hbase-5216 book.xml - added detail on Arch "when to use hbase" section
git-svn-id: https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/hbase/trunk@1232524 13f79535-47bb-0310-9956-ffa450edef68
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@ -1251,13 +1251,18 @@ if (!b) {
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<section xml:id="arch.overview.when">
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<title>When Should I Use HBase?</title>
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<para>First, make sure you have enough data. HBase isn't suitable for every problem. If you have
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hundreds of millions or billions of rows, then HBase is a good candidate. If you only have a few
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thousand/million rows, then using a traditional RDBMS might be a better choice due to the
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fact that all of your data might wind up on a single node (or two) and the rest of the cluster may
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be sitting idle.
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<para>HBase isn't suitable for every problem.</para>
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<para>First, make sure you have enough data. If you have hundreds of millions or billions of rows, then
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HBase is a good candidate. If you only have a few thousand/million rows, then using a traditional RDBMS
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might be a better choice due to the fact that all of your data might wind up on a single node (or two) and
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the rest of the cluster may be sitting idle.
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</para>
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<para>Second, make sure you have enough hardware. Even HDFS doesn't do well with anything less than
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<para>Second, make sure you can live without all the extra features that an RDBMS provides (e.g., typed columns,
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secondary indexes, transactions, advanced query languages, etc.) An application built against an RDBMS cannot be
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"ported" to HBase by simply changing a JDBC driver, for example. Consider moving from an RDBMS to HBase as a
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complete redesign as opposed to a port.
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</para>
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<para>Third, make sure you have enough hardware. Even HDFS doesn't do well with anything less than
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5 DataNodes (due to things such as HDFS block replication which has a default of 3), plus a NameNode.
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</para>
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<para>HBase can run quite well stand-alone on a laptop - but this should be considered a development
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