NoSQL: Difference between revisions
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==Types of NoSQL Databases== | ==Types of NoSQL Databases== | ||
===Key-value Store=== | ===Key-value Store=== | ||
A key-value store maintains data as a pair consisting of | A key-value store maintains data as a pair consisting of an indexed key and a value. In general, key-value stores provide a single operation: fetching a single value using its key. Some key-value store implementations include mechanisms for performing a join on two distinct tables. Examples of key-value stores include Oracle's BerkeleyDB and Amazon's Dynamo. | ||
====BerkeleyDB==== | ====BerkeleyDB==== |
Revision as of 07:58, 28 July 2010
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NoSQL refers to a number of non-relational distributed database architectures. NoSQL architectures usually store data as key-value pairs, rather than supporting relations. Some systems eliminate the guarantee of consistency (instead promising eventual consistency) in order to increase scalability. The distributed nature of NoSQL architectures makes such data stores highly scalable and fault-tolerant.
History
NoSQL vs. RDBMS
Disadvantages of NoSQL
Relationship to cloud computing
Types of NoSQL Databases
Key-value Store
A key-value store maintains data as a pair consisting of an indexed key and a value. In general, key-value stores provide a single operation: fetching a single value using its key. Some key-value store implementations include mechanisms for performing a join on two distinct tables. Examples of key-value stores include Oracle's BerkeleyDB and Amazon's Dynamo.