I suggest the tool to others as it is heavily, working a lot on improving the database framework. The tool offers support for multiple data models. We do need to maintain the tool as there is a need to upgrade it, and we do need to do continuous patching. We do have a central team for Couchbase, and they manage it for us. They are actively working with Couchbase's enterprise team to do all those operations, like patching, server upgrade, and backup, but it all requires some kind of support. The tool has some AI capabilities, as you can do vector search, semantic search, groupings, and using open-source models and enabling them on the database so that we can structure our data better and do things like advanced search operations. I rate the tool an eight out of ten.
Associate Principal Performance Engineer at Aptos Retail
Real User
Top 5
2024-07-30T17:00:00Z
Jul 30, 2024
Couchbase is a good NoSQL server and I would recommend it to users, simply because if the simple way of storing the data (in the form of JSON) as well the easy process to retrieve it. Customer support is good and they will help you in suggesting mitigation measures for most of the issues being faced by the project. There is no major knowledge gap while transitioning to a non-relational database, knowledge of SQL querying and JSOn models are sufficient. Overall, I would rate it an eight out of ten.
CTO Architect at a financial services firm with 10,001+ employees
Real User
Top 20
2023-01-13T01:04:37Z
Jan 13, 2023
Engage Couchbase-based technical staff soon and often. They're your best source of information. Don't struggle with trying to find it in the documentation because the online documentation is not intuitive. The other thing is to look at your data and see how your data is structured. Understand your data, and understand what you're trying to do from the get-go. Bring somebody on board who has experience implementing Couchbase. That has been a real help for us. We've got an on-staff SME with extensive background, but we also have a lot of communication with Couchbase itself. Couchbase presales have been good at helping us through things. So, use the resources that are there and engage them, and know your data—how it's structured and how you want to use it. I'd rate it an eight out of ten. I don't like giving tens because nothing is ever perfect. There is also the difficulty of having to engage third parties outside of Couchbase to do the integration stuff, but overall, I'm very pleased and very happy with them.
Senior Software Engineer at a retailer with 10,001+ employees
Real User
Top 5
2023-01-10T19:13:17Z
Jan 10, 2023
I would advise others to stick to the conventional libraries that you have or that are provided by Couchbase itself. I would advise against using third party solutions on top of Couchbase. Read through all the documentation to ensure you are aware of any conditions that are important to your environment.
Backend Developer & Team Lead at Osiris Trading powering Betway
Real User
2022-12-21T14:56:30Z
Dec 21, 2022
I would rate Couchbase a seven out of ten. It's not a bad product but it depends what you're using to run it on. The time and effort that you need to spend learning the product and how to fine tune it wasn't worth it for us. I would rate it a seven out of ten.
Chief Technology Officer at a comms service provider with 1-10 employees
Real User
2022-03-09T16:34:59Z
Mar 9, 2022
We have only tested deployment for Couchbase. It's just in POC, so it's still too early to tell if the deployment is easy or complex, until we have deployed it in a production environment. It's currently not deployed fully. We hope that Couchbase is scalable, as there are some studies that we have seen that mention its scalability, but as it's only in POC now, it's still difficult to know for sure. We have not interacted with technical support yet, so I'm not able to give an evaluation for Couchbase support. For now, I cannot say if I would recommend this product to others. It's still too early, e.g. it's better if we use it for more months, so we can have more information about it. I'm rating Couchbase nine out of ten. I didn't give it a perfect score because the implementation schemas need to be improved, and we don't have much data currently.
I plan to be using the enhanced version. I would definitely recommend this solution to anyone who is interested in using it. The enterprise version is a more stable version. The indexing is very powerful and the N1QL is especially useful when you come from an SQL background. It will be very powerful. This is why I would recommend Couchbase. To this point, I have never needed anything extra added to it. I am very happy with this solution, and I would rate Couchbase a nine out of ten.
Chief Information Officer at a computer software company with 51-200 employees
Real User
2018-12-11T08:31:00Z
Dec 11, 2018
Couchbase is a good solution to a lot of problems, but you will have to do your own research on it. It does have the scalability. It fits most of our needs. Though, the performance could be quicker and better, especially in the querying process. We actually have not used it with AWS. We just purchased directly with them, and we have our own hardware. As part of our solution, we are now looking to move some of the solution to AWS. We want to provide solutions to our customers and package it as a product, and it feels like a lot of people are asking for cloud as an option. Therefore, we are looking into cloud deployments instead of on-premise deployments.
