Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
104 lines (77 loc) · 5.81 KB

faq.md

File metadata and controls

104 lines (77 loc) · 5.81 KB
title subtitle layout sectionid
Frequently Asked Questions
Don't see your question here? <a href='/community'>Ask us</a>
simple_page
faq

Is Druid a data warehouse? When should I use Druid over Redshift/BigQuery/Snowflake?

Apache Druid (incubating) is a new type of database to power real-time analytic workloads for event-driven data, and isn’t a traditional data warehouse. Although Druid incorporates architecture ideas from data warehouses such as column-oriented storage, Druid also incorporates designs from search systems and timeseries databases. Druid's architecture is designed to handle many use cases that traditional data warehouses cannot.

Druid offers the following advantages over traditional data warehouses:

  • Low latency streaming ingest, and direct integration with messages buses such as Apache Kafka.
  • Time-based partitioning, which enables performant time-based queries.
  • Fast search and filter, for fast ad-hoc slice and dice.
  • Minimal schema design, and native support for semi-structured and nested data.

Consider using Druid over a data warehouse if you have streaming data, and require low-latency ingest as well as low-latency queries. Also consider Druid if you need ad-hoc analytics. Druid is great for slice and dice and drill downs. Druid is also often used over a data warehouse to power interactive applications, where support for high concurrency queries is required.

Is Druid a SQL-on-Hadoop solution? When should I use Druid over Presto/Hive?

Druid supports SQL and can load data from Hadoop, but is not a SQL-on-Hadoop system. Modern SQL-on-Hadoop solutions are used for the same use cases as data warehouses, except they are designed for architectures where compute and storage are separated systems, and data is loaded from storage into the compute layer as needed by queries.

The previous section on Druid vs data warehouses also applies to Druid versus SQL-on-Hadoop solutions.

Is Druid a log aggregation/log search system? When should I use Druid over Elastic/Splunk?

Druid uses inverted indexes (in particular, compressed bitmaps) for fast searching and filtering, but it is not generally considered a search system. While Druid contains many features commonly found in search systems, such as the ability to stream in structured and semi-structured data and the ability to search and filter the data, Druid isn’t commonly used to ingest text logs and run full text search queries over the text logs. However, Druid is often used to ingest and analyze semi-structured data such as JSON.

Druid at its core is an analytics engine and as such, it can support numerical aggregations, groupBys (including multi-dimensional groupBys), and other analytic workloads faster and more efficiently than search systems.

Is Druid a timeseries database? When should I use Druid over InfluxDB/OpenTSDB/Prometheus?

Druid does share some characteristics with timeseries databases, but also combines ideas from analytic databases and search systems. Like in timeseries databases, Druid is optimized for data where a timestamp is present. Druid partitions data by time, and queries that include a time filter will be significantly faster than those that do not. Aggregating metrics and filtering on dimensions (which are roughly equivalent to TSDBs' tags) are also very fast when a time filter is present. However, because Druid incorporates many architectural designs from analytics databases and search systems, it can significantly outperformance TSDBs when grouping, searching, and filtering on tags that are not time, or when computing complex metrics such as histograms and quantiles.

How is Druid deployed?

Druid can be deployed on commodity hardware in any *NIX based environment. A Druid cluster consists of several different processes, each designed to do a small set of things very well (ingestion, querying, coordination, etc). Many of these processes can be co-located and deployed together on the same hardware as described here.

Druid was initially created in the cloud, and runs well in AWS, GCP, Azure, and other cloud environments.

Where does Druid fit in my existing Hadoop-based data stack?

Druid typically connects to a source of raw data such as a message bus such as Apache Kafka, or a filesystem such as HDFS. Druid ingests an optimized, column-oriented, indexed copy of your data and serves analytics workloads on top of it.

A common streaming data oriented setup involving Druid looks like this: Raw data → Kafka → Stream processor (optional, typically for ETL) → Kafka (optional) → Druid → Application/user

A common batch/static file oriented setup involving Druid looks like this: Raw data → Kafka (optional) → HDFS → ETL process (optional) → Druid → Application/user

The same Druid cluster can serve both the streaming and batch path.

Is Druid in-memory?

The earliest iterations of Druid didn’t allow for data to be paged in from and out to disk, so it was often called an “in-memory” database. As Druid evolved, this limitation was removed. To provide a balance between hardware cost and query performance, Druid leverages memory-mapping to page data between disk and memory and extend the amount of data a single node can load up to the size of its disks.

Individual Historicals can be configured with the maximum amount of data they should be given. Coupled with the Coordinator’s ability to assign data to different “tiers” based on different query requirements, Druid is essentially a system that can be configured across a wide spectrum of performance requirements. All data can be in memory and processed, or data can be heavily over-committed compared to the amount of memory available. Druid can also support complex configurations, such as configuring the most recent month of data in memory, while everything else is over-committed.