HBase offers both scalability and the economy of sharing the same infrastructure as Hadoop, but will its flaws hold it back? NoSQL experts square off.
HBase is modeled after Google BigTable and is part of the world's most popular big data processing platform, Apache Hadoop. But will this pedigree guarantee HBase a dominant role in the competitive and fast-growing NoSQL database market?
Michael Hausenblas of MapR argues that Hadoop's popularity and HBase's scalability and consistency ensure success. The growing HBase community will surpass other open-source movements and will overcome a few technical wrinkles that have yet to be worked out.
Jonathan Ellis of DataStax, the support provider behind open-source Cassandra, argues that HBase flaws are too numerous and intrinsic to Hadoop's HDFS architecture to overcome. These flaws will forever limit HBase's applicability to high-velocity workloads, he says.
Read what our two NoSQL experts have to say, and then weigh in with your opinion in the comments section below.
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One funny pro-HBase argument is that there's worst: MongoDB. :D
I don't like Jonathan Ellis status though: "where he sets the technical direction and leads Apache Cassandra as project chair.". I hope that's not true. At the ASF the project chair is supposed to be an administrative task, the lead is done by a PMC (Project Management Community), aka the devs, by consensus. He may have influence, but it's social, not by title or rule.