43

I'm looking for a dbm-like library that I can use in place of Berkeley DB, which I'm currently using. My main reason for switching is the licensing fees for BDB are pretty high (free for open source apps, but my employer does not want to open source this particular app for various reasons).

I've looked briefly at qdbm but it doesn't look like it will fill my needs -- lots of keys (several million) and large data items (> 1-5 megabytes). Before I continue my search I figured I'd ask because it seems there are tons of dbm-like libraries out there.

9 Answers 9

31

C/C++

Java

0
18

You could look at Tokyo Cabinet. Its the successor to qdbm/gdbm, and if you decide to scale has a nice network front-end available.

Edit:

Another variant is Kyoto Cabinet; developed by the same person, but supposedly easier to use.

11

SQLite is public domain, meaning you can use it for any purpose whatsoever, and is widely used and supported.

8
  • 1
    Good idea, but SQLite apparently isn't recommended for large databases. Ours will be about 50GB; sorry, that probably wasn't clear in the original post.
    – John
    Nov 4, 2008 at 3:49
  • 1
    The other issue is that BDB is not an SQL DBMS, it's a storage engine. So unless he has written an SQL implementation on top of BDB, it seems there will be a bit more work to port to SQL rather than another storage engine.
    – Ferruccio
    Nov 4, 2008 at 11:56
  • 1
    @Ferruccio, he doesn't have to port to SQL, he can simply implement BDB-like API on top of SQL. easily. Nov 14, 2008 at 15:24
  • 4
    Berkeley DB now supports SQL as well as the key/value API. In fact it uses the SQLite code on top of the Berkeley DB B-Tree so you can now run TB-sized SQLite databases not just in cases where "a few dozen GB" is fine. (Disclaimer: I am a product manager for Berkeley DB at Oracle.)
    – Greg Burd
    Jan 20, 2011 at 20:22
  • 1
    Seems like SQLite is claimed to support TB sized databases - sqlite.org/features.html Mar 15, 2013 at 12:00
9

You can get much improved performance out of any dbm (even qdbm) and improved parallelism with a simple level of indirection: Simply take your keys and hash them, and use data_dir/H(key)/ as the database to store those keys. Limit the hash output to a small value (say) 255 for best results.

This approach has a number of benefits, easily summarized:

  • Conceptually simple
  • Easy to implement and test
  • Doesn't lock the entire database for updates
  • Can support much larger databases
  • Easy to replace the DBM component

The hash probably doesn't even need to be cryptographically secure; just mostly uniform. DJB's cdb hash works well in most cases.

1
  • 1
    Interesting suggestion, but it's a bit orthogonal to the question. The merits of using a hash table vs. a sorted btree-like structure are a different topic.
    – gonzojive
    Aug 7, 2011 at 17:36
3

If you are on Windows then you can use the builtin esent database engine. http://blogs.msdn.com/windowssdk/archive/2008/10/23/esent-extensible-storage-engine-api-in-the-windows-sdk.aspx

3

You could try JDBM. It is a free (Apache 2) key-value store with disk persistence. Simple API and high performance

2

Postgres or HSQLDB and possible even H2 database

0

db4o is pretty cheap and fast but it can only be used with java or .net

1
  • 1
    db4o is absolutely inappropriate alternative to BerkeleyDB. additionally db4o doesn't offer royalty free licensing model. They're charging for each deployment. Nov 14, 2008 at 15:34
0

Firebird is your best friend.

2
  • Firebird is a very nice SQL database. Not great as a storage DB, but probably better than most due to very good BLOB support. Mar 2, 2009 at 5:50
  • 1
    Can you elaborate a little more on 'not great as a storage DB'? Also, I would like to hear more on about what Firebird is NOT great (price? size? :) )
    – F.D.Castel
    Jul 5, 2009 at 18:14