Ok, so I've been doing a bit of research into NoSQL databases, and they seem to be the right option for what I need. The problem is however, that a lot of these databases, if not most of them are reading to/writing from RAM, as opposed to disk. That's great when you have plenty of server resources or don't expect massive data blocks - but I think I should prepare for the worst.
What I expect to receive from these data sources is anywhere from 25KB to 150KB per query - yup - up to 150KB for a single key value. The average user will produce anywhere from 500 to 5000 of these keys and they can grow infinitely (but will probably stop somewhere in that 5000 range). If you quickly do the calculations (most of the data will be on the higher end of 25-150, so I'll use 100KB as an "average", most users will probably produce 2000-3000 queries): 100KB*3000 - that's 300MB per user! An insane amount of data when you start getting a decent userbase. So, ultimately I'll probably throw away most of the data in the queries so it is no more than 1KB or so, but that will still far surpass most RAM capabilities.
So I think what I'm looking for is a solution that will store data to disk, and cache objects in RAM.. But I'm open to all solutions! Let me know what you guys think. I would love to keep this thing running fast...
Edit:
Wording it slightly differently as to be useful to a passerby:
If one is looking to maximize performance but handle large dataloads in a NoSQL database, what would be the recommended NoSQL database? I would think it would be one which stores data to disk, but this can compromise performance significantly. Is there a "best of both worlds" solution out there? It is important to note I assume, that these records would not be modified once they were submitted, only read from (but maybe not even that often).
I've been looking into Redis for such a task, because it looks very clean to manage - however it runs entirely in RAM, thus requires small data blocks, or multiple servers running multiple instances at once.. Which is something I don't have access to.