Book Image

Guide to NoSQL with Azure Cosmos DB

By : Gaston C. Hillar, Daron Yöndem
Book Image

Guide to NoSQL with Azure Cosmos DB

By: Gaston C. Hillar, Daron Yöndem

Overview of this book

Cosmos DB is a NoSQL database service included in Azure that is continuously adding new features and has quickly become one of the most innovative services found in Azure, targeting mission-critical applications at a global scale. This book starts off by showing you the main features of Cosmos DB, their supported NoSQL data models and the foundations of its scalable and distributed architecture. You will learn to work with the latest available tools that simplify your tasks with Cosmos DB and reduce development costs, such as the Data Explorer in the Azure portal, Microsoft Azure Storage Explorer, and the Cosmos DB Emulator. Next, move on to working with databases and document collections. We will use the tools to run schema agnostic queries against collections with the Cosmos DB SQL dialect and understand their results. Then, we will create a first version of an application that uses the latest .NET Core SDK to interact with Cosmos DB. Next, we will create a second version of the application that will take advantage of important features that the combination of C# and the .NET Core SDK provides, such as POCOs and LINQ queries. By the end of the book, you will be able to build an application that works with a Cosmos DB NoSQL document database with C#, the .NET Core SDK, LINQ, and JSON.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)
Title Page
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

Understanding the options for provisioning request units


So far, we have been provisioning throughput for each collection. This gives us more granular control on how many request units we will need per container. This option is usually better if you have a smaller number of containers and require guaranteed throughput on each container backed by SLA. Keep in mind that all physical partitions of a Cosmos DB container will equally share the number of request units available for the container.

The other option is to provision throughput at the database level. In this case, all the containers within the database will share the total pool of request units you have. This can be a more comfortable management option when you have a high number of containers and do not necessarily want to manage all individually.

Note

One crucial difference between container-level provisioning and database-level provisioning is the minimum throughput we can provision. For partitioned containers, the minimum provisioned...