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I need a persistent storage in Java for certain (possibly large) data structures, such as:

  • dense and sparse matrices of integers, doubles, booleans
  • directed graphs with labeled nodes and edges
  • binary trees
  • maps: string->string, string->integer (with fast retrieval of the keys with largest values)
  • sets of integers or strings

I don't mind if there is a separate storage for each data structure, as long as all the storages have similar, consistent interfaces.

I need to be able to efficiently modify the data structures "remotely", that is, without fetching the entire structure to RAM, modifying it, and storing back. Example operations: put a key-value in a map, remove a node from a tree, modify a node's label in a graph, add a value to a set.

It would be very nice if these storages could be also easily accessed from other programming languages, most notably Python. I'm thinking of a RESTful service in the backend and client APIs in Java and Python.

Motivation: I need to process a large collection of documents and perform various analyses on them. I want to explore various approaches and create fast prototypes (for that reason I need simple, easy-to-use APIs).

I guess I'm not the first person needing such a functionality and I would hate to reinvent the wheel here. Which brings me to the question: which open-source solutions allow easy-to-use persistence of data structures in Java?

Thanks in advance!

4 Answers 4

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Have you thought about using something like MongoDB? It seem perfect for what your looking for and Its picking up a lot of steam. It's a high-performance, schema-free document-oriented database and I love the fact it's based on json! Check it out!

Here is nice Java tutorial.

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  • Thanks, it's an interesting idea. I'm thinking about using MongoDB or another NoSQL solution as a "low-level" backend for some of the stores (maps and sets for sure). However, I also need a consistent Java API for CRUD operations on the data-structures, and I'm hoping that someone has already did that.
    – Bolo
    Jul 1, 2011 at 12:54
  • hmmm interesting. I haven't mixed JPA and MongoDB together yet. Seems like a un-likely pair. However; there are a couple tutorials on the net about MongoDB and java. Jul 1, 2011 at 13:03
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How about ObjectOutputStream and ObjectInputStream?

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  • Thanks, but that is too generic, and does not allow data structure-specific modifications without fetching the entire object. Example: I have a stored tree with 10M nodes, I want to add a leaf. I don't want to fetch and deserialize the entire tree, modify it, serialize and store it. The entire tree may not fit in memory. What I want to do is modify the persisted tree.
    – Bolo
    Jul 1, 2011 at 12:45
  • He mention that he don't want load all the data to change something
    – Zemzela
    Jul 1, 2011 at 12:46
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It's very hard to wire all that but you can use JPA with bi-directional mappings and lazy-loading.

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It would really depend on you usage patterens, i.e., how many reads, how many writes, how often, etc, but I would suggest you just use sql until you prove that it will not work.

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