NoSQL A brief look at Apache Cassandra Distributed Database
1. NoSQL (Not Only SQL)
Next generation web-
scale databases
A brief look at Apache Cassandra
Distributed Database
2. Who am I
• Joe Alex
– Software Architect / Data Scientist
Loves to code in Java, Scala
– Areas of Interest: Big Data, Data Analytics,
Machine Learning, Hadoop, Cassandra
– Currently working as Team Lead for Managed
Security Services Portal at Verizon
3. 3
New Face of data
Scale out not up
•Big Data
–user generated; Amazon, Social Networks: Twitter, Facebook, Four
Square
–machine generated; credit cards, RFID, POS, cell phones, GPS,
firewalls, routers
–more and more connected
–less structured
–data sets becoming larger and larger
–joins and relationships are exploding
–cloud computing - scaling and tolerance needs
–backing up is replaced with having multiple active copies
–nodes can crash and applications should survive
–nodes can be added or removed at any point of time
4. 4
New Face of data
Internet of Things (real-world objects connect to the Internet)
– 'Internet of Things' will infuse intelligence into all our systems and
present us with a whole new way to run a home, an enterprise, a
community or an economy. In a 4G world, wireless will connect
everything and that there's really no limit to the number of
connections that can be part of the mobile grid: vehicles,
appliances, buildings, roads, medical monitors.“
– recently announced a partnership with American Security
Logistics (ASL), to "wirelessly connect a series of location based
tracking devices that can be used to help keep tabs on an array of
valuables - from people to pets to pallets.
– 2013, the number of devices connected to the Internet will reach
1 trillion - up from 500 million in 2007.
5. 5
New Face of data
Scale out not up
•Traditional RDBMS
– neither economical or capable
– scaling up doesn't work
– scaling out with traditional DB is not easy
• scaling reads to a relational DB is hard
• scaling writes is almost impossible
– when you try to do, it is not relational anymore
– sharding scales
• but you lose all features that make RDBMS useful
• operational nightmare
– volumes of data strain commercial RDBMS
– cloud computing
– rethink how we store data. Understand your data, find the most efficient model
– de-normalization. normalization strives to remove duplication but duplication is an
interesting alternative to joins
6. 6
New Face of data
What is wrong with RDBMS
•Pros
–SQL lets you query all data at once
–enforces data integrity
–minimizes repetition
–proven
–familiar to DBA, users
•Cons
–rigidly schematic
–joins rapidly become a bottleneck
–difficult to scale up
–gets in way of parallization
–optimization may mitigate benefits of normalization (Sharding)
7. 7
New Face of data
What is good with NRDBMS
•Pros
–schemaless
–master-master replication
–scales well
–everything runs in parallel
–built for the web
•Cons
–integrity-enforcement migrates to code
–limited ORM tooling
–significant learning curve
–proven only in a sub-set of cases
–Unlearning normalization is difficult
8. 8
New Face of data
What is good with NRDBMS
– Relational databases do not fit every problem
– stuffing files in to an RDBMS, maybe there is something better
– using RDBMS for caching, perhaps a lighter weight solution is better
– cramming log data into a RDBMS, perhaps a KeyValue store is better
– trying to do parallel processing with a DB maybe Hadoop MapReduce is better
– executing a long running process taking few hours, may be MapReduce with
Hadoop/Hbase is better and get it done in minutes
– Despite the hype, RDBMS are not doomed, but
– their role and place will certainly change
– Scaling is a real challenge for relational db
• sharding is a band-aid, not feasible beyond a few nodes
– There is a hit in overcoming the initial leaning curve
