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Performance Evaluation of Unstructured PBRA for Bigdata with Cassandra and MongoDB in Cloud

Performance Evaluation of Unstructured PBRA for Bigdata with Cassandra and MongoDB in Cloud

Sangeeta Gupta
Copyright: © 2018 |Volume: 8 |Issue: 3 |Pages: 12
ISSN: 2156-1834|EISSN: 2156-1826|EISBN13: 9781522546351|DOI: 10.4018/IJCAC.2018070104
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MLA

Gupta, Sangeeta. "Performance Evaluation of Unstructured PBRA for Bigdata with Cassandra and MongoDB in Cloud." IJCAC vol.8, no.3 2018: pp.48-59. http://doi.org/10.4018/IJCAC.2018070104

APA

Gupta, S. (2018). Performance Evaluation of Unstructured PBRA for Bigdata with Cassandra and MongoDB in Cloud. International Journal of Cloud Applications and Computing (IJCAC), 8(3), 48-59. http://doi.org/10.4018/IJCAC.2018070104

Chicago

Gupta, Sangeeta. "Performance Evaluation of Unstructured PBRA for Bigdata with Cassandra and MongoDB in Cloud," International Journal of Cloud Applications and Computing (IJCAC) 8, no.3: 48-59. http://doi.org/10.4018/IJCAC.2018070104

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Abstract

In this article, performance evaluation of web collection data in data stores, such as NoSQL-Cassandra and MongoDB is presented, yielding scalability of applications. In addition to scalability, security of NoSQL databases remains highly unproved. It is noteworthy that existing works in the area of cloud with NoSQL focus on either scalability or security but not both aspects. Also, security, if provided, is at minor interface levels. In this article, the PBRA system is designed to deal with highly unstructured big data emerging from the twitter social networking service, which is new of its kind to strengthen the bigdata security. PBRA is Passphrase Based REST API model where the REST API methods are integrated with the user generated passphrase in addition to the private key for a set of records of user desirable number before storing into the Cassandra and MongoDB databases. Results are presented to illustrate the same for nearly 1 million records and the efficiency of Cassandra over MongoDB is observed. It is observed from the results that though the time taken to load and retrieve bulk data records is higher than dealing with cipher text, Cassandra performs better than MongoDB with the proposed security model.

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