Data modeling in Cassandra - data-modeling

I'm building a data base where some users can put tag in others data. Something like Last.fm. How can I implement a DB in cassandra for this application. The Tag must be associate with the user and the data.
Is there any data modeling pattern for cassandra?
The Stack overflow tags is a good example of what I want to do! :)
thanks

See http://maxgrinev.com/2010/07/12/do-you-really-need-sql-to-do-it-all-in-cassandra/ and the other articles at the top of http://wiki.apache.org/cassandra/ArticlesAndPresentations

If you haven't already built this in a conventional database I would suggest that first. Most people don't have the data scale to need something like Cassandra. Otherwise if this is simply a project and you want to try out Cassandra then I suggest this link to get you started:
Cassandra by Example : Twitter

Related

Which NoSql for visualization extensive app

I am about to work on a app that will be showing a lot of visualizations. It is an data read-only application, there will be negligible write operations. We have a lot of data(JSON, CSV), depending on the usecase we will have to filter to a subset and send it to the UI for visualization.
What kind of NoSQL would you recommend and please do specify the reasons?Thanks!
P.S: Some of the devs are recommending ElasticSearch. I am not sure if we should go for a document store or a key-value in the first place.
If you're visualizing log data, I'd use logstash in combination with elasticsearch and kibana. There's also commercial ways to protect your data and more coming. I'm working on k3bana which will visualize data with X3DOM and D3.js. Good luck!
I used Redis (with Jedis) to store key-value pairs in one case.

Maintaining Data about a Database

I'm designing a database and I would appreciate suggestions on maintaining data that describes the tables, attributes, etc. I will make a Database Design Document, but I want something that could be more useful for updating changes to the database schema.
I read an article that suggests using a Data Dictionary in YAML or JSON, but I haven't found much else about the subject.
My questions are: "What alternatives to data dictionaries are there for tracking this data?"
or
"From your professional experience, what is the best way to maintain this data?"
Thanks,
-N
You might find the comment functionality useful, e.g.:
comment on table foo is 'some comments go here';
Found this link about source controlling your databases recently and thought it might help someone in the future. Get your database under version control
Also this link which I mentioned earlier Data Dictionaries

Can I use RavenDB (NoSQL) or should I just be using MySQL(RDBMS)?

I am starting on a ASP.NET MVC 3 General Management System (Project Management being the first component). Now I have been reading up a bit on RavenDB and it sounds pretty interesting. One of the biggest things that I like about it is the fact I would not need any type on ORM to handle the data from the DB. This will make my code a lot cleaner and quicker. However coming from a background working exclusively with MySQL for the past 6+ years, I tend to think very relationally with my data. There are a few things that seems like NoSQL would not be good for. I want to throw these things out there and maybe these issues can be handle in a NoSQL solution and I am just think too relationally (then again, maybe this project should be done with MySQL). These are the issues I am thinking of:
Unique Idenifiers: I am going to want to be able to have unique identifiers for a lot of things. For stuff like projects, the name should be unique and could use that however when it come to tasks under a project, the title may not be unique and this is where I would use a quto-increment field but I can do that in RavenDB (from what I can tell)
Linking: Using for fields like status and type I would just use a linking with a foreign key. Now for one-to-many relationships, I can just use the text instead of trying to link a foreign key (which you don't have in NoSQL) but with many-to-many linking, that because a problem. For example, I intend to have a tagging system (like on here) where most items can have 1 to many tags attached to it and then I can perform searches on those tag for the items. Is there a way to do this in NoSQL?
Is a RDBMS really the best tool for the job here or am I just not properly think the "NoSQL" way and I can accomplish this with NoSQL (RavenDB)?
I know this is an old post. Perhaps the docs weren't as good when originally written. But for reference in case other stumble here:
Raven comes with a HiLo document id generation strategy by default. Storing a new document without specifying an id yourself will get an auto incrementing id such as "projects/1", "projects/2", etc. Read more here.
The best guidance on the different ways to handle document relationships is here in the documentation. For the situation you described, you don't really need a separate document at all. You can simply embed a string array of tag names into each item. Documents are not flat, they can be structured. And yes, you can still query on them.
Hopefully you've discovered this on your own since the original post.
Ayende wrote a post "Modeling reference data in RavenDB" which answers some of your questions re Linking. You will have copies of the data between the reference document and your other documents and that redundancy is "ok" for document databases. You can still build indexes or query based on the on either Id or text that you store.
I would favor SQL for a transaction system such as Accounts Receivable application where you need to perform ad hoc queries. With document database you really need to think through how you will be fetching your data and build indexes up front to answers those questions. With RavenDB there is also a dynamic indexing function that learns from and caches the queries that are fired at the database.
For project management where the majority of items would be tasks I would think a RavenDB would fit your needs.

What is best practice for working with DB in Wordpress?

I'm developing a plugin for Wordpress, and I need to store some information from a form into a table in the DB.
There are probably lots of pages explaining how to do this, this being one of them:
http://codex.wordpress.org/Function_Reference/wpdb_Class
But are there any other pages talking about best practice for interacting with th WP DB?
UPDATE
Found a few more pages which could be usefull:
http://wpengineer.com/wordpress-database-functions
http://blue-anvil.com/archives/wordpress-development-techniques-1-running-custom-queries-using-the-wpdb-class
Unless you need to create your own complex table structure I'd suggest using the existing tables for your needs. There's the options table, user meta table, and post meta table to work with. These all have built in apis for quick access.
Options: add_option(), get_option(), update_option(), delete_option()
Usermeta: add_user_meta(), get_user_meta(), update_user_meta(), delete_user_meta()
Postmeta: add_post_meta(), get_post_meta(), update_post_meta(), delete_post_meta()
I've not found much real need to go outside of these tables (yes, there are exceptions, I've done them myself when the data needs are complex) but these meta options all use a text field in the db to store the data, so there's a lot you can store here if its simple data.
If your data is simple then consider storing your information in one of these places as individual options or even as serialized arrays.
One of my BIGGEST pet peeves with plug in developers that leverage the WP database is that if/when a given database driven plugin isn't used anymore, the developer doesn't think to remove the footprint it made in the database.