• it changes how you build applications (jsp, jsf, jpa)
– Drop ACID and think about data
9. 9
New Face of data
What is good with NRDBMS
–Webapps need
• elastic scalability
• flexible schemas
• geographic distribution
• high availability
• reliable storage
–Webapps can do without
• complicated queries
• strong transactions ( some form of consistency is still desirable)
–DB vs NoSQL
• Strong consistency vs Eventual consistency
• Big dataset vs Huge Datasets
• Scaling is possible vs Scaling is easy
• SQL vs MapReduce, API etc
• Good availability vs Very high availability
10. 10
CAP Theorem
You cant have it all
–What is ACID
• Atomic
• Consistent
• Isolated
• Durable
–ACID trips when
• downtime is unacceptable
• reliability is >= 2 nodes
• challenging over Networks
11. 11
CAP Theorem
You cant have it all
•What is CAP Theorem
– Distributed systems can have any two
• Consistency (data is correct at all times)
– ACID transactions
• Availability (read and write all the time)
– Total Redundancy
• Partition Tolerance (plug and play nodes)
– Infinite scale out
– CA - corruption is possible if live nodes cant communicate
– CP - completely inaccessible if any nodes are dead
– AP - always available, but not always read most recent
– Cassandra chooses A and P but allows them to be tunable to have more C
– RDBMS are typically CA
12. 12
CAP Theorem
You cant have it all
•What is BASE
– ACID Alternative
– Basically Available (appears to work all the time)
– Soft state (doesn't have to be consistent all the time)
– Eventually consistent (but eventually it will be)
–BASE (basically available, soft state, eventually consistent) rather than ACID
(atomicity, consistency, isolation, durability )
13. 13
NoSQL
It is really Not Only SQL
•What problems does it solve
–Reliable and simple scaling
–No single point of failure (all nodes are identical)
–High write throughput
–Large data sets
–Scale out not up
–Online load balancing, cluster growth
–flexible schema
–key-oriented queries
–CAP aware
14. 14
NoSQL
It is really Not Only SQL
•Many choices
–Key/Value Stores (distributed hash tables)
Stores entities as key value pairs in large hash tables
– Voldemort, Redis, Riak, SimpleDB, Tokyo Cabinet, Dynomite, MemcacheDB
–Column Oriented (semi-structured)
Stores entities by Column
– Cassandra, Bigtable, HBase, Hypertable, Azure table services
–Document (semi-structured)
stores documents (JSON)
– CouchDB, MongoDB
–Graph (stores entities as nodes and edges)
– Neo4j
16. 16
Cassandra
Highly scalable distributed database
• Created at Facebook
– Designed by Avinash Lakshman and Prashant Malik
– Open sourced by Facebook in 2008
– Apache Incubator
– Graduated in March 2009
– Dynamo's fully distributed design
– Bigtable's Column Family-based data model
17. 17
Cassandra
Highly scalable distributed database
– Proven
• largest production cluster has over 100 TB of data in over 150 machines.
– Fault Tolerant
• automatically replicated to multiple nodes for fault-tolerance
• Replication across multiple data centers supported
• Failed nodes can be replaced with no downtime
– Decentralized
• Every node in the cluster is identical
• no network bottlenecks
• no SPOF
– You're in control
• Choose between synchronous or asynchronous replication for each update
• Highly available asynchronous operations are optimized with features like Hinted Handoff
and Read Repair
– Rich Data Model
• Allows efficient use for many applications beyond simple key/value
– Elastic
• Read and write throughput both increase linearly as new machines are added, with no
downtime or interruption to application
– Durable
• Cassandra is suitable for applications that can't afford to lose data, even when an entire
data center goes down
18. 18
Cassandra
Highly scalable distributed database
–High Availability. Writes never fail.
