BigCache
ristretto

BigCache | ristretto | |
---|---|---|
1 | 19 | |
7,673 | 5,831 | |
0.6% | 1.4% | |
5.3 | 8.2 | |
23 days ago | 6 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
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BigCache
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Recommendation for Key/Value storage
There are also different packages used as a wrapper on top of the Go map based on what your requirements are (storing a lot of data) https://github.com/allegro/bigcache or (need performance) https://github.com/dgraph-io/ristretto. For basic use-cases, the standard Go map should be enough. Just keep in mind whether you need concurrent access to your data structure, in which case you should guard your map with a mutex .
ristretto
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Otter, Fastest Go in-memory cache based on S3-FIFO algorithm
1. Unfortunately, ristretto has been showing hit ratio around 0 on almost all traces for a very long time now and the authors don't respond to this in any way. Vitess for example has already changed it to another cache. Here are two issues about it: https://github.com/dgraph-io/ristretto/issues/346 and https://github.com/dgraph-io/ristretto/issues/336. That is, ristretto shows such results even on its own benchmarks. You can see it just by running hit ratio benchmarks on a very simple zipf distribution from the ristretto repository: https://github.com/dgraph-io/ristretto/blob/main/stress_test.... On this test I got the following:
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S3 Express Is All You Need
That's exactly how Userify[0] used to work. (when it was Python; now that it's a Go app, we do the caching in memory using Ristretto[1]).
0. https://userify.com (team ssh key management/sudo authz)
1. https://github.com/dgraph-io/ristretto
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Theine - High performance in-memory cache
I also do some hit ratio benchmarks and Theine's results are much better than Ristretto. See results in README: https://github.com/Yiling-J/theine-go#hit-ratios
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Python deserves a good in-memory cache library!
If you know Caffeine(Java)/Ristretto(Go)/Moka(Rust), you know what Theine is. Python deserves a good in-memory cache library.
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VCache: A Simple In-Memory Cache Library
Thanks for sharing. There are a lot of options for embedded in-memory caches: https://github.com/dgraph-io/ristretto https://awesome-go.com/caches/ Do you have any comparisons or details on how your project has a different approach?
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Cacheme: Asyncio cache framework with multiple storages and thundering herd protection
I made Cacheme years ago, which support redis and synchronous API only. Then I switch to Go and found that there are some awesome cache projects in Go(ristretto, gocache...), I also made my own Cacheme go version: cacheme-go. After trying asyncio and type hint, I think it's time to rewrite my old Cacheme.
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Show HN: Zcached, in-memory key-value cache wire-compatible with memcached
zcached is an in-memory key-value cache exposing a memcached ASCII protocol-compatible interface, built on pluggable cache engines like Ristretto and freecache [0].
It's not performance-competitive with memcached, especially at higher thread counts. That said, it achieves about 1.1M ops/s, but at significantly higher P99 and P999 latency (as measured by memtier). See [1] and [2] for benchmark results from my 7950x-based workstation.
Disclaimer: This is a hobby project created for fun while hacking over the holidays. zcached is not a commercial product and never will be. Don't use it in production; consider this a technology demo more than anything.
I don't expect the source code to build outside of my environment, but for those interested in playing with it, binary artifacts are available at [3]. Try `zcached --address tcp:localhost:11211`.
[0] https://github.com/dgraph-io/ristretto, https://github.com/coocood/freecache
- What is the coolest Go open source projects you have seen?
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Quitting Dgraph Labs
While I never used dgraph, I do use badger and ristretto and am similarly in a bind over their long-term survival (moreso badger than ristretto)...
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Recommendation for Key/Value storage
There are also different packages used as a wrapper on top of the Go map based on what your requirements are (storing a lot of data) https://github.com/allegro/bigcache or (need performance) https://github.com/dgraph-io/ristretto. For basic use-cases, the standard Go map should be enough. Just keep in mind whether you need concurrent access to your data structure, in which case you should guard your map with a mutex .
What are some alternatives?
go-cache - An in-memory key:value store/cache (similar to Memcached) library for Go, suitable for single-machine applications.
go-cache-benchmark - Cache benchmark for Golang
GCache - An in-memory cache library for golang. It supports multiple eviction policies: LRU, LFU, ARC
moka - A high performance concurrent caching library for Rust
groupcache - groupcache is a caching and cache-filling library, intended as a replacement for memcached in many cases.
parquet-go - Go library to read/write Parquet files
fastcache - Fast thread-safe inmemory cache for big number of entries in Go. Minimizes GC overhead
stretto - Stretto is a Rust implementation for Dgraph's ristretto (https://github.com/dgraph-io/ristretto). A high performance memory-bound Rust cache.
badger - Fast key-value DB in Go.
ergo - An actor-based Framework with network transparency for creating event-driven architecture in Golang. Inspired by Erlang. Zero dependencies.
ledisdb - A high performance NoSQL Database Server powered by Go
Caffeine - A high performance caching library for Java
