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NoSQL releases: All content tagged as NoSQL releases in NoSQL databases and polyglot persistence

Neo4j 1.9 General Availability - Auto-clustering, Cypher, and Some comments

The 1.9 release adds primarily three things:

  1. Auto-Clustering, which makes Neo4j Enterprise clustering more robust & easier to administer, with fewer moving parts
  2. Cypher language improvements make the language more functionally powerful and more performant, and
  3. New welcome pages make learning easier for new users
  1. The first is for the enterprise customers and brings in the features that were initially supported through ZooKeeper
  2. Cypher is Neo4j’s fast evolving query language
  3. The site is brilliant.
  4. The release post is terrible with no links to dive into the newly announced features.

Original title and link: Neo4j 1.9 General Availability - Auto-clustering, Cypher, and Some comments (NoSQL database©myNoSQL)

via: http://blog.neo4j.org/2013/05/neo4j-19-general-availability.html


MongoDB 2.4 Released: Hash-Based Sharding, Geo Enhancements, Text Search

MongoDB 2.4 is out:

Highlights of MongoDB 2.4 include:

  • Hash-based Sharding
  • Capped Arrays
  • Text Search (Beta)
  • Geospatial Enhancements
  • Faster Counts
  • Working Set Analyzer
  • V8 JavaScript engine

Original title and link: MongoDB 2.4 Released: Hash-Based Sharding, Geo Enhancements, Text Search (NoSQL database©myNoSQL)

via: http://blog.mongodb.org/post/45754637343/mongodb-2-4-released


NoSQL Bug Fix Releases: Redis 2.6.10 and RavenDB 2.01

The RavenDB team has released mostly a bug fix new version RavenDB 2.01. The change log is here.

Redis also has a new bug fix release: 2.6.10 including non-critical fixes and 5 small improvements. Change log is here

Original title and link: NoSQL Bug Fix Releases: Redis 2.6.10 and RavenDB 2.01 (NoSQL database©myNoSQL)


MongoDB 2.4 Highlights

MongoDB 2.4 is just around the corner:

MongoDB 2.4 highlights

From Mike Friedman’s Roadmap slidedeck.

Original title and link: MongoDB 2.4 Highlights (NoSQL database©myNoSQL)


11 Interesting Releases From the First Weeks of January

The list of releases I wanted to post about has been growing fast these last couple of weeks, so instead of waiting leaving it to Here it is (in no particular order1):

  1. (Jan.2nd) Cassandra 1.2 — announcement on DataStax’s blog. I’m currently learning and working on a post looking at what’s new in Cassandra 1.2.
  2. (Jan.10th) Apache Pig 0.10.1 — Hortonworks wrote about it
  3. (Jan.10th) DataStax Community Edition 1.2 and OpsCenter 2.1.3 — DataStax announcement
  4. (Jan.10th) CouchDB 1.0.4, 1.1.2, and 1.2.1 — releases fixing some security vulnerabilities
  5. (Jan.11th) MongoDB 2.3.2 unstable — announcement. This dev release includes support for full text indexing. For more details you can check:

    […] an open source project extending Hadoop and Hive with a collection of useful user-defined-functions. Its aim is to make the Hive Big Data developer more productive, and to enable scalable and robust dataflows.


  1. I’ve tried to order it chronologically, but most probably I’ve failed. 

Original title and link: 11 Interesting Releases From the First Weeks of January (NoSQL database©myNoSQL)


Redis 2.6 Released. Finally

Salvatore Sanfilippo:

Scripting, bitops, and all the big features are good additions but my feeling is that Redis 2.6 is especially significative as a step forward in the maturity of the Redis implementation. This does not mean that’s bug free, it’s new code and we’ll likely discover bugs especially in the early days as with every new release that starts to be adopted more and more.

Redis 2.6 is the release I’ve written about so many times that is tempting to just say finally.

Original title and link: Redis 2.6 Released. Finally (NoSQL database©myNoSQL)

via: http://antirez.com/news/21


Cloudera Disitribution of Hadoop 4.1 Released

The yearly major release of CDH is out.

