rsdb

Build Status crates.io documentation

A modern lock-free atomic embedded database designed to beat LSM trees for reads and traditional B+ trees for writes.

It uses a modular design which can also be used to implement your own high performance persistent systems, using the included LockFreeLog and PageCache. Eventually, a versioned DB will be built on top of the Tree which provides multi-key transactions and snapshots.

The Tree has a C API, so you can use this from any mainstream language.

```rust extern crate rsdb;

let tree = rsdb::Config::default() .path(Some(path)) .tree();

// set and get tree.set(k, v1); assert_eq!(tree.get(&k), Some(v1));

// compare and swap tree.cas(k, Some(v1), Some(v2));

// scans let mut iter = tree.scan(b"a non-present key < k!"); asserteq!(iter.next(), Some((k, v2))); asserteq!(iter.next(), None);

// deletion tree.del(&k); ```

Warnings

Contribution Welcome!

Features

Goals

  1. beat LSM's on read performance and traditional B+ trees on write performance.
  2. don't use so much electricity. our data structures should play to modern hardware's strengths.
  3. don't surprise users with performance traps.
  4. bring reliability techniques from academia into real-world practice.

Architecture

Lock-free trees on a lock-free pagecache on a lock-free log. The pagecache scatters partial page fragments across the log, rather than rewriting entire pages at a time as B+ trees for spinning disks historically have. On page reads, we concurrently scatter-gather reads across the log to materialize the page from its fragments.

The system is largely inspired by the Deuteronomy architecture, and aims to implement the best features from RocksDB as well.

References