Hybrid DB System: NoSQL for data, SQL for relationships. Best Practice?
If the only reason you like to use a NoSQL database along with a RDBMS is to gain speed and flexibility, I'd suggest to use a caching server instead (such as Memcache). You could build a document/result using sql statements and store it using a single key value in memcache for retrieving it later. Its much easier to implement than say MongoDB. But it of course depends on your requirements if you really only intend to do document lookups by using a key or plan to use more complex queries for your documents.
"Best practice" is a horrible term - it is often used to justify gut instinct, "this is how we've always done it", or other prejudice.
However, the solution you describe has a bunch of benefits (you mention a few), but also some significant drawbacks, mostly because you are splitting knowledge of your problem domain among two incompatible data stores, and this opens up lots of opportunities for duplication - but also for inconsistency.
For instance, the knowledge that a given user is identified by a certain identifier would be shared between your NoSQL system and your database. If one system deletes that user, the other is left in an inconsistent state. A given user's profile would be split across two systems, and neither would have a complete picture; you'd need lots of housekeeping synchronization code.
Developers working on your platform would need expertise in both technology stacks - imagine trying to debug why a given user's comment count appears to be incorrect.
You now have two points of failure - if either the NoSQL or SQL databases fail, your entire system breaks. And failure may not mean crashing - it may also mean performance issues, or problems with upgrades, or problems with backups.
It's not uncommon for software solutions to have multiple systems each owning a part of the data, the split is usually along business domain lines (the CRM system knows your profile, the payment system your credit card details, the ecommerce system knows what you ordered); splitting the division along technical lines would create a complex architecture with multiple points of failure.
I don't think the benefits outweigh those drawbacks.
7 years later I'm stepping at my own question, and feel like I could now help the past me.
Today, I would go for PostgreSQL JSON types.
This allows to still have tables, relationships and indexes, which are great for comprehension and atomicity, along with extendable fields in the users
table, like a identity
field that would look like:
identity {
firstName: "John",
lastName: "Doe",
address: "5 example st",
postCode: "XXX",
city: "Example city"
}
which is queryable like: select * from users u where u.identity ->> lastName = 'Doe'
(not 100% sure of the syntax).
Though this may be quite surprising at first, it works very well. The best is when the ORM includes support of those types out of the box, like Ecto, Active Record etc.