Column Families in Binary Tables

Scanning an entire table for matches can be very performance-intensive. Column families enable you to group related sets of data and restrict queries to a defined subset, leading to better performance. When you design a column family, think about what kinds of queries are going to be used the most often, and group your columns accordingly.

You can specify compression settings for individual column families, which lets you choose the settings that prioritize speed of access or efficient use of disk space, according to your needs.

Be aware of the approximate number of rows in your column families. This property is called the column family's cardinality. When column families in the same table have very disparate cardinalities, the sparser table's data can be spread out across multiple nodes, due to the denser table requiring more splits. Scans on the sparser column family can take longer due to this effect. For example, consider a table that lists products across a small range of model numbers, but with a row for the unique serial numbers for each individual product manufactured within a given model. Such a table will have a very large difference in cardinality between a column family that relates to the model number compared to a column family that relates to the serial number. Scans on the model-number column family will have to range across the cluster, since the frequent splits required by the comparatively large numbers of serial-number rows will spread the model-number rows out across many regions on many nodes.

For a list of the properties that you can set when you create a column family, see the documentation for the maprcli command table cf create .

NOTE When replicating a specific column family or column from a binary source table and a row is deleted, the destination table will show only a deletion for the specific column family or column. When replicating a specific column from a binary source table and its column family is deleted, the destination table will show only a deletion for the specific column.

Column Design

HPE Ezmeral Data Fabric Database tables split at the row level, not the column level. For this reason, extremely wide tables with very large numbers of columns can sometimes reach the recommended size for a table split at a comparatively small number of rows.

WARNING In general, design your schema to prioritize more rows and fewer columns.

As the HPE Ezmeral Data Fabric Database tables are sparse, you can add columns to a table at any time. Null columns for a given row do not take up any storage space.