Date post: | 16-Aug-2015 |
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SQL to NoSQL: Top 6 Questions
Mike BrobergMarketing Communications, Cloudant, IBM Cloud Data Services
Ryan MillayField Engineer, Cloudant, IBM Cloud Data Services
Agenda
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• Top 6 Questions When Moving to NoSQL1. Why NoSQL?
a. What Is Cloudant?
2. Rows and Tables Become ... What?
3. Will I Have to Rebuild My App?
4. Each of My Tables Becomes a Different Type of JSON Document?
5. What if I Need Relationships? Can Cloudant Do JOINs?
6. Are There Tools That Make Migrating My Data to Cloudant Easier?
• Live Q&A
Housekeeping Notes
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• Today’s webcast is being recorded. We will send you a link to the recording, a link to the library and its code examples, and a copy of the slide deck after the presentation.
• The webcast recording will be available on our website: https://cloudant.com
• If you would like to ask a question during today’s presentation, please type in your question using the GoToWebinar tool bar.
1. Why NoSQL?
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But, What Is NoSQL, Really?
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• Umbrella term for databases using non-SQL query languages• Key-Value stores• Wide column stores• Document stores• Graph stores
• Some also say "non-relational," because data is not decomposed into separate tables, rows, and columns
• As we’ll see, it’s still possible to represent relationships in NoSQL
• The question is, are these relationships always necessary?
Today's NoSQL Focus: Document Stores
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• That's databases like MongoDB, Apache CouchDB™, Cloudant, and MarkLogic
• Optimized for "semi-structured" or "schema-optional" data
• People say "unstructured," but that's inaccurate
• Each document has its own structure
Schema Flexibility
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• Cloudant uses JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) as its data format
• Cloudant is based on Apache CouchDB. In both systems, a "database" is simply a collection of JSON documents
{ "docs": [ { "_id": "df8cecd9809662d08eb853989a5ca2f2", "_rev": "1-8522c9a1d9570566d96b7f7171623270", "Movie_runtime": 162, "Movie_rating": "PG-13", "Person_name": "Zoe Saldana", "Actor_actor_id": "0757855", "Movie_genre": "AVYS", "Movie_name": "Avatar", "Actor_movie_id": "0499549", "Movie_earnings_rank": "1", "Person_pob": "New Jersey, USA", "Person_id": "0757855", "Movie_id": "0499549", "Movie_year": 2009, "Person_dob": "1978-06-19" } ]}
Horizontal Scaling
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• Many commodity servers vs. few expensive ones
• Performance improves linearly with cost, not exponentially
Master-Master Replication
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Or "masterless replica architecture"
• Replicate data widely to mitigate disasters
• No single point of failure
• Minimize latency by putting data close to users
• Cloudant excels at data movement
The Cloudant Data Layer
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• Distributed NoSQL data persistence layer
• Available as a fully-managed DBaaS, or managed by you on-premises
• Transactional JSON document database with REST API
• Spreads data across data centers & devices for scale & high availability
• Ideal for apps that require:
• Massive, elastic scalability
• High availability
• Geo-location services
• Full-text search
• Offline-first design for occasionally connected users
Not One DB Server; a Cluster of Servers
• A Cloudant cluster
• Horizontal scale
• Redundant load balancers backed by multiple DB servers
• Designed for durability
• Saves multiple copies of data
• Spreads copies across cluster
• All replicas do reads & writes
• Access Cloudant over the Web
• Developers get an API
• Cloudant manages it all behind the scenes
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lb2 (failover)lb1
db1
db2 db3
HAProxy
NGINXCloudant
Dashboard
Bringing OSS and Custom Technology Together
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Operational
ToolingReshard / Rebalance
MonitoringBuilt-in monitoring
and system collection
CouchDB 2.0JSON storage, API,
Replication
LuceneText indexing &
Search
HaproxyLoad Balancing
GeoJSONGeospatial indexing
& query
Cloudant Query
Declarative Lang.
DiagnosticsTooling for diagnosing common issues with
clusters
Using Apache CouchDB™ 2.0 as one of the core components and wrapping additional features and operational expertise
2. Rows and Tables Become ... What?
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... This!
SQL Terms/Concepts
database -->
table -->
row -->
column -->
materialized view -->
primary key -->
table JOIN operations -->
Document Store Terms/Concepts
database
bunch of documents
document
field
index/database view/secondary index
"_id":
entity relations
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Rows --> Documents
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• Use some field to group documents by schema
• Example: "type":"user" or "type":"edge:follower"
• Don't worry. We'll return to this example later on
Tables --> Databases
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• Put all tables in one database; use "type": to distinguish
• Model entity relationships with secondary indexes
• More on this later in the webinar
• Can't wait? We're talking about concepts described in the CouchDB documentation on entity relationships
• http://wiki.apache.org/couchdb/EntityRelationship
Indexes and Queries
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• An "index" in Cloudant is not strictly a performance optimization• Instead, more akin to "materialized view" in RDBMS terms• Index also called a "database view" in Cloudant
• Index, then query
• You need one before you can do the other
• Create index, then query by URL
• Can create a secondary index on any field within a document• You get primary index (based on reserved "_id": field) by default
• Indexes precomputed, updated in real time• Indexes are updated using incremental MapReduce• You don't need to rebuild the entire index every time a document is changed,
added, or deleted• Performant at big-honkin' scale
Aside: One Cloudant DB, Many Indexes
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• Cloudant comes with several different indexing & query systems
• Cloudant Query: declarative query system
• Borrows syntax from MongoDB, but applied to Cloudant's REST API
• Incremental MapReduce view engine: traditional CouchDB approach
• Efficient range queries at large scale. Useful for aggregate functions/light analytics on operational data
• Cloudant Search: full-text indexing via Apache Lucene™
• Cloudant Geospatial: proprietary tech for GeoJSON spec
• Beyond bounding box with custom polygons, predictive path, etc.
