Internet has become so widespread that most popular websites are accessed by hundreds of millions of people on a daily basis. Monolithic architectures, which were frequently used in the past, were mostly composed of traditional relational database management systems, but quickly have become incapable of sustaining high data traffic very common these days. Meanwhile, NoSQL databases have emerged to provide some missing properties in relational databases like the schema-less design, horizontal scaling, and eventual consistency. This paper analyzes and compares the consistency model implementation on five popular NoSQL databases: Redis, Cassandra, MongoDB, Neo4j, and OrientDB. All of which offer at least eventual consistency, and some have the option of supporting strong consistency. However, imposing strong consistency will result in less availability when subject to network partition events.
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IEEE Transactions on Network and Service Management
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Coherent wide-area data caching can improve the scalability and responsiveness of distributed services such as wide-area file access, database and directory services, and content distribution. However, distributed services differ widely in the frequency of read/write sharing, the amount of contention between clients for the same data, and their ability to make tradeoffs between consistency and availability. Aggressive replication enhances the scalability and availability of services with read-mostly data or data that need not be kept .
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Proceedings of the Symposium on SDN Research