dqlite
ydb
dqlite | ydb | |
---|---|---|
33 | 10 | |
3,717 | 3,422 | |
0.9% | 2.0% | |
9.5 | 10.0 | |
2 days ago | 3 days ago | |
C | C++ | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
dqlite
-
Marmot: Multi-writer distributed SQLite based on NATS
If you're interested in this, here are some related projects that all take slightly different approaches:
- LiteSync directly competes with Marmot and supports DDL sync, but is closed source commercial (similar to SQLite EE): https://litesync.io
- dqlite is Canonical's distributed SQLite that depends on c-raft and kernel-level async I/O: https://dqlite.io
- cr-sqlite is a Rust-based loadable extension that adds CRDT changeset generation and reconciliation to SQLite: https://github.com/vlcn-io/cr-sqlite
Slightly related but not really (no multi writer, no C-level SQLite API or other restrictions):
- comdb2 (Bloombergs multi-homed RDMS using SQLite as the frontend)
- rqlite: RDMS with HTTP API and SQLite as the storage engine, used for replication and strong consistency (does not scale writes)
- litestream/LiteFS: disaster recovery replication
- liteserver: active read-only replication (predecessor of LiteSync)
- I'm All-In on Server-Side SQLite
-
SQLite performance tuning: concurrent reads, multiple GBs and 100k SELECTs/s
I'd be curious for a similar tuning with Dqlite: https://github.com/canonical/dqlite
- Strong Consistency with Raft and SQLite
-
9 years of open-source database development: reviewing the designs
Anyone knows how the DB this is about, https://rqlite.io/, compares with https://dqlite.io/ by Canonical (both seem to be distributed versions of sqlite)?
- SQLite the only database you will ever need in most cases
-
Transcending Posix: The End of an Era?
For folks' context, the new tool that's being discussed in the thread mentioned by the parent here is litefs [0], as well as which you can also look at rqlite [1] and dqlite [2], which all provide different trade-offs (e.g. rqlite is 'more strongly consistent' than litefs).
[0]: https://github.com/superfly/litefs
[1]: https://github.com/rqlite/rqlite
[2]: https://github.com/canonical/dqlite
-
SQLite is not a toy database
I presume you're familiar with https://github.com/canonical/dqlite (made by my employer) and https://github.com/rqlite/rqlite (unrelated)? How will mvsqlite compare to those?
-
GitDB, a distributed embeddable database on top of Git
Check out dqlite, it's sqlite but with a raft consensus to distribute changes through a log: https://dqlite.io/ You can link it in as a library too, it sounds like exactly what you want.
- Ask HN: Free and open source distributed database written in C++ or C
ydb
-
Erasure Coding versus Tail Latency
There https://ydb.tech/ open source db that uses erasure coding for replication in single zone/region.
-
YDB – an open source distributed SQL database
This is a good source for features that may/may not already be existing.
https://github.com/ydb-platform/ydb/blob/main/ROADMAP.md
-
Sqllogictest Illustrated
[YDB] implemented by Python
-
Gitlab is splitting their main and ci Postgres databases
https://ydb.tech/ which each has promise.
There is definitely lots of progress to make in this space. From what I have seen they are all significantly slower on a single node and are not as battle-hardened. But I think with time we will have a few really nice options to pick from.
- Ask HN: Free and open source distributed database written in C++ or C
- YDB – distributed DBMS that combines HA, scalability, strict consistency, ACID
-
Yandex Open-Sources YDB
I found a lot of mentions of "Postgresql" in repository: https://github.com/ydb-platform/ydb/search?q=postgresql
Is it build on top of PG ?
What are some alternatives?
rqlite - The lightweight, distributed relational database built on SQLite.
ClickHouse - ClickHouse® is a free analytics DBMS for big data
kine - Run Kubernetes on MySQL, Postgres, sqlite, dqlite, not etcd.
Aerospike - Aerospike Database Server – flash-optimized, in-memory, nosql database
better-sqlite3 - The fastest and simplest library for SQLite3 in Node.js.
Scylla - NoSQL data store using the seastar framework, compatible with Apache Cassandra
litestream - Streaming replication for SQLite.
MySQL - MySQL Server, the world's most popular open source database, and MySQL Cluster, a real-time, open source transactional database.
boringproxy - Simple tunneling reverse proxy with a fast web UI and auto HTTPS. Designed for self-hosters.
ytsaurus - YTsaurus is a scalable and fault-tolerant open-source big data platform.
Bedrock - Rock solid distributed database specializing in active/active automatic failover and WAN replication
yugabyte-db - YugabyteDB - the cloud native distributed SQL database for mission-critical applications.