• All out-of-the-box in Cloudant. No added integration or separate systems to maintain
3. Will I Have to Rebuild My App?
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Yes
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By ripping out the bad parts:
• Extract, Transform, Load
• Schema migrations
• JOINs that don't scale
Scale Whale
• A little more work up-front, but your application will adapt to scale much better
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4. Each of My Tables Becomes a Different Type of JSON Document?
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No
• Fancy explanation:
• Best practice is to denormalize data into 3rd normal form
• Or, less fancy:
• Smoosh relationships for each entry all together into one JSON doc
• Denormalization
• Approach to data modeling that shards well and scales well
• Works well with data that is somewhat static, or infrequently updated
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A smooshed and griddled cheese sandwich
Static Data Example: TV Cast Members
http://www.sarahmei.com/blog/2013/11/11/why-you-should-never-use-mongodb/
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5. What if I Need Relationships?Can Cloudant Do JOINs?
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Yes ...
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• Enter Cloudant "JOINs" via materialized views
... But First, What Not To DoRelationships as single documents
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http://www.sarahmei.com/blog/2013/11/11/why-you-should-never-use-mongodb/
Materialized View: Example
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Each transaction an immutable entry ... + accumulator
Some "Key" Concepts
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• Inject logic into "_id": field to enforce uniqueness
• Example: "_id":"<course>-<student>" ensures at most one document per course per student
• Give your documents a "type": field
• Add relations as separate "edge" documents
• Exploit powerful materialized view engine
Let's See One in Action
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https://webinar.cloudant.com/relational
Preview: Defining an Index/View
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• This design document (built in Cloudant Web dashboard) encapsulates everything that follows
• It builds our secondary index/database view, which we will soon query• It's the incremental MapReduce view engine we cited earlier• https://webinar.cloudant.com/relational/_design/join
Sample Related Data: Twitter
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User documents flexible & straightforward
How Do We Deal With Followers?
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a. Update each user document with a list
b. Create relation documents and "join"
E.g., Follower Graph
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Relationships as Documents
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Goal: Materialize Users & Following List
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"join" by selecting rows at lines 103–105
Index Sorting Rules
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http://wiki.apache.org/couchdb/View_collation
Materialize Users, With All Followed
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Keys only, for now
Materialize Users, With All Followed
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Keys +emitted values
Let's Query That View
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https://webinar.cloudant.com/relational/_design/join/_view/follows?
startkey=["user:kocolosk"]&endkey=["user:kocolosk",{}]
System-generated unique doc "_id":
Sort key Pointer to related followed user's doc "_id":
Let's Query That View, and Follow Pointers
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https://webinar.cloudant.com/relational/_design/join/_view/follows?
startkey=["user:kocolosk"]&endkey=["user:kocolosk",{}]&include_docs=true
Pretty Printed
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Wait. What Did We Get?
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• kocolosk’s USER document
• list of all USERs kocolosk FOLLOWS
• full USER document for all USERs that kocolosk FOLLOWS
• In a fast, single query:https://webinar.cloudant.com/relational/_design/join/_view/follows?
startkey=["user:kocolosk"]&endkey=["user:kocolosk",{}]&include_docs=true
6. Are There Tools That Make Migrating My Data to Cloudant Easier?
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• Yes
• https://cloudant.com/for-developers/migrating-data/
• But every use case is different and everyone’s data is different
• Lots of DIY tools on github that could work for you
• Cloudant’s Homegrown CSV --> JSON Tools
• python: https://github.com/claudiusli/csv-import
• Java: https://github.com/cavanaugh-ibm/db-data-loader
• Some support for direct SQL queries to database
Big Time
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• IBM InfoSphere
• Complex ETL tool that profiles, cleanses, and transforms data from heterogeneous data sources
• http://ibm.com/software/data/infosphere/
• SPViewer CouchDBPumper for Oracle
• Commercial tool for migrating data back and forth from CouchDB and Oracle
• http://spviewer.com/couchdbpump.html
• Eight-Wire Conductor
• Commercial tool for moving data between different sources
• http://www.eight-wire.com/
Legal Slide #1
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© "Apache", "CouchDB", "Apache CouchDB", "Apache Lucene," "Lucene", and the CouchDB logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of The Apache Software Foundation. All other brands and trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
Legal Slide #2
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© Copyright IBM Corporation 2015.
IBM and the IBM Cloudant logo are trademarks of International Business Machines Corp., registered in many jurisdictions worldwide. Other product and service names might be trademarks of IBM or other companies. A current list of IBM trademarks is available on the Web at "Copyright and trademark information" at ibm.com/legal/copytrade.shtml