Best Real-Time Analytic Databases for Linux of 2024

Find and compare the best Real-Time Analytic Databases for Linux in 2024

Use the comparison tool below to compare the top Real-Time Analytic Databases for Linux on the market. You can filter results by user reviews, pricing, features, platform, region, support options, integrations, and more.

  • 1
    InfluxDB Reviews

    InfluxDB

    InfluxData

    $0
    InfluxDB is a purpose-built data platform designed to handle all time series data, from users, sensors, applications and infrastructure — seamlessly collecting, storing, visualizing, and turning insight into action. With a library of more than 250 open source Telegraf plugins, importing and monitoring data from any system is easy. InfluxDB empowers developers to build transformative IoT, monitoring and analytics services and applications. InfluxDB’s flexible architecture fits any implementation — whether in the cloud, at the edge or on-premises — and its versatility, accessibility and supporting tools (client libraries, APIs, etc.) make it easy for developers at any level to quickly build applications and services with time series data. Optimized for developer efficiency and productivity, the InfluxDB platform gives builders time to focus on the features and functionalities that give their internal projects value and their applications a competitive edge. To get started, InfluxData offers free training through InfluxDB University.
  • 2
    Apache Doris Reviews

    Apache Doris

    The Apache Software Foundation

    Free
    Apache Doris is an advanced data warehouse for real time analytics. It delivers lightning fast analytics on real-time, large-scale data. Ingestion of micro-batch data and streaming data within a second. Storage engine with upserts, appends and pre-aggregations in real-time. Optimize for high-concurrency, high-throughput queries using columnar storage engine, cost-based query optimizer, and vectorized execution engine. Federated querying for data lakes like Hive, Iceberg, and Hudi and databases like MySQL and PostgreSQL. Compound data types, such as Arrays, Maps and JSON. Variant data types to support auto datatype inference for JSON data. NGram bloomfilter for text search. Distributed design for linear scaling. Workload isolation, tiered storage and efficient resource management. Supports shared-nothing as well as the separation of storage from compute.
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