Is there a database like this?

Background: Okay, so I'm looking for what I guess is an object database. However, the (admittedly few) object databases that I've looked at have been simple persistence layers, and not full-blown DBMSs. I don't know if what I'm looking for is even considered an object database, so really any help in pointing me in the right direction would be very appreciated.
I don't want to give you two pages describing what I'm looking for so I'll use an example to illustrate my point. Let's say I have a "BlogPost" object that I need to store. Something like this, in pseudocode:
class BlogPost
title:String
body:String
author:User
tags:List<String>
comments:List<Comment>
(Assume Comment is its own class.)
Now, in a relational database, author would be stored as a foreign key pointing to a User.id, and the tags and comments would be stored as one-to-many or many-to-many relationships using a separate table to store the relationships. What I'd like is a database engine that does the following:
Stores related objects (author, tags, etc.) with a direct reference instead of using foreign keys, which require an additional lookup; in other words, objects on top of each other should be natively supported by the database
Allows me to add a comment or a tag to the blog post without retrieving the entire object, updating it, and then putting it back into the database (like a document-oriented database -- CouchDB being an example)
I guess what I'm looking for is a navigational database, but I don't know. Is there anything even remotely similar to what I'm thinking of? If so, what is it called? (Or better yet, give me an actual working database.) Or am I being too picky?
Edit:
Just to clarify, I am NOT looking for an ORM or an abstraction layer or anything like that. I am looking for an actual database that does this internally. Sorry if I'm being difficult, but I've searched and I couldn't find anything.
Edit:
Also, something for the JVM would be excellent, but at this point I really don't care what platform it runs on.
I think what you are describing could easily be modeled in a graph database. Then you get the benefit of navigating to the nodes/edges where you want to make changes without any need to retrieve anything else. For the JVM there's the Neo4j open source graph database (where I'm part of the team). You can read about it over at High Scalability, as part of an overview at thinkvitamin or in this stackoverflow thread. As for the tags, I think storing them in a graph database can give you some extra advantages if you want to find related tags and similar stuff. Just drop a line on the mailing list, and I'm sure the community will help you out.
You could try out db4o which is available in C# and Java.
I think our looking for this: http://www.odbms.org/. This site has some good info on Object Databases, including Objectivity, which is a pretty good object database.
Elephant does this: http://common-lisp.net/project/elephant/
Exactly what you've described can be done with (N)Hibernate running on an ordinary RDBMS.
The advantage of using such a persistence layer with an ordinary database is that you have a standard database system combined with convenient programming. You declare your classes in a very natural way, and (N)Hibernate provides a way to translate betweeen references/lists and foreign key relationships.
Java tutorial: http://docs.jboss.org/hibernate/stable/core/reference/en/html/tutorial-firstapp.html
.NET tutorial: https://web.archive.org/web/20081212181310/http://blogs.hibernatingrhinos.com/nhibernate/archive/2008/04/01/your-first-nhibernate-based-application.aspx
If you insist that you don't want to use a well-supported standard RDBMS and would rather trust your data to something more exotic and less heavily tested, you're looking for an Object Relational Database.
However, such a product would probably be best implemented by making it be a layer over a standard RDBMS anyway. This is probably why ORMs like (N)Hibernate are the most popular solution - they allow standard RDBMS software (and widely available management/user skills) to be applied, and yet the programming experience is 99% object-based.
This is exactly what LINQ was designed for.
Microsoft LINQ defines a set of proprietary query operators that can be used to query, project and filter data in arrays, enumerable classes, XML (XLINQ), relational database, and third party data sources. While it allows any data source to be queried, it requires that the data be encapsulated as objects. So, if the data source does not natively store data as objects, the data must be mapped to the object domain. Queries written using the query operators are executed either by the LINQ query processing engine or, via an extension mechanism, handed over to LINQ providers which either implement a separate query processing engine or translate to a different format to be executed on a separate data store (such as on a database server as SQL queries (DLINQ)). The results of a query are returned as a collection of in-memory objects that can be enumerated using a standard iterator function such as C#'s foreach.
There's a variety of terms, all linked to Object-Relational Mapping, aka ORM, which is probably going to be the most useful one for you to look up. ORM libraries exist for many programming languages.
Oracle's nested tables provide some part of that functionality, though in updates, you cannot just add a row to the nested table - you have to replace the whole nested table.
I guess you're looking for an ORM with "EntityFirst" approach.
In EntityFirst approach the developer is least[not-at-all] concerned with Database. You just have to build your entities or objects. The ORM then takes care of storing the entities in Database and retrieving them at your will.
The only EntityFirst ORM witihn my knowledge "Signum". It's a wonderful framework built on top of .net. I recommend you to go thrgouh some videos on the SignumFramework website and I'm sure you'll find it useful.
Link Text: http://www.signumframework.com
Thanks.
ZODB perhaps?
good introduction find here:
http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/aix/library/au-zodb/
You could try out STSdb, DB4O, Perst ... which is available in C# and Java.

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