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  2. MySQL Cluster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MySQL_Cluster

    MySQL Cluster, also known as MySQL Ndb Cluster is a technology providing shared-nothing clustering and auto-sharding for the MySQL database management system. It is designed to provide high availability and high throughput with low latency, while allowing for near linear scalability. [ 3 ]

  3. Database index - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Database_index

    This may improve the joins of these tables on the cluster key, since the matching records are stored together and less I/O is required to locate them. [2] The cluster configuration defines the data layout in the tables that are parts of the cluster. A cluster can be keyed with a B-tree index or a hash table. The data block where the table ...

  4. Keyspace (distributed data store) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keyspace_(distributed_data...

    A keyspace (or key space) in a NoSQL data store is an object that holds together all column families of a design. [1] [2] It is the outermost grouping of the data in the data store. [3] It resembles the schema concept in Relational database management systems. [4] Generally, there is one keyspace per application.

  5. Determining the number of clusters in a data set - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Determining_the_number_of...

    When clustering text databases with the cover coefficient on a document collection defined by a document by term D matrix (of size m×n, where m is the number of documents and n is the number of terms), the number of clusters can roughly be estimated by the formula where t is the number of non-zero entries in D. Note that in D each row and each ...

  6. Database model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Database_model

    A key that has an external, real-world meaning (such as a person's name, a book's ISBN, or a car's serial number) is sometimes called a "natural" key. If no natural key is suitable (think of the many people named Brown), an arbitrary or surrogate key can be assigned (such as by giving employees ID numbers). In practice, most databases have both ...

  7. Cluster analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cluster_analysis

    Cluster analysis or clustering is the task of grouping a set of objects in such a way that objects in the same group (called a cluster) are more similar (in some specific sense defined by the analyst) to each other than to those in other groups (clusters).

  8. CURE algorithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CURE_algorithm

    CURE (Clustering Using REpresentatives) is an efficient data clustering algorithm for large databases [citation needed]. Compared with K-means clustering it is more robust to outliers and able to identify clusters having non-spherical shapes and size variances.

  9. Database schema - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Database_schema

    The database schema is the structure of a database described in a formal language supported typically by a relational database management system (RDBMS). The term " schema " refers to the organization of data as a blueprint of how the database is constructed (divided into database tables in the case of relational databases ).