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Home/ Questions/Q 6146633
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 23, 20262026-05-23T18:58:44+00:00 2026-05-23T18:58:44+00:00

I’m building a component for recording historical data. Initially I expect it to do

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I’m building a component for recording historical data. Initially I expect it to do about 30 writes/second, and less than 1 read/second.

The data will never be modified, only new data will be added. Reads are likely to be done with fresh records.

The demand is likely to increase rapidly, expecting around 80 writes/second in one year time.

I could choose to distribute my component and use a common database such as MySql, or I could go with a distributed database such as MongoDb. Either way, I’d like the database to handle writes very well.

The database must be free. Open source would be a plus 🙂

Note: A record is plain text in variable size, typically 50 to 500 words.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-23T18:58:44+00:00Added an answer on May 23, 2026 at 6:58 pm

    Your question can be solved a few different ways, so let’s break it down and look at the individual requirements you’ve laid out:

    1. Writes – It sounds like the bulk of what you’re doing is append only writes at a relatively low volume (80 writes/second). Just about any product on the market with a reasonable storage backend is going to be able to handle this. You’re looking at 50-500 “words” of data being saved. I’m not sure what constitutes a word, but for the sake of argument let’s assume that a word is an average of 8 characters, so your data is going to be some kind of metadata, a key/timestamp/whatever plus 400-4000 bytes of words. Barring implementation specific details of different RDBMSes, this is still pretty normal, we’re probably writing at most (including record overhead) 4100 bytes per record. This maxes out at 328,000 bytes per second or, as I like to put it, not a lot of writing.

    2. Deletes – You also need the ability to delete your data. There’s not a lot I can say about that. Deletes are deletes.

    3. Reading – Here’s where things get tricky. You mention that it’s mostly primary keys and reads are being done on fresh data. I’m not sure what either of these mean, but I don’t think that it matters. If you’re doing key only lookups (e.g. I want record 8675309), then life is good and you can use just about anything.

    4. Joins – If you need the ability to write actual joins where the database handles them, you’ve written yourself out of the major non-relational database products.

    5. Data size/Data life – This is where things get fun. You’ve estimated your writes at 80/second and I guess at 4100 bytes per record or 328,000 bytes per second. There are 86400 seconds in a day, which gives us 28,339,200,000 bytes. Terrifying! That’s 3,351,269.53125 KB, 27,026 MB, or roughly 26 GB / day. Even if you’re keeping your data for 1 year, that’s 9633 GB, or 10TB of data. You can lease 1 TB of data from a cloud hosting provider for around $250 per month or buy it from a SAN vendor like EqualLogic for about $15,000.

    Conclusion: I can only think of a few databases that couldn’t handle this load. 10TB is getting a bit tricky and requires a bit of administration skill, and you might need to look at certain data lifecycle management techniques, but almost any RDBMS should be up to this task. Likewise, almost any non-relational/NoSQL database should be up to this task. In fact, almost any database of any sort should be up to the task.

    If you (or your team members) already have skills in a particular product, just stick with that. If there’s a specific product that excels in your problem domain, use that.

    This isn’t the type of problem that requires any kind of distributed magical unicorn powder.

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