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From what I understand, CouchDB's Btree implementation actually uses Shadowing technique, and every update will produce new root, the following excerpts from this PDF (it looks like implementing a better algorithm than traditional shadowing).

Shadowing means that to update an on-disk page, the entire page is read into memory, modified, and later written to disk at an alternate location. When a page is shadowed its location on disk changes, this creates a need to update (and shadow) the immediate ancestor of the page with the new address. Shadowing propagates up to the file system root.

How does couchdb implement fetching all leaf revisions as possible as it can( since some revisions are removed by compacting process)? Does couch internally store a pointer which points to previous revisions?

Thanks Chang

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  • That is a tough question. Yes, Couch databases are roughly log-structured as you describe, but somehow the old leaf nodes must be referenced. I would like to know too. I will try to ask CouchDB developers, or tell them to answer this question.
    – JasonSmith
    Jun 23, 2011 at 1:13

2 Answers 2

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Couch doesn't guarantee that old revisions of a document can be retrieved:

The terms version and revision might sound familiar (if you are programming without version control, drop this book right now and start learning one of the popular systems). Using new versions for document changes works a lot like version control, but there’s an important difference: CouchDB does not guarantee that older versions are kept around.

Source: O'Reilly CouchDB The Definitive Guide, page 40.

Why is this? Because CouchDB is not a version control system: the versioning mechanism is there for concurrent access to the database. The Definitive Guide touches on this on pages 14-15.

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  • 2
    +1, helpful answer although I think Chang understands that, he's just asking before compaction, when you click "previous version" in Futon, how can Couch fetch that document if it had been shadowed?
    – JasonSmith
    Jun 23, 2011 at 1:09
  • What is the point of the versioning system if you're not able to count on it? (I know this is an old question and I haven really googled to find an answer myself to this, but I'm tinking of including version control to a project. I've mostly thought about doing it in sql, but that might be a pain if you want to keep version of an entire object graph - object with subobjects. So I'm looking around)
    – mortb
    Oct 26, 2012 at 14:27
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By good luck, CouchDB committer and community leader Adam Kocoloski explained this recently on the mailing list.

Here is what he said:

"Each leaf in the ID btree [stores] a revision tree containing pointers to all available revisions of a document. Retrieving an old revision (before compaction) or a conflicting version of a document requires exactly the same number of IOs as retrieving the current one."

If I understand correctly, shadowing is not used to conceal old document revisions at all, but rather entire revision trees that are no longer meaningful.

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  • what is the meaning of "shadowing is not used to conceal old document revisions at all, but rather entire revision trees that are no longer meaningful"
    – Chang
    Jul 6, 2011 at 15:33
  • It means, the leaf node of the btree is not a single document. It is exactly as you describe: the leaf node stores pointers to all (available) revisions.
    – JasonSmith
    Jul 7, 2011 at 2:03
  • @jsh if so, it should first load previous revision trees before update.
    – Chang
    Jul 7, 2011 at 5:30
  • @Chang, yes it does that. There have been some complaints about performance for very large databases because of so many reads before a write. I believe that is currently a priority for the CouchDB development team.
    – JasonSmith
    Jul 7, 2011 at 5:52

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