–Incremental scalability
–Eventually Consistent (Hinted Handoff, Read Repair)
–Tunable tradeoffs between consistency and latency
– partitioning, replication
–Minimal administration
–No Single Point Of Failure (SPOF)
–Key-Value store (with some structure)
–Schemaless
–MapReduce support
–Two read paths available: high-performance weak reads/quorum
reads
–Reads and writes atomic within a single Column Family
–Versioning and conflict resolution (last update wins)
19. 19
Cassandra
Who is using it
• Used by
– Twitter
– Facebook
– Digg
– Rackspace
– Reddit
– IBM
– Cisco
– SimpleGeo
– Cloudkick
– Comcast
– Mahalo
– Ooyala
– OpenX
23. 23
Cassandra
Highly scalable distributed database
• Writes
– no reads
– no seeks
– sequential disk access
– atomic within CF
– Fast
– Any node
– Always writable (hinted hand-off)
– Writes go to a commit log and in-memory storage (memtable)
– Memtable is occasionally flushed to disk (SSTable)
– The SSTables are periodically compacted
– Partitioner
– Wait for W responses
– client issues a write req to a random node in the cassandra cluster partitioner determines
the nodes responsible for the data
– No locks in critical path
– always writable - accepts writes during failure scenarios
24. 24
Cassandra
Highly scalable distributed database
• Reads
– Any nodes
– read repair
– usual cache conventions apply
– Bloom Filters before SSTable
– reads (memtable, sstable)
– Partitioner
– Wait for N – R responses in the background and perform read repair
– Read multiple SSTables
– Slower than writes (but still fast)
– Scales to billions of rows
– Read repair when out of synch
– Row Cache avoid SSTable lookup
– key cache avoid index scan
26. 26
Compared with MySQL
• MySQL
– 300ms write
– 350ms read
• Cassandra
– 0.12 ms write
– 15ms read
– on 50GB data
27. 27
Clients
• Most common way to access is via Thrift Interface.
• Other clients for most languages
• http://wiki.apache.org/cassandra/ClientExamples
• Fauna – Twitter’s Ruby client
• Lazyboy - Digg’s Python library
28. 28
Datamodels
• Cluster: machines (nodes) in logical Cassandra instance. Clusters can contain
multiple keyspaces.
• Keyspace: namespace for ColumnFamilies. (Analogous to DB schema)
• ColumnFamilies: contain multiple columns, referenced by row keys. (Analogous to
table)
• SuperColumns: columns that themselves have subcolumns.
30. 30
Column
• Lowest increment of data. Analogous to Name/Value pairs or Attribute. Key is ID.
• { "name": "emailAddress",
"value": "foo@bar.com",
"timestamp": 123456789 }
31. 31
SuperColumn
• Value is a Map of Columns
• {name: “address",
value: {
street: {name: "street", value: “888 anywhere", timestamp: 123456789},
city: {name: "city", value: “reston", timestamp: 123456789},
zip: {name: "zip", value: “20190", timestamp: 123456789},
}
}
32. 32
Column Families
• Analogous to Tables. Rows can have different columns. Columns can be created
dynamically. Columns are always sorted in row by Column name.
• User = {
keyhole : {
username: “keyhole",
email: " keyhole@bar.com“},
spacer: {
username: “spacer",
email: “spacer@bar.com",
phone: "(888) 888-8888“}
}
35. 35
Column Families
• Analogous to Tables. Rows can have different columns. Columns can be created
dynamically. Columns are always sorted in row by Column name.
• User = {
keyhole : {
username: “keyhole",
email: " keyhole@bar.com“},
spacer: {
username: “spacer",
email: “spacer@bar.com",
phone: "(888) 888-8888“}
}
36. 36
Type of Queries
• Single column
• Slice
• Key range
• Quering : get(), multiget(), get_slice(), multiget_slice(0, get_count, get_range_slice()
• Column comparators - TimeuUID, LexicalUUID, UTF8, Long, Bytes, ...
• Updating - insert(), batch_insert(), remove(), batch_mutate(), remove key range
37. 37
Cassandra
• Conclusions
– You probably do not need an NRDBMS now, but ought to learn one anyway
– Its not just for Twitter and bleeding edge startups Amazon, Facebook, Google, IBM,
Microsoft all get this
– Sometimes it is simply the right tool for the job
– if you are in the cloud you are going to use them
– best of both worlds - external mapping layer JPA driver
– Next Big thing - In Memory elastic DB
• memory can be much more efficient than disk
• RAMClouds become much more attractive for apps with high throughputs requirements
38. 38
More…
•Other articles/videos about Cassandra
–http://wiki.apache.org/cassandra/
–#cassandra on irc.freenode.net
–http://wiki.apache.org/cassandra/ArticlesAndPresent
ations