java-immutable-collections
MapDB
java-immutable-collections | MapDB | |
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2 | 5 | |
41 | 4,834 | |
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8.3 | 0.0 | |
2 months ago | 4 months ago | |
Java | Java | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Apache License 2.0 |
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java-immutable-collections
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what is the best persistent collection library?
I'm not sure which one is best, but I always wanted to give https://github.com/brianburton/java-immutable-collections and/or https://github.com/lacuna/bifurcan (which, strictly speaking, does not satisfy your requirements, read the description).
- Immutable/Persistent Collections for Java 3.2.1 features improved efficiency
MapDB
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GC, hands off my data!
I decided to start with an overview of what open-source options are currently available. When it comes to the implementation of the on-heap cache mechanism, the options are numerous – there is well known: guava, ehcache, caffeine and many other solutions. However, when I began researching cache mechanisms offering the possibility of storing data outside GC control, I found out that there are very few solutions left. Out of the popular ones, only Terracotta is supported. It seems that this is a very niche solution and we do not have many options to choose from. In terms of less-known projects, I came across Chronicle-Map, MapDB and OHC. I chose the last one because it was created as part of the Cassandra project, which I had some experience with and was curious about how this component worked:
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Permazen: Language-natural persistence to KV stores
So, it's an object database, like Zope's ZODB on Python?
I like the idea, but I'd like to learn about use cases for it.
Otherwise, in Java, MapDB is about as far as I'd be willing to go: https://github.com/jankotek/mapdb/
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what is the best persistent collection library?
Anyway, without further ado, I found MapDB (https://github.com/jankotek/mapdb) which does exactly that. Of course, they also provide their own Java collection implementations as well, so I suspect using it with Vavr would be a poor idea, but it is very cool in its own right anyway. Of course, there is also Apache Derby and HSQLDB, and those great options with a long history as well. I haven't played with these in a while though, so I might give them a try again soon for some personal stuff.
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Ask HN: What are the best key-value self-hosted storage engines?
In Java I like
https://mapdb.org/
It is more feature rich than you want but in Python I'd probably just use sqlite3 since it is in the standard library.
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Solution for hash-map with >100M values
I have had good results with mapdb
What are some alternatives?
kotlinx.collections.immutable - Immutable persistent collections for Kotlin
Chronicle Map - Replicate your Key Value Store across your network, with consistency, persistance and performance.
jimmer - A revolutionary ORM framework for both java and kotlin.
H2 - H2 is an embeddable RDBMS written in Java.
Paguro - Generic, Null-safe, Immutable Collections and Functional Transformations for the JVM
JetBrains Xodus - Transactional schema-less embedded database used by JetBrains YouTrack and JetBrains Hub.
bifurcan - functional, durable data structures
Redisson - Redisson - Easy Redis Java client and Real-Time Data Platform. Sync/Async/RxJava/Reactive API. Over 50 Redis based Java objects and services: Set, Multimap, SortedSet, Map, List, Queue, Deque, Semaphore, Lock, AtomicLong, Map Reduce, Bloom filter, Spring Cache, Tomcat, Scheduler, JCache API, Hibernate, RPC, local cache ...
data-structures - A collection of powerful data structures
Jedis - Redis Java client
Javaslang - vʌvr (formerly called Javaslang) is a non-commercial, non-profit object-functional library that runs with Java 8+. It aims to reduce the lines of code and increase code quality.
Exposed - Kotlin SQL Framework