Aerospike vs. Apache HBase

Overview
ProductRatingMost Used ByProduct SummaryStarting Price
Aerospike
Score 9.0 out of 10
N/A
The Aerospike Real-time Data Platform aims to enable organizations to act instantly across billions of transactions while reducing server footprint up to 80%. The vendor states Aerospike multi-cloud platform powers real-time applications with predictable sub-millisecond performance up to petabyte scale with five-nines uptime with globally distributed, consistent data. Aerospike boasts customers such as Airtel, Experian, European Central Bank, Nielsen, PayPal, Snap, Verizon Media and Wayfair.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
AerospikeApache HBase
Editions & Modules
No answers on this topic
No answers on this topic
Offerings
Pricing Offerings
AerospikeHBase
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
AerospikeApache HBase
Features
AerospikeApache HBase
NoSQL Databases
Comparison of NoSQL Databases features of Product A and Product B
Aerospike
9.9
Ratings
11% above category average
Apache HBase
7.7
Ratings
14% below category average
Performance10.00 Ratings7.10 Ratings
Availability10.00 Ratings7.80 Ratings
Concurrency10.00 Ratings7.00 Ratings
Security10.00 Ratings7.80 Ratings
Scalability10.00 Ratings8.60 Ratings
Data model flexibility10.00 Ratings7.10 Ratings
Deployment model flexibility9.00 Ratings8.20 Ratings
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AerospikeApache HBase
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User Ratings
AerospikeApache HBase
Likelihood to Recommend
9.0
(0 ratings)
7.7
(0 ratings)
Likelihood to Renew
8.0
(0 ratings)
7.9
(0 ratings)
Usability
7.0
(0 ratings)
-
(0 ratings)
Support Rating
8.9
(0 ratings)
-
(0 ratings)
User Testimonials
AerospikeApache HBase
Likelihood to Recommend
We were developing an advertisement time auction application, where we had to store the client's personal details, advertisement-related details, location, and many other details. Moreover, we required a promotion, cookies, and a few more details from the front end. All this information is heavy in terms of size and cannot be lost if the server crash. So, we required an extremely fast disk database with high scalability and low throughput.
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HBase is well suited for streaming ingest, fast lookups, massive datasets, data warehouse lookup tables, RDBMS replacement, MongoDB replacement, key-value store, data scans, logs, JSON storage and some binary storage. My preferred use case is for storing data points like time series or data produced by sensors. I often use HBase when I need data available immediately and I am not looking for transactions. This is a great store for really wide tables with tons of columns. It is also great if you are not sure what type of data you are going to have. It really excels at sparse data.
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Pros
  • featured with robustness and reliability
  • low hardware resource consumption especially RAM
  • open-source
  • distributed no-sql server
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  • Scalable and truly non-relational data
  • HBase operations run in real-time on its database rather than MapReduce jobs
  • Scales linearly to support billions of rows with millions of columns
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Cons
  • AQL is pretty limited and not as useful as the java client
  • Documentation can be lacking for some products
  • replication configuration is complicated
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  • Write performance
  • Performance support for parquet file format. supports, but performance wise still not there
  • API / library availability for spark, rather than creating a new library for it
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Likelihood to Renew
If money isn't an issue, and you're not on the cloud, then I'd go with Aerospike. If you're the cloud ie, aws or azure, then i'd stick with dynamoDB or Cosmos then. Aerospike is definitely not something you want to put into the cloud. It doesn't work well w/ cross regions. If cross DC, you'll have to write some stuff for data integrity checks.
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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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Usability
Could be easier to use and install. Also developer experience needs some work
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No answers on this topic
Support Rating
We used the community edition.
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No answers on this topic
Alternatives Considered
Aerospike is much more performant than MongoDB, however there is much greater community adoption and support for mongo
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Compared NoSQL databases with traditional databases for faster retrieval and consistency. As MongoDB is a NoSQL supports dynamic fields, however, query performance is bad for aggregations and added maintenance. When compared with MySQL and Teradata, it could not scale up as fast as Hbase and added cost involved to it. HBase can be easily scalable to a huge volume of records, have a faster lookup and provides consistency
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Return on Investment
  • Being able to power the same workload on a fraction of the servers has led to better ROI for my application.
  • Less servers needed also meant less time to manage the cluster, leading to savings in engineering time
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  • Positive: Open source, easy to use, good to store big data.
  • Negative: SQL functionalities are not available.
  • More memory utilization
  • More troubleshooting
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ScreenShots