druid/docs/content/Deep-Storage.md

57 lines
2.5 KiB
Markdown

---
layout: doc_page
---
# Deep Storage
Deep storage is where segments are stored. It is a storage mechanism that Druid does not provide. This deep storage infrastructure defines the level of durability of your data, as long as Druid nodes can see this storage infrastructure and get at the segments stored on it, you will not lose data no matter how many Druid nodes you lose. If segments disappear from this storage layer, then you will lose whatever data those segments represented.
## Production Tested Deep Stores
### Local Mount
A local mount can be used for storage of segments as well. This allows you to use just your local file system or anything else that can be mount locally like NFS, Ceph, etc. This is the default deep storage implementation.
In order to use a local mount for deep storage, you need to set the following configuration in your common configs.
```
druid.storage.type=local
druid.storage.storageDirectory=<directory for storing segments>
```
Note that you should generally set `druid.storage.storageDirectory` to something different from `druid.segmentCache.locations` and `druid.segmentCache.infoDir`.
If you are using the Hadoop indexer in local mode, then just give it a local file as your output directory and it will work.
### S3-compatible
S3-compatible deep storage is basically either S3 or something like Google Storage which exposes the same API as S3.
S3 configuration parameters are
```
druid.s3.accessKey=<S3 access key>
druid.s3.secretKey=<S3 secret_key>
druid.storage.bucket=<bucket to store in>
druid.storage.baseKey=<base key prefix to use, i.e. what directory>
```
### HDFS
In order to use hdfs for deep storage, you need to set the following configuration in your common configs.
```
druid.storage.type=hdfs
druid.storage.storageDirectory=<directory for storing segments>
```
If you are using the Hadoop indexer, set your output directory to be a location on Hadoop and it will work
## Community Contributed Deep Stores
### Cassandra
[Apache Cassandra](http://www.datastax.com/what-we-offer/products-services/datastax-enterprise/apache-cassandra) can also be leveraged for deep storage. This requires some additional druid configuration as well as setting up the necessary schema within a Cassandra keystore.
Please note that this is a community contributed module and does not support Cassandra 2.x or hadoop-based batch indexing. For more information on using Cassandra as deep storage, see [Cassandra Deep Storage](Cassandra-Deep-Storage.html).