Hello Craig,
although I think we’re slightly off topic here, please be aware that neo4j is not a graphical database (eg. it doesn’t aim to be gui-driven), but a *graph* one: this characteristic tells you about the paradigm the db engine uses to organize and indicize data; it’s just another flavour, the others being - for example - relational and document databases.
Operationally wise is quite hassle free, also has an integrated backup tool which does its job; being a java application it consumes a fair amount of ram just to run :-)…it uses lucene under the hood (just as elasticsearch does), so memory wise you should take dataset size into account and plan accordingly. Our dataset is very small so I can’t be very helpful on this matter. Runs nicely in docker and there’s also an official image.
I use it for outside plant documentation, for me does its job definitely better than an excel file, but it’s not so user friendly: the data visualization tool does its job but feels more a PoC than a mature application, and it’s read only…so for data entry you have to manually write queries. I’m looking to integrate it with a proper GIS solution in the future.
TL;DR: it’s fine if you want to use it as a database for your application, but it’s not a complete application by itself (even if the integrated data visualization tool does its job pretty well). Operationally wise is a piece of cake, also runs nicely in docker.
Regards
Simone
Has anyone used the graphical data base software:
I looked at this software several years ago, but it will still relatively new.
We are exploring using this to create dependencies of our network infrastructure hardware, customer information, etc. etc.
here is an example:
For those that have used it:
Has anyone been able to successfully use this for their networks?
pros/cons/good/bad
Is maintaining the data a chore?
Has it helped operationally?
if anyone has any input would appreciate hearing from you;
thanks;
CPV