Nobody ever got fired for using Hadoop on a cluster
- Ant Rowstron ,
- Dushyanth Narayanan ,
- Austin Donnelly ,
- Greg O'Shea ,
- Andrew Douglas
1st International Workshop on Hot Topics in Cloud Data Processing (HotCDP 2012) |
Published by ACM
The norm for data analytics is now to run them on commodity clusters with MapReduce-like abstractions. One only needs to read the popular blogs to see the evidence of this. We believe that we could now say that “nobody ever got fired for using Hadoop on a cluster”! We completely agree that Hadoop on a cluster is the right solution for jobs where the input data is multi-terabyte or larger. However, in this position paper we ask if this is the right path for general purpose data analytics? Evidence suggests that many MapReduce-like jobs process relatively small input data sets (less than 14 GB). Memory has reached a GB/$ ratio such that it is now technically and financially feasible to have servers with 100s GB of DRAM. We therefore ask, should we be scaling by using single machines with very large memories rather than clusters? We conjecture that, in terms of hardware and programmer time, this may be a better option for the majority of data processing jobs.
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