Original title and link: Cloudera Disitribution of Hadoop 4.1 Released (NoSQL database©myNoSQL)

via: http://www.cloudera.com/blog/2012/10/cdh4-1-now-released/


Neo4j 1.8 With Enhanced Cypher Support

Short list of additions and improvements in Neo4j 1.8:

  • Support in the Cypher language for writing graph data and updating auto-indexes
  • Zero-downtime rolling upgrades in HA clusters
  • Streamed responses to REST API requests
  • Bi-directional traversals, branch state and path expanders in the traversal framework
  • Support for explicit transactions in neo4j-shell

Original title and link: Neo4j 1.8 With Enhanced Cypher Support (NoSQL database©myNoSQL)

via: http://blog.neo4j.org/2012/10/neo4j-18-release-fluent-graph-literacy.html


Riak 1.2 Released: Operational Improvements

Here’s the tl;dr on what’s new and improved since the Riak 1.1 release:

  • More efficiently add multiple Riak nodes to your cluster
  • Stage and review, then commit or abort cluster changes for easier operations; plus smoother handling of rolling upgrades
  • Better visibility into active handoffs
  • Repair Riak KV and Search partitions by attaching to the Riak Console and using a one-line command to recover from data corruption/loss
  • More performant stats for Riak; the addition of stats to Riak Search
  • 2i and Search usage thru the Protocol Buffers API
  • Official Support for Riak on FreeBSD
  • In Riak Enterprise: SSL encryption, better balancing and more granular control of replication across multiple data centers, NAT support

More details in the official announcement.

Original title and link: Riak 1.2 Released: Operational Improvements (NoSQL database©myNoSQL)

via: http://basho.com/blog/technical/2012/08/07/Riak-1-2-released/


Hortonworks Data Platform 1.0

Hortonworks has announced the 1.0 release of the Hortonworks Data Platform prior to the Hadoop Summit 2012 together with a lot of supporting quotes from companies like Attunity, Dataguise, Datameer, Karmasphere, Kognitio, MarkLogic, Microsoft, NetApp, StackIQ, Syncsort, Talend, 10gen, Teradata, and VMware.

Some info points:

  1. Hortonworks Data Platform is a platform meant to simplify the installation, integration, management, and use of Apache Hadoop

    hdp-diagram

    1. HDP 1.0 is based on Apache Hadoop 1.0
    2. Apache Ambari is used for installation and provisioning
    3. The same Apache Amabari is behind the Hortonworks Management Console
    4. For Data integration, HDP offers WebHDFS, HCatalog APIs, and Talend Open Studio
    5. Apache HCatalog is the solution offering metadata and table management
  2. Hortonworks Data Platform is 100% open source—I really appreciate Hortonworks’s dedication to the Apache Hadoop project and open source community

  3. HDP comes with 3 levels of support subscriptions, pricing starting at $12500/year for a 10 nodes cluster

One of the most interesting aspects of the Hortonworks Data Platform release is that the high-availability (HA) option for HDP is based on using VMWare-powered virtual machines for the NameNode and JobTracker. My first thought about this approach is that it was chosen to strengthen a partnership with VMWare. On the other hand, Hadoop 2.0 contains already a new highly-available version of the NameNode (Cloudera Hadoop Distribution uses this solution) and VMWare has bigger plans for a virtualization-friendly Hadoop environment with project Serengeti.

You can read a lot of posts about this announcement, but you’ll find all the details in Hortonworks’s John Kreisa’s post here and the PR announcement.

Original title and link: Hortonworks Data Platform 1.0 (NoSQL database©myNoSQL)


HBase 0.94 Released: What’s New

With over 350 enhancements and bug fixes, 0.94 is the new major release of HBase. This Cloudera blog post does a good summary of the most interesting improvements:

  • Read caching improvements
  • Seek optimizations
  • WAL writes optimizations
  • added functionality to HBck: fixing orphaned regions, region holes, overlapping regions
  • simplified region sizing
  • atomic Put & Delete in a single transaction

Original title and link: HBase 0.94 Released: What’s New (NoSQL database©myNoSQL)


Cassandra 1.1 Released: What’s New

There are a lot of interesting new features and improvements in the newly released Cassandra 1.1 version to cover them all here, but here’s the gist of them:

  1. Schema improvements
    1. Support for compound keys
    2. Concurrent schema changes
  2. A new version of Cassandra Query Language (CQL3) supporting compound keys and wide rows
  3. Better and easier tuning of the key and row caches
  4. Support for per-table hybrid storage —mixing SSDs and spinning disks

This DataStax’s blog entry provides links to more details about all these features and the others I haven’t enumerated above.

Original title and link: Cassandra 1.1 Released: What’s New (NoSQL database©myNoSQL)