Apache Druid vs. Apache HBase

Overview
ProductRatingMost Used ByProduct SummaryStarting Price
Druid
Score 9.0 out of 10
N/A
Apache Druid is an open source distributed data store. Druid’s core design combines ideas from data warehouses, timeseries databases, and search systems to create a high performance real-time analytics database for a broad range of use cases. Druid merges key characteristics of each of the 3 systems into its ingestion layer, storage format, querying layer, and core architecture.N/A
HBase
Score 7.3 out of 10
N/A
The Apache HBase project's goal is the hosting of very large tables -- billions of rows X millions of columns -- atop clusters of commodity hardware. Apache HBase is an open-source, distributed, versioned, non-relational database modeled after Google's Bigtable.N/A
Pricing
Apache DruidApache HBase
Editions & Modules
No answers on this topic
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Offerings
Pricing Offerings
DruidHBase
Free Trial
NoNo
Free/Freemium Version
NoNo
Premium Consulting/Integration Services
NoNo
Entry-level Setup FeeNo setup feeNo setup fee
Additional Details
More Pricing Information
Community Pulse
Apache DruidApache HBase
Top Pros

No answers on this topic

Top Cons

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Features
Apache DruidApache HBase
NoSQL Databases
Comparison of NoSQL Databases features of Product A and Product B
Apache Druid
-
Ratings
Apache HBase
7.7
5 Ratings
14% below category average
Performance00 Ratings7.15 Ratings
Availability00 Ratings7.85 Ratings
Concurrency00 Ratings7.05 Ratings
Security00 Ratings7.85 Ratings
Scalability00 Ratings8.65 Ratings
Data model flexibility00 Ratings7.15 Ratings
Deployment model flexibility00 Ratings8.25 Ratings
Best Alternatives
Apache DruidApache HBase
Small Businesses
InfluxDB
InfluxDB
Score 8.8 out of 10
IBM Cloudant
IBM Cloudant
Score 7.6 out of 10
Medium-sized Companies

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IBM Cloudant
IBM Cloudant
Score 7.6 out of 10
Enterprises

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IBM Cloudant
IBM Cloudant
Score 7.6 out of 10
All AlternativesView all alternativesView all alternatives
User Ratings
Apache DruidApache HBase
Likelihood to Recommend
9.0
(1 ratings)
7.7
(10 ratings)
Likelihood to Renew
-
(0 ratings)
7.9
(10 ratings)
User Testimonials
Apache DruidApache HBase
Likelihood to Recommend
Apache
It is extremely well suited to rapid ingest of data from large data sources, due to the fact that you can restrict what is ingested by column/field, so that you only pull in the data you actually want or need.
As stated earlier, the open source version could use better cluster management tools, and troubleshooting tools for failing jobs/tasks.
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Apache
Hbase is well suited for large organizations with millions of operations performing on tables, real-time lookup of records in a table, range queries, random reads and writes and online analytics operations. Hbase cannot be replaced for traditional databases as it cannot support all the features, CPU and memory intensive. Observed increased latency when using with MapReduce job joins.
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Pros
Apache
  • Rapid ingest
  • Limiting ingest to only the relevant fields/columns
  • Easy ingest spec creation
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Apache
  • Scalability. HBase can scale to trillions of records.
  • Fast. HBase is extremely fast to scan values or retrieve individual records by key.
  • HBase can be accessed by standard SQL via Apache Phoenix.
  • Integrated. I can easily store and retrieve data from HBase using Apache Spark.
  • It is easy to set up DR and backups.
  • Ingest. It is easy to ingest data into HBase via shell, Java, Apache NiFi, Storm, Spark, Flink, Python and other means.
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Cons
Apache
  • Security configuration is problematic
  • Cluster management could have more features
  • Troubleshooting incomplete tasks/jobs is a chore
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Apache
  • There are very few commands in HBase.
  • Stored procedures functionality is not available so it should be implemented.
  • HBase is CPU and Memory intensive with large sequential input or output access while as Map Reduce jobs are primarily input or output bound with fixed memory. HBase integrated with Map-reduce jobs will result in random latencies.
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Likelihood to Renew
Apache
No answers on this topic
Apache
There's really not anything else out there that I've seen comparable for my use cases. HBase has never proven me wrong. Some companies align their whole business on HBase and are moving all of their infrastructure from other database engines to HBase. It's also open source and has a very collaborative community.
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Alternatives Considered
Apache
No answers on this topic
Apache
Cassandra os great for writes. But with large datasets, depending, not as great as HBASE. Cassandra does support parquet now. HBase still performance issues. Cassandra has use cases of being used as time series. HBase, it fails miserably. GeoSpatial data, Hbase does work to an extent. HA between the two are almost the same.
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Return on Investment
Apache
  • Integration with S3 storage has saved about 35% on our storage, over HDFS
  • The rapid ingest has saved user's time in the query aspects of their applications.
  • The ability to ingest from a variety of data sources has made overall user application queries much simpler
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Apache
  • As Hbase is a noSql database, here we don't have transaction support and we cannot do many operations on the data.
  • Not having the feature of primary or a composite primary key is an issue as the architecture to be defined cannot be the same legacy type. Also the transaction concept is not applicable here.
  • The way data is printed on console is not so user-friendly. So we had to use some abstraction over HBase (eg apache phoenix) which means there is one new component to handle.
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