Book Image

Seven NoSQL Databases in a Week

By : Sudarshan Kadambi, Xun (Brian) Wu
Book Image

Seven NoSQL Databases in a Week

By: Sudarshan Kadambi, Xun (Brian) Wu

Overview of this book

This is the golden age of open source NoSQL databases. With enterprises having to work with large amounts of unstructured data and moving away from expensive monolithic architecture, the adoption of NoSQL databases is rapidly increasing. Being familiar with the popular NoSQL databases and knowing how to use them is a must for budding DBAs and developers. This book introduces you to the different types of NoSQL databases and gets you started with seven of the most popular NoSQL databases used by enterprises today. We start off with a brief overview of what NoSQL databases are, followed by an explanation of why and when to use them. The book then covers the seven most popular databases in each of these categories: MongoDB, Amazon DynamoDB, Redis, HBase, Cassandra, In?uxDB, and Neo4j. The book doesn't go into too much detail about each database but teaches you enough to get started with them. By the end of this book, you will have a thorough understanding of the different NoSQL databases and their functionalities, empowering you to select and use the right database according to your needs.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Dedication
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

Replication


A replica set is a group of MongoDB instances that store the same set of data. Replicas are basically used in production to ensure a high availability of data.

Redundancy and data availability: because of replication, we have redundant data across the MongoDB instances. We are using replication to provide a high availability of data to the application. If one instance of MongoDB is unavailable, we can serve data from another instance. Replication also increases the read capacity of applications as reading operations can be sent to different servers and retrieve data faster. By maintaining data on different servers, we can increase the locality of data and increase the availability of data for distributed applications. We can use the replica copy for backup, reporting, as well as disaster recovery.

Replication in MongoDB

A replica set is a group of MongoDB instances that have the same dataset. A replica set has one arbiter node and multiple data-bearing nodes. In data-bearing nodes...