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Seven NoSQL Databases in a Week

You're reading from   Seven NoSQL Databases in a Week Get up and running with the fundamentals and functionalities of seven of the most popular NoSQL databases

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787288867
Length 308 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (4):
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Sudarshan Kadambi Sudarshan Kadambi
Author Profile Icon Sudarshan Kadambi
Sudarshan Kadambi
Aaron Ploetz Aaron Ploetz
Author Profile Icon Aaron Ploetz
Aaron Ploetz
Devram Kandhare Devram Kandhare
Author Profile Icon Devram Kandhare
Devram Kandhare
Xun (Brian) Wu Xun (Brian) Wu
Author Profile Icon Xun (Brian) Wu
Xun (Brian) Wu
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Table of Contents (10) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to NoSQL Databases FREE CHAPTER 2. MongoDB 3. Neo4j 4. Redis 5. Cassandra 6. HBase 7. DynamoDB 8. InfluxDB 9. Other Books You May Enjoy

HBase

Systems aren't designed in a vacuum. Each system reflects a long line of prior work. HBase is no exception. So where did HBase's developers draw their inspiration from?

In 2006, engineers at Google published a paper on a system they called Bigtable. It described the data model, semantics, and inner workings of a distributed database, which itself drew inspiration from a line of prior work, such as Chord, Tapestry, and C-Store.

Bigtable followed Google File System (GFS), the inspiration behind HDFS at Google, and was meant to offer record-level random read/write capabilities that were missing in GFS. Bigtable was initially used to serve workloads such as Google Analytics (for storing site metrics), and continues to be a popular storage choice at Google, despite newer systems, such as Spanner, that have been developed since then.

In 2007, engineers at a search...

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