noms
DISCONTINUED
nessie
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noms | nessie | |
---|---|---|
11 | 13 | |
7,502 | 804 | |
- | 4.9% | |
1.9 | 9.9 | |
over 2 years ago | 3 days ago | |
Go | Java | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
noms
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I was wrong. CRDTs are the future
I am. But i know very little about CRDTs lol, so we'll see how that goes. I'm interested in converting some immutable, local-first data warehouse tooling i enjoy to a CRDT version. Prior it was more.. Git-like. Basically just Git with data structures inspired-massively from Noms[1].
The thing i've found most interesting is it appears[2] that CRDT backends need to expose CRDT flavored types to users. Which is to say how i'm writing this combines the notion of a type, say `[i32]` with how you want the merges to work. CRDT works great but based on my amateur-hour researching on the subject i don't feel you can write a single CRDT merge strategy for a single data type ala `[i32]` and have it be always correct. Applications need to indicate enough context on what makes sense for a given data type.
So yea, i agree with you. I'm interested in making a database-like thing, backed by CRDTs, but i also have seen very few general purpose implementations with CRDTs. It feels like i'm breaking "new ground", while having no idea what i'm doing and having no intention of being an actual researcher here. I'm just making apps i enjoy heh.
- Building a decentralized database
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Picking low-hanging memory usage bugs of an open source database
Most of the changes are in the noms package which used to live in a separate repo (https://github.com/attic-labs/noms), but Dolt has since adopted them.
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Downsides of Offline First
Not much more to say other than Noms was my favorite project (https://github.com/attic-labs/noms) for a while until acquisition and the engineers are now the ones behind Replicache (https://replicache.dev/).
I think this is going to be the next "Realm" that works everywhere.
- calling Format() on a time struct in a golang program changes the default Location's timezone information in the rest of the program
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Steps to build Database System from sratch?
The storage layer based on Noms: https://github.com/attic-labs/noms
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Dolt is Git for Data: a SQL database that you can fork, clone, branch, merge
Noms might be what you’re looking for (https://github.com/attic-labs/noms). Dolt is actually a fork of Noms.
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CondensationDB: Build secure and collaborative apps [open-source]
People that are interested in a similar feature set should check out https://github.com/attic-labs/noms and the SQL fork of Noms, https://github.com/dolthub/dolt
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Distributed search engines using BitTorrent and SQLite
With respect to IPFS and Merkle Search Trees, can anyone "in the know" comment on how they're materially different than Probabilistic B-Trees as defined by Noms[1] and Dolt[2]? I've been playing a lot with the Noms variant (Prolly Trees) lately and have often wondered where they differ from IPFS-ish Merkle Search Trees. If at all.
[1]: https://github.com/attic-labs/noms/blob/master/doc/intro.md#...
nessie
- FLaNK Stack Weekly 22 January 2024
- What are the main things I need to know to be hired as a Java developer?
- Is learning and mastering Spring & Spring boot worth it in 2023 ?
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Which lakehouse table format do you expect your organization will be using by the end of 2023?
Project Nessie (https://projectnessie.org/) will be the catalog that eventually decouples Iceberg from Hive. At that point, I think it will be a no brainer to go Iceberg over Delta.
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5 Reasons Your Data Lakehouse should Embrace Dremio Cloud
The Dremio Sonar query engine can query your data where it exists whether it's AWS Glue, S3, Nessie Catalogs, MySQL, Postgres, RedShift and an ever growing list of sources.
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Introduction to The World of Data - (OLTP, OLAP, Data Warehouses, Data Lakes and more)
We will also need a catalog to track all of these tables, with the open source Project Nessie we can do just that, and also get great versioning features similar to using Git when developing applications allowing data engineers to practice "data as code" and "write-audit-publish" patterns on their data.
- DoltLab v0.2.0
- Unstructured Data Governance for ML
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Dolt is Git for Data: a SQL database that you can fork, clone, branch, merge
I've been working on https://github.com/projectnessie/nessie for about a year now. Its similar to Dolt in spirit but aimed at big data/data lakes. Would welcome feedback from the community.
Its very exciting to see this field picking up speed. Tons of interesting problems to be solved :-)
What are some alternatives?
rqlite - The lightweight, distributed relational database built on SQLite.
dat - Go Postgres Data Access Toolkit
dolt - Dolt – Git for Data
sql-migrate - SQL schema migration tool for Go.
skeema - Declarative pure-SQL schema management for MySQL and MariaDB
cockroach - CockroachDB - the open source, cloud-native distributed SQL database.
levigo - levigo is a Go wrapper for LevelDB
ObjectBox Go Database - Embedded Go Database, the fast alternative to SQLite, gorm, etc.
GCache - An in-memory cache library for golang. It supports multiple eviction policies: LRU, LFU, ARC
FlockDB - A distributed, fault-tolerant graph database
go-cache - An in-memory key:value store/cache (similar to Memcached) library for Go, suitable for single-machine applications.
dgraph - The high-performance database for modern applications