show/hide this revision's text 2 clarified what I meant by "is single-user".

Sqlite is scalable in terms of single-user, I have multi-gigabyte database that performs very well and I haven't had much problems with it.

But it is single-user, so it depends on what kind of scaling you're talking about.

In response to comments. Note that there is nothing that prevents using an Sqlite database in a multi-user environment, but every transaction (in effect, every SQL statement that modifies the database) takes a lock on the file, which will prevent other users from accessing the database at all.

So if you have lots of modifications done to the database, you're essentially going to hit scaling problems very quick. If, on the other hand, you have lots of read access compared to write access, it might not be so bad.

But Sqlite will of course function in a multi-user environment, but it won't perform well.

show/hide this revision's text 1

Sqlite is scalable in terms of single-user, I have multi-gigabyte database that performs very well and I haven't had much problems with it.

But it is single-user, so it depends on what kind of scaling you're talking about.