sqlnotebook
go-sqlite3
sqlnotebook | go-sqlite3 | |
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1 | 23 | |
589 | 301 | |
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7.6 | 9.5 | |
7 months ago | 4 days ago | |
C# | Go | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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sqlnotebook
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Show HN: My Go SQLite driver did poorly on a benchmark, so I fixed it
The meat of the P/Invoke code is in here: https://github.com/electroly/sqlnotebook/tree/master/src/Sql...
The parent directory includes code that uses it. I'm most proud of this SQLite virtual table module that proxies queries to remote ADO.NET connections, allowing you to write joins directly between local SQLite tables and remote SQL Server tables. https://github.com/electroly/sqlnotebook/blob/master/src/Sql...
I've also got a generic virtual table module that lets me easily write table-valued functions in C#: https://github.com/electroly/sqlnotebook/blob/master/src/Sql...
The goal is to provide various "supercharged" features to base SQLite by taking advantage of all the extension points I can. I wish some went further; in particular the virtual table API doesn't "push down" enough of the original query to allow the module to avoid doing O(N+1) queries in some cases.
go-sqlite3
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Show HN: Roast my SQLite encryption at-rest
Yep, I just made it tweakable at build, which was always the intent, although I expect the default to be popular.
https://github.com/ncruces/go-sqlite3/blob/67d859a5/vfs/adia...
That's unfortunate about the default parameters, but note that you can also replace the KDF altogether (besides just not using it).
You just need to implement this interface, with any HBSH construction and KDF:
https://github.com/ncruces/go-sqlite3/blob/67d859a5/vfs/adia...
If you keep the HBSH and change the KDF, your file format will be “compatible.”
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Jsonfile: A Quick Hack for Tinkering
struggling figuring out how to make my cgo sqlite cross-compile to Windows
Plenty of people trying to fix that.
There's at least:
https://modernc.org/sqlite
Then there's https://github.com/zombiezen/go-sqlite that actually builds https://crawshaw.io/sqlite on top of modernc.
And there's mine that has both a low level and a database/sql driver builds and runs everywhere Go does: https://github.com/ncruces/go-sqlite3
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SQLite-memory-vfs: Open a SQLite db from memory in Python, without hitting disk
If you're interested both SQLite's and my memdb VFSes implement safe locking.
Depending on your familiarity with Go, mine maybe easier to follow, or not.
https://github.com/ncruces/go-sqlite3/blob/f1b00a9944730eaa9...
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Show HN: My Go SQLite driver did poorly on a benchmark, so I fixed it
One thing I tried to make sure, to avoid the pitfall modernc is having, is to make sure building "the WASM BLOB" is easily reproducible with widely available tools:
https://github.com/ncruces/go-sqlite3/blob/main/.github/work...
I do apply some light patches to SQLite, but so far they've always cleanly applied, and I can produce a new release within hours of being notified of SQLite releases.
- JSONB Has Landed in SQLite
- Show HN: Go bindings to SQLite using wazero
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Show HN: Gogosseract, a Go Lib for CGo-Free Tesseract OCR via Wazero
Disclosure: I'm working on alternative Cgo-less bindings for SQLite, using wazero.
https://github.com/ncruces/go-sqlite3
One of the problems of the modernc approach (IMO) is that they're not just transpiring CPU/compute stuff, but entirely OS/platform stuff.
Each Go file of theirs is a xxx_os_arch.go that starts with 100s of OS-#defines-as-consts, and goes on to transpile fully #ifdefed code.
It also implements antithetical (in Go) stuff like goroutine local storage, because libc pthreads can't live without it.
And all IO is via direct syscalls that will never play nice with the Go scheduler, because, again this is OS level stuff.
WASM defines a cross platform CPU and an ABI, and using that for compute and the bottom OS layer in Go you get (IMO) a nicer end result.
Given the hard task of generating decent code from WASM at load time (wazero's compiler is pretty naive, a better one is being developed, but it will take seconds to generate good code for anything non trivial like SQLite) I wouldn't mind having a solution that translated to Go, or Go ASM, at build time.
- Show HN: Sqinn-Go is a Golang library for accessing SQLite databases in pure Go
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Go bindings to SQLite using Wazero
The github.com/ncruces/go-sqlite3 is a link.
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C to WASM to Go
Using the stack pointer global is an interesting hack. I'd never thought of that. Need to compare with what I'm doing for SQLite (a kind of per connection arena).
What are some alternatives?
sqinn - SQLite over stdin/stdout
xcgo - Golang cross-platform builder docker image with CGo and other tooling
zenity - Zenity dialogs for Golang, Windows, macOS
go-sqlite3 - sqlite3 driver for go using database/sql
go-sqlite - pure-Go SQLite driver for Go (SQLite embedded)
acmd - Simple, useful and opinionated CLI package in Go.
venomoid - Defanging viper
wazero - wazero: the zero dependency WebAssembly runtime for Go developers
go-database-sql-tutorial - A tutorial for Go's database/sql package
go-sqlite-bench - Benchmarks for Golang SQLite Drivers
kdialog - Tool to show nice dialog boxes from shell scripts