Berkeley DB would be the best choice probably but I can't use it due to licensing issues.

Are there any alternatives?

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73% accept rate
-1 for being vague, and for responding sarcastically to answers. – Stephen C Apr 4 '10 at 15:19
@Stephen C: you are welcome to edit and provide better explanation. About "responding sarcastically": it sounds strange for me that alternative to Berkeley DB is HashMap. – Roman Apr 4 '10 at 15:27
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upvoting - question seems legit, and not that much sarcasm going around. Given, question could have stated from the start that hashmaps would not cut it. – tucuxi Apr 4 '10 at 21:45
OK @Roman ... what DO you mean by "//sarcasam" in your comment below?? – Stephen C Apr 5 '10 at 0:30
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7 Answers

Your question could mean one of two things.

If you mean a data structure for storing key-value pairs, use one of the Map instances that are a standard part of the JDK.

If however you are after an in-memory key-value store then I would suggest taking a look at EHCache or even memcached.

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in-memory key-value store – Roman Apr 4 '10 at 14:28
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HashMap?

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It lacks transactions management and possibility to keep some data in the disk and another part in-memory and so on.. //sarcasm – Roman Apr 4 '10 at 15:01
Ah, I see :) There was a problem a while back with someone wanting to develop stuff for Android but needed to use a storage-backed hashmap because the size of his data was too large. Something similar, I guess. – Chris Dennett Apr 4 '10 at 15:40
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You can try Hazelcast. Just add hazelcast.jar to your classpath. And start coding

java.util.Map map = Hazelcast.getMap("myMap");

You'll get an in-memory, distributed, dynamically scalable data grid which performs super fast.

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jdbm works great for this sort of thing. It's intended for storing on disk in a paged file, provides for basic transaction support (no guarantees on isolation, but ACD are covered). We've used it in a production system with fairly wide deployment and have been quite pleased with the performance, stability, etc...

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There are lightweigh or embedded dbs like HSQLDB, Derby, SQLite But like others don't understand why you need a db to store key/values...

Why not a Map? Need to keep key/values on app reboot?

Also it's perhaps not what you need but with html5 on up to date browsers you have localStorage that permits you to store key/values in the browser using javascript.

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Consider using jredis. It's a Java client for Redis, a persistent key-value store. There's also a JDBC driver for it: code.google.com/p/jdbc-redis/.

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I know this is a two-year old post but I've been messing around with Infinispan recently and I like it so far. I'm not an expert by any means but it was not too difficult for me to set up a distributed cache with a few nodes and I was pulling some data from them in about an hour.

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