What's the difference between BigQuery and Bigtable?

Google Cloud-PlatformGoogle BigqueryCloudBigtableGoogle Cloud-Spanner

Google Cloud-Platform Problem Overview


Is there any reason why someone would use Bigtable instead of BigQuery? Both seem to support Read and Write operations with the latter offering also advanced 'Query' operations.

I need to develop an affiliate network (thus I need to track clicks and 'sales') so I'm quite confused by the difference because BigQuery seems to be just Bigtable with a better API.

Google Cloud-Platform Solutions


Solution 1 - Google Cloud-Platform

The difference is basically this:

BigQuery is a query Engine for datasets that don't change much, or change by appending. It's a great choice when your queries require a "table scan" or the need to look across the entire database. Think sums, averages, counts, groupings. BigQuery is what you use when you have collected a large amount of data, and need to ask questions about it.

BigTable is a database. It is designed to be the foundation for a large, scaleable application. Use BigTable when you are making any kind of app that needs to read and write data, and scale is a potential issue.

Solution 2 - Google Cloud-Platform

Google Cloud - GCP database options decision flowchart

This may help a bit in deciding between different datastore solutions that Google cloud offers (Disclaimer! Copied from Google Cloud page)

If your requirement is a live database, BigTable is what you need (Not really an OLTP system though). If it is more of an analytics kind of purpose, then BigQuery is what you need!

Think of OLTP vs OLAP; Or if you are familiar with Cassandra vs Hadoop, BigTable roughly equates to Cassandra, BigQuery roughly equates to Hadoop (Agreed, it's not a fair comparison, but you get the idea)

https://cloud.google.com/images/storage-options/flowchart.svg

Note

Please keep in mind that Bigtable is not a relational database and it does not support SQL queries or JOINs, nor does it support multi-row transactions. Also, it is not a good solution for small amounts of data. If you want an RDBMS OLTP, you might need to look at cloudSQL (mysql/ postgres) or spanner.

Cost Perspective

https://stackoverflow.com/a/34845073/6785908. Quoting the relevant parts here. > The overall cost boils down to how often you will 'query' the data. If > it's a backup and you don't replay events too often, it'll be dirt > cheap. However, if you need to replay it daily once, you will start > triggering the 5$/TB scanned very easily. We were surprised too how > cheap inserts and storage were, but this is ofc because Google expects > you to run expensive queries at some point in time on them. You'll > have to design around a few things though. E.g. AFAIK streaming > inserts have no guarantees of being written to the table and you have > to poll frequently on tail of list to see if it was really written. > Tailing can be done efficiently with time range table decorator, > though (not paying for scanning whole dataset). > > If you don't care about order, you can even list a table for free. No > need to run a 'query' then.

Edit 1

Cloud spanner is relatively young, but is powerful and promising. At least, google marketing claims that it's features are best of both worlds (Traditional RDBMS and noSQL)

enter image description here

Solution 3 - Google Cloud-Platform

BigQuery and Cloud Bigtable are not the same. Bigtable is a Hadoop based NoSQL database whereas BigQuery is a SQL based datawarehouse. They have specific usage scenarios.

In very short and simple terms;

  • If you don’t require support for ACID transactions or if your data is not highly structured, consider Cloud Bigtable.
  • If you need interactive querying in an online analytical processing (OLAP) system, consider BigQuery.

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionThe user with no hatView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - Google Cloud-PlatformMichael ManoochehriView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - Google Cloud-Platformso-random-dudeView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - Google Cloud-PlatformChiroView Answer on Stackoverflow