Couchbase is a versatile database solution for healthcare, automation, e-commerce, gaming, caching, and analytics. It supports 920 nodes and 420 clusters, making it scalable and extensible. Its valuable features include multiple database paradigms, low latency, dynamic API integration, Sync Gateway for mobile apps, and a user-friendly interface.
Couchbase has helped organizations with low latency metrics, large user updates, and cost-effective caching. Its built-in data replication and...
I suggest the tool to others as it is heavily, working a lot on improving the database framework. The tool offers support for multiple data models. We do need to maintain the tool as there is a need to upgrade it, and we do need to do continuous patching. We do have a central team for Couchbase, and they manage it for us. They are actively working with Couchbase's enterprise team to do all those operations, like patching, server upgrade, and backup, but it all requires some kind of support. The tool has some AI capabilities, as you can do vector search, semantic search, groupings, and using open-source models and enabling them on the database so that we can structure our data better and do things like advanced search operations. I rate the tool an eight out of ten.
Couchbase is a good NoSQL server and I would recommend it to users, simply because if the simple way of storing the data (in the form of JSON) as well the easy process to retrieve it. Customer support is good and they will help you in suggesting mitigation measures for most of the issues being faced by the project. There is no major knowledge gap while transitioning to a non-relational database, knowledge of SQL querying and JSOn models are sufficient. Overall, I would rate it an eight out of ten.
The platform's migration process, including upgrades, is quite easy compared to other databases like PostgreSQL. I rate a six out of ten.
Engage Couchbase-based technical staff soon and often. They're your best source of information. Don't struggle with trying to find it in the documentation because the online documentation is not intuitive. The other thing is to look at your data and see how your data is structured. Understand your data, and understand what you're trying to do from the get-go. Bring somebody on board who has experience implementing Couchbase. That has been a real help for us. We've got an on-staff SME with extensive background, but we also have a lot of communication with Couchbase itself. Couchbase presales have been good at helping us through things. So, use the resources that are there and engage them, and know your data—how it's structured and how you want to use it. I'd rate it an eight out of ten. I don't like giving tens because nothing is ever perfect. There is also the difficulty of having to engage third parties outside of Couchbase to do the integration stuff, but overall, I'm very pleased and very happy with them.
I would advise others to stick to the conventional libraries that you have or that are provided by Couchbase itself. I would advise against using third party solutions on top of Couchbase. Read through all the documentation to ensure you are aware of any conditions that are important to your environment.
I would rate Couchbase a seven out of ten. It's not a bad product but it depends what you're using to run it on. The time and effort that you need to spend learning the product and how to fine tune it wasn't worth it for us. I would rate it a seven out of ten.
We have only tested deployment for Couchbase. It's just in POC, so it's still too early to tell if the deployment is easy or complex, until we have deployed it in a production environment. It's currently not deployed fully. We hope that Couchbase is scalable, as there are some studies that we have seen that mention its scalability, but as it's only in POC now, it's still difficult to know for sure. We have not interacted with technical support yet, so I'm not able to give an evaluation for Couchbase support. For now, I cannot say if I would recommend this product to others. It's still too early, e.g. it's better if we use it for more months, so we can have more information about it. I'm rating Couchbase nine out of ten. I didn't give it a perfect score because the implementation schemas need to be improved, and we don't have much data currently.
I would recommend this solution to others. I rate Couchbasean eight out of ten.
I plan to be using the enhanced version. I would definitely recommend this solution to anyone who is interested in using it. The enterprise version is a more stable version. The indexing is very powerful and the N1QL is especially useful when you come from an SQL background. It will be very powerful. This is why I would recommend Couchbase. To this point, I have never needed anything extra added to it. I am very happy with this solution, and I would rate Couchbase a nine out of ten.
My recommendation of Couchbase would depend on the user's requirements. I would rate Couchbase an eight out of ten.
Couchbase is a good solution to a lot of problems, but you will have to do your own research on it. It does have the scalability. It fits most of our needs. Though, the performance could be quicker and better, especially in the querying process. We actually have not used it with AWS. We just purchased directly with them, and we have our own hardware. As part of our solution, we are now looking to move some of the solution to AWS. We want to provide solutions to our customers and package it as a product, and it feels like a lot of people are asking for cloud as an option. Therefore, we are looking into cloud deployments instead of on-premise deployments.