I\'m thinking of creating a multi-tenant app using MongoDB. I don\'t have any guesses in terms of how many tenants I\'d have yet, but I would like to be able to scale into t
While the discussion here is on NoSQL and primarily MongoDB, we at Citus are using PostgreSQL and building a distributed/sharded multi-tenant database.
Our use-case guide walks through an example app, covering the schema and various multi-tenant specific features.
For more unstructured data, we use PostgreSQL's JSONB column to store such and tenant-specific data.
According to my research in MongoDB. Trucos y consejos. Aplicaciones multitenant. that option is not recommended if you do not know how many tenants you can have, it could be thousands and it would be complicated when it comes to sharding, also imagine having thousands of collections in a single database ... So in your case it is recommended to use option one. Now if you are going to have a limited number of users, it is already different and yes, you could use option two as you thought.
There is a reasonable article on MSDN about multi-tenant data architecture which you might wish to refer to. Some key topics touched on by this article:
Also touched upon are some patterns for Software as a Service (SaaS) configuration.
Additionally, worth a gander is an interesting write-up from the SQL Anywhere guys.
My own personal take - unless you are certain of enforced security / trust, I would go with option 3, or if scalability concerns prohibit fallback to option 2 at a minimum. That said... I'm no pro with MongoDB. I get pretty nervous using a shared "schema" - but I will happily defer to more experienced practitioners.
I have the same problem to solve and also considering variants. As I have years of experience creating SaaS multi-tenant applicatios I also was going to select the second option based on my previous experience with the relational databases.
While making my research I found this article on mongodb support site (way back added since it's gone): https://web.archive.org/web/20140812091703/http://support.mongohq.com/use-cases/multi-tenant.html
The guys stated to avoid 2nd options at any cost, which as I understand is not particularly specific to mongodb. My impression is that this is applicable for most of the NoSQL dbs I researched (CoachDB, Cassandra, CouchBase Server, etc.) due to the specifics of the database design.
Collections (or buckets or however they call it in different DBs) are not the same thing as security schemas in RDBMS despite they behave as container for documents they are useless for applying good tenant separation. I couldn't find NoSQL database that can apply security restrictions based on collections.
Of course you can use mongodb role based security to restrict the access on database/server level. (http://docs.mongodb.org/manual/core/authorization/)
I would recommend 1st option when:
I would go for variant 3 if:
If you post additional details about your application, perhaps I can give you more detailed advice.
I would go for option 2.
However you could set mongod.exe command line option --smallfiles. This means that the biggest file size of an extent will be 0.5 gigabyte and not 2 gigabyte. I tested this with mongo 1.42 . So option 3 is not impossible.
I found a good answer in the comments in this link:
http://blog.boxedice.com/2010/02/28/notes-from-a-production-mongodb-deployment/
Basically option #2 seems to be the best way to go.
Quote from David Mytton's comment:
We decided not to have a database per customer because of the way MongoDB allocates its data files. Each database uses it’s own set of files:
The first file for a database is dbname.0, then dbname.1, etc. dbname.0 will be 64MB, dbname.1 128MB, etc., up to 2GB. Once the files reach 2GB in size, each successive file is also 2GB.
Thus if the last datafile present is say, 1GB, that file might be 90% empty if it was recently reached.
from the manual.
As users sign up to the trial and give things a go, we’d get more and more databases that were at least 2GB in size, even if the whole of the data file wasn’t use. We found this used a massive amount of disk space compared to having several databases for all customers where the disk space can be used to maximum efficiency.
Sharding will be on a per collection basis as standard which presents a problem where the collection never reaches the minimum size to start sharding, as is the case for quite a few of ours (e.g. collections just storing user login details). However, we have requested that this will also be able to be done on a per database level. See http://jira.mongodb.org/browse/SHARDING-41
There are no performance tradeoffs using lots of collections. See http://www.mongodb.org/display/DOCS/Using+a+Large+Number+of+Collections