yottaStore
uNVMe
yottaStore | uNVMe | |
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9 | 1 | |
82 | 96 | |
- | - | |
1.8 | 10.0 | |
over 1 year ago | over 4 years ago | |
C++ | ||
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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yottaStore
- Ask HN: Why are there no open source NVMe-native key value stores in 2023?
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How to deal with overflowing counters?
I'm building a database, and I'm working on the storage format. For each record I have a logical clock which increases by 1 every time there's a write operation on the record, and I would like to be able to compare the clocks of two writes to understand which happened first.
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Need help porting a wait free trie from C to Rust (and other silly questions)
If you're curious to know more, the tree is used for rendezvous based routing, as used by my datastore. I'm doing machine learning on a 200 TB dataset, using around 200 machines.
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Looking for fast, space-efficient key-lookup
I copied this approach from several papers, with some improvements, for my datastore.
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How to handle hundreds of routes?
I have a server with hundreds of routes, representing all the possible operations I can do on a datastore. How can I organize my code better?
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Async-rdma v0.4.0: A Rust lib for writing high-throughput, low-latency networking apps simply
Yes I'm building a database where storage and compute are decoupled. I use io_uring to do pseudo-RDMA, and I'm looking to add ePBF to make it even more effective.
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Avoid hash flooding without a secret key?
I'm currently building an implementation of the dynamo paper, yottastore. Imagine it as a huge, distributed, hash map.
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How to deal with a very big hash table?
I'm building an implementation of the dynamo paper, yottastore. Given a key, I need to find which NVMe block stores the data. To do that I hash the key to find the shard where I have an in memory array in which at position [hash] I can find a struct with:
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Golang is better than Rust for next generation in-memory database
I have to be honest, I'm very skeptical about your results and your code. I'm building a database, yottastore, both in javascript, golang and rust so I think I can share my opinion:
uNVMe
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Ask HN: Why are there no open source NVMe-native key value stores in 2023?
https://github.com/OpenMPDK/uNVMe/blob/master/doc/uNVMe2.0_S...
I can't find detailed spec sheets detailing which NVMe command sets are supported even for their enterprise drives.
What are some alternatives?
solid_cache - A database-backed ActiveSupport::Cache::Store
udisk - The fastest ACID-transactional persisted Key-Value store designed as modified LSM-Tree for NVMe block-devices with GPU-acceleration and SPDK to bypass the Linux kernel
KVRocks - RocksDB compatible key value store and MyRocks compatible storage engine designed for KV SSD
cdb - A native golang implementation of cdb (http://cr.yp.to/cdb.html)
KVSSD - KV SSD host software including APIs and drivers
async-rdma - Easy to use RDMA API in Rust async
ssd-nvme-database - Columnar database on SSD NVMe
ScaleStore - This is the source code for our (Tobias Ziegler, Carsten Binnig and Viktor Leis) published paper at SIGMOD’22: ScaleStore: A Fast and Cost-Efficient Storage Engine using DRAM, NVMe, and RDMA.