A curated list of awesome HBase projects, clients, frameworks, tools, and resources.
Awesome HBase is a curated, community-maintained list of projects, tools, libraries, and resources built for and around Apache HBase. It solves the problem of ecosystem discovery by organizing the vast array of HBase-related software—from clients and cloud services to SQL layers, graph databases, and monitoring tools—into a single, easily navigable directory.
Data engineers, database administrators, and developers working with or evaluating Apache HBase who need to find compatible tools, client libraries, integration points, or learning materials.
Developers choose Awesome HBase because it provides a trusted, centralized, and well-structured overview of the entire HBase ecosystem, saving significant time and effort in researching compatible software and best practices compared to scattered searches.
A curated list of awesome HBase projects and resources.
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Covers everything from clients (e.g., happybase for Python) to cloud services (AWS EMR, Google Bigtable) and specialized frameworks like Phoenix for SQL and JanusGraph for graphs, as detailed in the Projects section.
Organizes resources into clear categories such as Clients, Cloud, Frameworks with subcategories (SQL, graph, time series), and Tools, making it easy to navigate the vast HBase landscape.
Follows the 'awesome list' philosophy with an Awesome badge, ensuring entries are vetted and maintained by the community for reliability and quality.
Lists connectors for major data processing frameworks like Spark, Flink, and Kafka, plus analytics tools such as Presto and Drill, as seen in the extensive Integrations section.
Merely lists projects with links but provides no ratings, comparisons, or guidance on which tool is best suited for specific scenarios, leaving users to research independently.
As a community-maintained resource, updates may lag behind the fast-evolving HBase ecosystem, potentially leading to stale links or missing newer projects.
Focuses on listing resources without including code snippets, configuration examples, or tutorials, so users must seek additional help for practical deployment and use.