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I want to implement a cache system for our application, we've started integrating with Memcached. Recently I started hearing of Hypertable, and saw some great benchmarks done with that..

However, I couldn't find good comparison between the two.

Just to get things straight: I know that Hypertable is considered closer to a DB than to a cache. On the other hand, it's not exactly an RDBMS - in fact, it's exactly not an RDBMS. It has its own benefits, but the question is whether they're worth the performance cost (if any)?

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  • Gonna depend a lot on your use case. Is Memcached on the same server? Different server? Same for HyperTable. How many records are you storing? How are you indexing/keying? Aug 8, 2009 at 21:03

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Hypertable is an implementation of concepts in Google's BigTable. Namely a column-oriented DB which has properties of being highly denormalized which means it doesn't need joins.

Memcached is an in-memory caching layer which acts like a distributed hashtable, keeping your app from having to hit the actual DB.

Both lend themselves well to being distributed and work well with MapReduce style topologies but they serve different purposes. Memcached/DHT is going to serve to speed access to data in memory while HyperTable/BigTable are actual mechanisms for permanent data storage on disk.

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  • Why are you linking to a non-existent article in Wikipedia?
    – Alex
    Aug 8, 2009 at 20:39
  • It was a typo. Wikipedia apparently has case-sensitive URLs.
    – mckamey
    Aug 8, 2009 at 20:46
  • Thanks for the explanation but that's not what I'm seeking. As I said, I know the difference between the two, and what they're supposed to do. The question is: what are the performance differences between the two? It would be nice to see a memcached benchmark compared to a Hypertable benchmark to see if memcached is actually required for a given task at hand. Aug 8, 2009 at 20:54
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    I doubt that you're going to find a direct comparison as they aren't replacements for one another. You might rephrase the question to compare a SQL-DB/Memcached stack to a Hadoop-DFS/Hypertable stack, but even still there are many, many variables which would affect the answer. Not the least of which is network topology and structure of the data. It's analogous to asking "Which is faster a Windows machine or a Linux machine?" Answer: depends on a lot.
    – mckamey
    Aug 8, 2009 at 21:52
  • I agree with you - I need a concrete answer, not something vague. I guess I don't know how to ask it properly. What kind of data do you think I should provide in order to make this question more concrete? You mentioned network topology, for example. Aug 9, 2009 at 4:19
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Memcached is used for speeding things up, e.g. results of SQL queries, without going to DB, by storing everything in memory (RAM).

Hypertable (HBase, Cassandra, MongoDB etc.) and others are permanent storage NoSQL DBs (data stored and retrieved from Hard Drives). They can't give you the performance of the reading/writing from/to RAM (e.g. memcached). So these are not compared to one another.

A better use case is to use NoSQL DBs for permanent storage, and using memcached as a front-side fast access cache between web-application and (NoSQL or any) DB.

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