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HBase High Performance Cookbook

HBase High Performance Cookbook

By : Ruchir Choudhry
2.5 (2)
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HBase High Performance Cookbook

HBase High Performance Cookbook

2.5 (2)
By: Ruchir Choudhry

Overview of this book

Apache HBase is a non-relational NoSQL database management system that runs on top of HDFS. It is an open source, disturbed, versioned, column-oriented store and is written in Java to provide random real-time access to big Data. We’ll start off by ensuring you have a solid understanding the basics of HBase, followed by giving you a thorough explanation of architecting a HBase cluster as per our project specifications. Next, we will explore the scalable structure of tables and we will be able to communicate with the HBase client. After this, we’ll show you the intricacies of MapReduce and the art of performance tuning with HBase. Following this, we’ll explain the concepts pertaining to scaling with HBase. Finally, you will get an understanding of how to integrate HBase with other tools such as ElasticSearch. By the end of this book, you will have learned enough to exploit HBase for boost system performance.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)
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7
7. Large-Scale MapReduce
12
Index

Backing up and restoring Hbase


Amazon Elastic MapReduce provides multiple ways to back up and restore Hbase data to S3 cloud. It also allows us to do an incremental backup; during the backup process Hbase continues to execute the write commands, helping us to keep working while the backup process continues.

Note

There is a risk of having an inconsistency in the data. If consistence is of prime importance, then the write needs to be stopped during the initial backup process, synchronized across nodes. This can be achieved by passing the–consistent parameter when requesting a backup.

When you back up HBase data, you should specify a different backup directory for each cluster.

An easy way to do this is to use the cluster identifier as part of the path specified for the backup directory.

For example, s3://mybucket/backups/j-3AEXXXXXX16F2. This ensures that any future incremental backups reference the correct HBase cluster.

How to do it…

When you are ready to delete old backup files that are no longer...

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