With ever-growing data workloads, such as time series metrics and IoT sensor events, databases need to handle large data (larger than 10 TB). Running a highly dense database cluster where each node stores terabytes of data makes perfect sense from a cost-efficiency standpoint. But spinning up new data nodes to get more storage-per-node leads to significant wastage of expensive compute resources.

YugabyteDB has been designed from the ground up to handle large data and is powered by a radical replication and storage architecture. DocDB, YugabyteDB's underlying distributed document store, uses a heavily customized version of RocksDB for node-local persistence. It has been engineered from the ground up to deliver high performance at a massive scale. Several features have been built into DocDB to enhance performance, including the following:

  • Scan-resistant global block cache
  • Bloom/index data splitting
  • Global memstore limit
  • Separate compaction queues to reduce read amplification
  • Smart load balancing across disks

Bootstrapping new nodes and removing existing nodes is much simpler and more resilient in YugabyteDB when compared to the eventually-consistent Cassandra-compatible databases.

The following scenario shows how YugabyteDB handles a total of 18 TB on just four general-purpose machines.

Configuration and data size

Cluster Size 4
Node Type c4.4xlarge (16-vcpus, 30 GB RAM, 1 x 6000 TB gp2 EBS SSD)
Replication Factor 3
Number of KV records 20 Billion
Key + Value Size ~300 Bytes
Key size 50 Bytes
Value size 256 Bytes (deliberately chosen to be not very compressible)
Logical Data Set Size 20 Billion keys * 300 Bytes = 6000 GB
Raw Data including Replication 6000 GB * 3 = 18 TB
Data Per Node 18 TB / 4 = 4.5 TB

Data load

The data was loaded at a steady rate over about 6 days using the Cassandra Key Value sample application. The following graph shows the steady growth in SSTable size per node for 6 days, beyond which it stabilizes at 4.5 TB.

Data load

The following figure shows the YB-Master Admin UI, with the tablet servers, number of tablets on each, number of tablet leaders, and size of the on-disk SSTable files (4.5 TB).

SST Size

Read-heavy workload

On a read-heavy workload with 32 readers and 2 writers, YugabyteDB serviced 19K ops/s with a latency of 13.5 ms.

Ops/s Latency
Ops/s Latency

Note that this is a random-read workload, with only 30 GB of RAM for 4.5 TB of data per node. So every read will be forced to go to disk, and this workload is bottlenecked by the IO the EBS volume can support.

As expected, CPU was not the bottleneck in this workload, and CPU use was under 7%.

Write-heavy workload

On a write-heavy workload with 2 readers and 64 writers, YugabyteDB serviced 25K ops/s with a latency of 4 ms.

Ops/s Latency
Ops/s Latency

For a write-heavy workload, there is more variability because of the use of general-purpose SSD (gp2) EBS volumes. This variability arises from the need to perform periodic compaction. Note that for time series data such as IoT or KairosDB-like workloads, YugabyteDB doesn't need to perform aggressive compaction, and the results will be even better. But this particular experiment is running an arbitrary KV workload, and as expected puts a higher demand on the system.

Instead of using 1x6000GB EBS volume per node, using 2x3000GB EBS volumes might be a better choice to get more throughput. When the disk R + W throughput reaches its maximum (around 150 MB/sec) during compaction, the latencies also go up a bit.

To allow sufficient room for foreground operations on a low-end gp2 SSD volume-based setup, we reduced the default quota settings for compaction/flush rate from 100 MB/sec to 30 MB/sec.

On i3* instance types with directly attached NVMe SSDs (which have much more disk IOPS and throughput), this observed variability should be minimal for a similar workload.

Customer use cases

20 TB

In a customer installation, YugabyteDB has been loaded with ~20 TB of compressed data (~50 TB uncompressed) per node and YugabyteDB was able to handle sustained 450K ops/sec with CPU use at ~40% maximum.

80 TB

One customer uses the YCQL interface to store and retrieve about 80 TB of event data from different vehicles clocked at 1.25 M Ops/s with an average latency of 1.7s. Their setup is as follows:

Nodes 40
Zones 5
Replication Factor 5
CPU 64vCPU
Memory 256 GB RAM
Storage 6x4 TB NVMe
Data Size 80 TB
Data Density/node 10 TB
Data Size (+Replication) 450 TB

Operational efficiency

Scaling up and down with YugabyteDB doesn't result in any loss of availability and the data loader application continues to perform high ingest in parallel without any interruption. As YugabyteDB performs size-tiered compaction automatically in the background, explicit manual compaction is not needed and there is only 10-20% space amplification overhead.

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