • Operate Dashboards to monitor, compact, replicate • Grow Automatic

  8. CouchDB Inside • Data is stored and returned in JSON format • Queried via HTTP RESTful API • Index building language: Javascript • Simple and intuitive interface www.softacad.bg

  9. REST Interface – DEMO • Create: HTTP PUT /db/test • Read: HTTP GET /db/test • Update: HTTP PUT /db/test • Delete: HTTP DELETE /db/test www.softacad.bg

  10. Querying the DB • Views: the way to arrange data to answer our questions • Method to build views: Incremental MapReduce using JavaScript www.softacad.bg

  11. DEMO – Simple MapReduce www.softacad.bg

  12. Example www.softacad.bg

  13. How to Findsum(checkouts) ? www.softacad.bg

  14. Simple Map: emit(checkout) www.softacad.bg

  15. Simple Reduce: sum(checkouts) www.softacad.bg

  16. Simple Reduce: sum(checkouts) www.softacad.bg

  17. Views can be Distributed www.softacad.bg

  18. Practice Practice Map Reduce at: http://blog.mudynamics.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/icouch.html http://couchdb.apache.org/downloads.html www.softacad.bg

  19. Meet Redis “Redisis an open source, advancedkey-value store It is often referred to as a data structure server • Since keys can contain strings, hashes, lists, sets and sorted sets www.softacad.bg

  20. Features First • It’s really fast • Non-blocking I/O, single threaded • 100,000+ read/writes a second • It complements yourexisting storage layer • It is very feasible for small apps • But..trade performance for durability www.softacad.bg

  21. Keys • Short keys perform better • Could not contain whitespaces • Common convention is : obj-type:id:field • user:77:pass = abcd • SHA1(data) makes a useful key too

  22. Supported Data Types • strings (up to 1GB) • Lists of strings • Sets of strings • Sorted sets • Hashes • Pubsub channels

  23. Commands on All Keys • EXISTS[key] • DEL[key] • TYPE[key] • RENAMENX[key] • EXPIRE [key] • EXPIREAT[key] • TTL[key]

  24. Commands on Strings • SET[key value] • MGET[key1 key2 key3..] • GET [key] • INCR/DECR [key] • INCRBY/DECRBY[key]

  25. Common Uses • Store session data + creation time • Hit counts • key =MD5(url) • Incr hits-by-key:$key • APPEND can be used for logging • Redis as shared memory location • Progress bars, polling

  26. Durability • More durability -> less performance • Default behaviour fork-and-save a snapshot to disk every… • 15 mins if one key has changed • 5 mins if 10 keys have changed • 60 secs if 10000 keys have changed • SAVE/BGSAVE commands trigger a save

  27. DEMO (JAVA)

  28. Check It Out • Try it : • http://try.redis-db.com • Redis Admin UI • http://www.servicestack.net/mythz_blog/?p=381 www.softacad.bg

  29. Amazon SimpleDB

  30. SimpleDB: Overview • Non–relational data store • Designed to be highly available and flexible • Available only on Amazon WS

  31. SimpleDB: Functionality • Low touch – almost no administration needed • Highly available – automatic replication and fail over • Flexible – not bound by a schema • Simple to use – supports only the most common operations • Designed for integration with other Amazon Web Services • Secure • RESTful interface

  32. SimpleDB: Pricing • Free tier – 1 GB/month, 25 SimpleDB machine hours • Only outgoing transfers are charged • Data transfers in the same region are free • Monthly rates between $0.12 and $0.05

  33. SimpleDB: Pros • Optimized reads and writes • Easily integrated with other AWS • Uses the HTTP protocol for communication • Ideal for storing non – structured or semi – structured data

  34. SimpleDB: Cons • Limited functionality compared to relational and other non – relational products • Complex queries need a lot of coding • No fulltext indexing • All queries have the N + 1 problem

  35. Demo Amazon Simple DB

  36. Google Datastore (GDS)

  37. GDS: Overview • Schemaless object datastore • Designed to scale • Hierarchical • Available only on Google App Engine

  38. GDS: Functionality • No administration needed • Flexible – not bound by a schema • Designed for no downtime • Automatic replication • Queries must run against predefined indexes • Rich query engine • Atomic transactions • APIs available for all the languages supported by GAE

  39. GDS: Pricing • Free quota: 1GB, 200 indexes • Monthly rates: $0.24/gigabyte; between $0.01 and $0.10 for 100k database operations

  40. GDS: Pros • Fast • Hierarchical queries boost speed • Atomic transactions supported • Large and active community • The Java API include implementations of JDO and JPA

  41. GDS: Cons • Limited functionality • Compared to relational databases and other non–relational data stores • Indexes require additional configuration

  42. Demo Google App Engine Datastore

  43. MongoDB

  44. Overview • Non – relational, schema free database • Highly scalable • Engineered for maximum speed • Available as a stand alone product • A number of hosted MongoDB solutions available • MongoLab • MongoHQ • Mongo Machine

  45. MongoDB: Functionality • Almost administration free • High availability – replication and sharding • A rich set of features • Complex queries • Aggregate functions • Map/Reduce operations • Indexes • Stored procedures • BLOB storage (GridFS) • Database drivers available for a large list of programming languages

  46. MongoDB:Hosted Solutions • Easy setup (No billing info needed) • Intuitive interface • 240MB free • Deploy on Amazon EC2, Rackspace or Joynet • MongoDB Version 1.8 • Easy setup (Credit card needed) • Intuitive interface • 16MB free • Deploy only on Amazon EC2 • Different MongoDB Version according to price plan MongoLab MongoHQ

  47. MongoDB: Pros • Fast • Rich feature set • Mature product • Large and active community

  48. MongoDB: Cons • No relational database style transactions • No data validation

  49. Demo MongoDB on MongoLab

  50. Homework • Register for a free Cloudant account at https://cloudant.com. • Write a simple "Dictionary" application in Java, C#, PHP, or JavaScript to perform the following in Cloudant: • Add a dictionary entry (word + translation) • List all words and their translations • Find the translation of given word The UI of the application is up to you (it could be Web-based, GUI or console-based). You may download a Cloudant client library from http://wiki.apache.org/couchdb/Related_Projects

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