I would at least start with 3 cheap nodes with RF=3 and start with CL=TWO on 
writes and reads most likely getting your feet wet.  Don't buy very expensive 
computers like a lot do getting into the game for the first time…Every time I 
walk into a new gig, they seem to think they need to spend 6/10k per node.  I 
think this kind of scenario sounds find to use cassandra.  When you say 
virtualize, I believe you mean "use Vms"…..many use Amazon Vms and there is 
stuff to configure if you are on amazon specifically for this.

If you are on your own VM's, you do need to worry about if two nodes end up on 
the same hardware stealing resources from each other or if hardware fails as 
well.  Ie. The idea in noSQL is you typically have 3 copies of all data so if 
one node goes down, you are still live with CL=TWO.

Also, plan on doing ~300GB per node typically depending on how it works out in 
testing.

Later,
Dean

From: Marc Teufel 
<teufel.m...@googlemail.com<mailto:teufel.m...@googlemail.com>>
Reply-To: "user@cassandra.apache.org<mailto:user@cassandra.apache.org>" 
<user@cassandra.apache.org<mailto:user@cassandra.apache.org>>
Date: Friday, April 26, 2013 10:59 AM
To: "user@cassandra.apache.org<mailto:user@cassandra.apache.org>" 
<user@cassandra.apache.org<mailto:user@cassandra.apache.org>>
Subject: Re: Is Cassandra oversized for this kind of use case?

Okay one billion rows of data is a lot, compared to that i am far far away - 
means i can stay with Oracle? Maybe.
But you're right when you say its not only about big data but also about your 
need.

So storing the data is one part, doing analytical analysis is the second. I do 
a lot of calculations and queries to generate management criteria about how the 
production is going on actually, how the production went the last week, month, 
years and so on. Saving in a 5 minute rhythm is only a compromise to reduce the 
amount of data - maybe in the future the usecase will change an is about to 
store status of each machine as soon as it changes. This will of course 
increase the amount of data and the complexity of my queries again. And sure I 
show "Live" Data today... 5 Minute old Live Data... but if i tell the CEO that 
i am also able to work with real live data, i am sure this is what he wants to 
get .... ;-)

Can you recommend me to use Cassandra for this kind of scenario or is this 
oversized ?

Does it makes sense to start with 2 Nodes ?

Can i virtualize these two Nodes ?


Thx a lot for your assistance.

Marc




2013/4/26 Hiller, Dean <dean.hil...@nrel.gov<mailto:dean.hil...@nrel.gov>>
Well, it depends more on what you will do with the data.  I know I was on a 
sybase(RDBMS) with 1 billion rows but it was getting close to not being able to 
handle more (constraints had to be turned off and all sorts of optimizations 
done and expert consultants brought in and everything).

BUT there are other use cases where noSQL is great for (ie. It is not just 
great for big data type systems).  It is great for really high write throughput 
as you can add more nodes and handle more writes/second than an RDBMS very 
easily yet you may be doing so many deletes that the system constantly stays at 
a small data set.

You may want to analyze the data constantly or near real time involving huge 
amounts of reads / second in which case noSQL can be better as well.

Ie. Nosql is not just for big data.  I know with PlayOrm for cassandra, we have 
handled many different use cases out there.

Later,
Dean

From: Marc Teufel 
<teufel.m...@googlemail.com<mailto:teufel.m...@googlemail.com><mailto:teufel.m...@googlemail.com<mailto:teufel.m...@googlemail.com>>>
Reply-To: 
"user@cassandra.apache.org<mailto:user@cassandra.apache.org><mailto:user@cassandra.apache.org<mailto:user@cassandra.apache.org>>"
 
<user@cassandra.apache.org<mailto:user@cassandra.apache.org><mailto:user@cassandra.apache.org<mailto:user@cassandra.apache.org>>>
Date: Friday, April 26, 2013 8:17 AM
To: 
"user@cassandra.apache.org<mailto:user@cassandra.apache.org><mailto:user@cassandra.apache.org<mailto:user@cassandra.apache.org>>"
 
<user@cassandra.apache.org<mailto:user@cassandra.apache.org><mailto:user@cassandra.apache.org<mailto:user@cassandra.apache.org>>>
Subject: Is Cassandra oversized for this kind of use case?

I hope the Cassandra Community can help me finding a decision.

The project i am working on actually is located in industrial plant, machines 
are connected to a server an every 5 minutes i get data from the machines about 
its status. We are talking about a production with 100+ machines, so the data 
amount is very high:

Per Machine every 5th minute one row,
means 12 rows per hour, means roundabout 120 rows per day = 1200+ rows per day
multiplied by 20 its 240.000 rows per month and 2.880.000 rows per year. I have 
to hold
the last 3 years and i must be able to do analytics on this data. in the end i 
deal with roundabout 10 Mio Rows (12 columns holding text and numbers each row)
Okay, its kind of big data is not really  "big data" isn'it  but for me its a 
lot data to handle anyway.
Actually i am holding all these data in a oracle database but doing analytics 
on so many rows
 is not the good and modern way i think. as the company is successfull they 
will grew, means more machines, again more data to handle...

So i thought maybe Big Data technologies are a possible solution for me to 
store my data.

Meanwhile i know Apache Hadoop is not the right tool for this kind of thing 
because it scales not down.But maybe Cassandra ? This is my question to you, do 
you think cassandra is the right store for this kind of data?

I am thinking about 2 Nodes. Maybe virtual.

Let me know what you think. And if Cassandra is not the right tool please tell 
me and if you know any please tell me alternatives. Maybe i am already doing 
the right thing with storing that much data in oracle database and maybe one of 
you is doing the same - if so please let me also know.

Thank you very much.


Web: http://www.teufel.net



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