RedisLess
yugabyte-db
Our great sponsors
RedisLess | yugabyte-db | |
---|---|---|
4 | 87 | |
147 | 8,486 | |
- | 1.3% | |
8.4 | 10.0 | |
over 2 years ago | 1 day ago | |
Rust | C | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
RedisLess
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How I imagine the future of databases in the Cloud
RedisLess is an experiment to provide a fast, lightweight, embedded, and scalable in-memory Key/Value store library compatible with the Redis API. This project aims to check the feasibility of the principle listed above, and in a few days of works we succeed to have:
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Why you should code in Rust in 2021
I hope you liked this article, and it gives you the appetite to try out Rust. If you have no idea how to start learning it, I would recommend reading the official free ebook. Then, trying to reimplement some good old academic (or not) algorithms and data structures in Rust. If you want to put your hands into dirty stuff, I can recommend contributing to my project Qovery Engine and RedisLess as well.
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I am building a Serverless version of Redis - written in Rust
Data is not persisted yet - everything lives in memory and synced to different instances via Raft (not implemented yet). So it will be a volatile K/V store at the moment. In the future, it will be possible to plug another [storage](https://github.com/Qovery/RedisLess/tree/main/redisless/storage/src) to support persistence.
yugabyte-db
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Best Practice: use the same datatypes for comparisons, like joins and foreign keys
It is possible to apply Batched Nested Loop but with additional code that checks the range of the outer bigint and compare it only if it matches the range of integer. This has been added in YugabyteDB 2.21 with #20715 YSQL: Allow BNL on joins over different integer types to help migrations from PostgreSQL with such datatype inconsistencies.
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Jonathan Katz: Thoughts on PostgreSQL in 2024
It can be done like https://github.com/yugabyte/yugabyte-db/ has.
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Is co-partition or interleave necessary in Distributed SQL?
Therefore, interleaving or co-partitioning is probably not necessary, and would reduce agility and scalability more than improving the performance. Unless you have a good reason for it that you can share on Issue #79. But, first, test and tune the queries to see if you need something else.
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PostGIS on YugabyteDB Alma8 (workarounds)
This is a workaround, not supported. I've opened the following issue to get it solve in the YugabyteDB deployment: https://github.com/yugabyte/yugabyte-db/issues/19389
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Bitmap Scan in YugabyteDB
Note that there may still be a need for bitmaps, especially with disjunctions (OR) as the following is about conjunction (AND), and it can still be implemented, differently than PostgreSQL. This is tracked by #4634.
- Yugabyte – distributed PostgreSQL, 100% open source
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PL/Python on YugabyteDB
FROM almalinux:8 as build RUN dnf -y update &&\ dnf groupinstall -y 'Development Tools' # get YugabyteDB sources ARG YB_TAG=2.18 RUN git clone --branch ${YB_TAG} https://github.com/yugabyte/yugabyte-db.git WORKDIR yugabyte-db # install dependencies and compilation tools RUN dnf install -y https://dl.fedoraproject.org/pub/epel/epel-release-latest-8.noarch.rpm RUN dnf -y install epel-release libatomic rsync python3-devel cmake3 java-1.8.0-openjdk maven npm golang gcc-toolset-12 gcc-toolset-12-libatomic-devel patchelf glibc-langpack-en ccache vim wget python3.11-devel python3.11-pip clang ncurses-devel readline-devel libsqlite3x-devel RUN mkdir /opt/yb-build RUN chown "$USER" /opt/yb-build # Install Python 3 RUN alternatives --remove-all python3 RUN alternatives --remove-all python RUN alternatives --install /usr/bin/python python /usr/bin/python3.11 3 RUN alternatives --install /usr/bin/python3 python3 /usr/bin/python3.11 3 # add #include "pg_yb_utils.h" to src/postgres/src/pl/plpython/plpy_procedure.c RUN sed -e '/#include "postgres.h"/a#include "pg_yb_utils.h"' -i src/postgres/src/pl/plpython/plpy_procedure.c # if using python > 3.9 remove #include and #include from src/postgres/src/pl/plpython/plpython.h RUN sed -e '/#include /d' -e '/#include /d' -i src/postgres/src/pl/plpython/plpython.h # add '--with-python', to python/yugabyte/build_postgres.py under the configure_postgres method RUN sed -e "/'\.\/configure',/a\ '--with-python'," -i python/yugabyte/build_postgres.py # Build and package the release RUN YB_CCACHE_DIR="$HOME/.cache/yb_ccache" ./yb_build.sh -j$(nproc) --clean-all --build-yugabyted-ui --no-linuxbrew --clang15 -f release RUN chmod +x bin/get_clients.sh bin/parse_contention.py bin/yb-check-consistency.py RUN YB_USE_LINUXBREW=0 ./yb_release --force WORKDIR / RUN mv /yugabyte-db/build/yugabyte*.tar.gz /yugabyte.tgz
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YugabyteDB official Dockerfile
You have seen me using the official YugabyteDB Docker image extensively. This image is suitable for various purposes, including labs, development, testing, and even production. In the past, we used to create it internally due to its seamless integration with our build process. However, some companies prefer to construct the image on their own, which is indeed a commendable practice. After all, it's not advisable to run random images with root privileges on your servers. As a result, we have made a significant alteration by introducing a refined Dockerfile to our Github repository.
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FlameGraphs on Steroids with profiler.firefox.com
Of course, I can guess from the function names, but YugabyteDB is Open Source and I can search for them. What happens here is that I didn't declare a Primary Key for my table and then an internal one (ybctid) is generated, because secondary indexes need a key to address the table row. This ID generation calls /dev/urandom. I made this simple example to show that low-level traces can give a clue about high level data model problems.
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Understand what you run before publishing your (silly) benchmark results
To show that it is not difficut to understand what you run, when in a PostgreSQL-compatible database, I'll look at the HammerDB benchmark connected to YugabyteDB. HammerDB has no specific code for it but YugabyteDB is PostgreSQL-compatible (it uses PostgreSQL code on top of distributed storage and transaction).
What are some alternatives?
MeiliSearch - A lightning-fast search API that fits effortlessly into your apps, websites, and workflow
citus - Distributed PostgreSQL as an extension
node-cache - a node internal (in-memory) caching module
cockroach - CockroachDB - the open source, cloud-native distributed SQL database.
loki - Like Prometheus, but for logs.
neon - Neon: Serverless Postgres. We separated storage and compute to offer autoscaling, branching, and bottomless storage.
Redis - Redis is an in-memory database that persists on disk. The data model is key-value, but many different kind of values are supported: Strings, Lists, Sets, Sorted Sets, Hashes, Streams, HyperLogLogs, Bitmaps.
psycopg2 - PostgreSQL database adapter for the Python programming language
sled - the champagne of beta embedded databases
realtime - Broadcast, Presence, and Postgres Changes via WebSockets
engine - The Orchestration Engine To Deliver Self-Service Infrastructure Faster ⚡️
Apache AGE - Graph database optimized for fast analysis and real-time data processing. It is provided as an extension to PostgreSQL. [Moved to: https://github.com/apache/age]