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794 lines
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Markdown
794 lines
40 KiB
Markdown
<!-- Required extensions: pymdownx.betterem, pymdownx.tilde, pymdownx.emoji, pymdownx.tasklist, pymdownx.superfences -->
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> Please refer to the online [documentation](https://libmdbx.dqdkfa.ru)
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> with [`C` API description](https://libmdbx.dqdkfa.ru/group__c__api.html)
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> and pay attention to the [`C++` API](https://gitflic.ru/project/erthink/libmdbx/blob?file=mdbx.h%2B%2B#line-num-1).
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> Questions, feedback and suggestions are welcome to the [Telegram' group](https://t.me/libmdbx).
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> For NEWS take a look to the [ChangeLog](https://gitflic.ru/project/erthink/libmdbx/blob?file=ChangeLog.md)
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> or the [TODO](https://gitflic.ru/project/erthink/libmdbx/blob?file=TODO.md).
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*The Future will (be) [Positive](https://www.ptsecurity.com). Всё будет хорошо.*
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libmdbx
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========
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<!-- section-begin overview -->
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_libmdbx_ is an extremely fast, compact, powerful, embedded, transactional
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[key-value database](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Key-value_database),
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with [Apache 2.0 license](https://gitflic.ru/project/erthink/libmdbx/blob?file=LICENSE).
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_libmdbx_ has a specific set of properties and capabilities,
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focused on creating unique lightweight solutions.
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1. Allows **a swarm of multi-threaded processes to
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[ACID](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ACID)ly read and update** several
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key-value [maps](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Associative_array) and
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[multimaps](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multimap) in a locally-shared
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database.
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2. Provides **extraordinary performance**, minimal overhead through
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[Memory-Mapping](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memory-mapped_file) and
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`Olog(N)` operations costs by virtue of [B+
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tree](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B%2B_tree).
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3. Requires **no maintenance and no crash recovery** since it doesn't use
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[WAL](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Write-ahead_logging), but that might
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be a caveat for write-intensive workloads with durability requirements.
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4. **Compact and friendly for fully embedding**. Only ≈25KLOC of `C11`,
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≈64K x86 binary code of core, no internal threads neither server process(es),
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but implements a simplified variant of the [Berkeley
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DB](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berkeley_DB) and
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[dbm](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DBM_(computing)) API.
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5. Enforces [serializability](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serializability) for
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writers just by single
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[mutex](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mutual_exclusion) and affords
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[wait-free](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-blocking_algorithm#Wait-freedom)
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for parallel readers without atomic/interlocked operations, while
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**writing and reading transactions do not block each other**.
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6. **Guarantee data integrity** after crash unless this was explicitly
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neglected in favour of write performance.
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7. Supports Linux, Windows, MacOS, Android, iOS, FreeBSD, DragonFly, Solaris,
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OpenSolaris, OpenIndiana, NetBSD, OpenBSD and other systems compliant with
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**POSIX.1-2008**.
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<!-- section-end -->
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Historically, _libmdbx_ is a deeply revised and extended descendant of the amazing
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[Lightning Memory-Mapped Database](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lightning_Memory-Mapped_Database).
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_libmdbx_ inherits all benefits from _LMDB_, but resolves some issues and adds [a set of improvements](#improvements-beyond-lmdb).
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### MithrilDB and Future
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<!-- section-begin mithril -->
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The next version is under non-public development from scratch and will be
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released as **MithrilDB** and `libmithrildb` for libraries & packages.
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Admittedly mythical [Mithril](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mithril) is
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resembling silver but being stronger and lighter than steel. Therefore
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_MithrilDB_ is a rightly relevant name.
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_MithrilDB_ is radically different from _libmdbx_ by the new database
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format and API based on C++20. The goal of this revolution is to provide
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a clearer and robust API, add more features and new valuable properties
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of the database. All fundamental architectural problems of libmdbx/LMDB
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have been solved there, but now the active development has been
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suspended for top-three reasons:
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1. For now _libmdbx_ «mostly» enough for all [our products](https://www.ptsecurity.com/ww-en/products/),
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and I’m busy in development of replication for scalability.
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2. Waiting for fresh [Elbrus CPU](https://wiki.elbrus.ru/) of [e2k architecture](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elbrus_2000),
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especially with hardware acceleration of [Streebog](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Streebog) and
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[Kuznyechik](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kuznyechik), which are required for Merkle tree, etc.
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3. The expectation of needs and opportunities due to the wide use of NVDIMM (aka persistent memory),
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modern NVMe and [Ангара](https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ангара_(интерконнект)).
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However, _MithrilDB_ will not be available for countries unfriendly to
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Russia (i.e. acceded the sanctions, devil adepts and/or NATO). But it is
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not yet known whether such restriction will be implemented only through
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a license and support, either the source code will not be open at all.
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Basically we are not inclined to allow our work to contribute to the
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profit that goes to weapons that kill our relatives and friends.
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NO OPTIONS.
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Nonetheless, I try not to make any promises regarding _MithrilDB_ until release.
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Contrary to _MithrilDB_, _libmdbx_ will forever free and open source.
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Moreover with high-quality support whenever possible. Tu deviens
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responsable pour toujours de ce que tu as apprivois. So we will continue
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to comply with the original open license and the principles of
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constructive cooperation, in spite of outright Github sabotage and
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sanctions. I will also try to keep (not drop) Windows support, despite
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it is an unused obsolete technology for us.
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<!-- section-end -->
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```
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$ objdump -f -h -j .text libmdbx.so
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libmdbx.so: формат файла elf64-e2k
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архитектура: elbrus-v6:64, флаги 0x00000150:
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HAS_SYMS, DYNAMIC, D_PAGED
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начальный адрес 0x00000000??????00
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Разделы:
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Idx Name Разм VMA LMA Фа смещ. Выр. Флаги
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10 .text 000e7460 0000000000025c00 0000000000025c00 00025c00 2**10 CONTENTS, ALLOC, LOAD, READONLY, CODE
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$ cc --version
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lcc:1.27.14:Jan-31-2024:e2k-v6-linux
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gcc (GCC) 9.3.0 compatible
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```
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-----
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## Table of Contents
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- [Characteristics](#characteristics)
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- [Features](#features)
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- [Limitations](#limitations)
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- [Gotchas](#gotchas)
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- [Comparison with other databases](#comparison-with-other-databases)
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- [Improvements beyond LMDB](#improvements-beyond-lmdb)
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- [History & Acknowledgments](#history)
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- [Usage](#usage)
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- [Building and Testing](#building-and-testing)
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- [API description](#api-description)
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- [Bindings](#bindings)
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- [Performance comparison](#performance-comparison)
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- [Integral performance](#integral-performance)
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- [Read scalability](#read-scalability)
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- [Sync-write mode](#sync-write-mode)
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- [Lazy-write mode](#lazy-write-mode)
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- [Async-write mode](#async-write-mode)
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- [Cost comparison](#cost-comparison)
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# Characteristics
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<!-- section-begin characteristics -->
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## Features
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- Key-value data model, keys are always sorted.
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- Fully [ACID](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ACID)-compliant, through to
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[MVCC](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiversion_concurrency_control)
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and [CoW](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copy-on-write).
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- Multiple key-value tables/sub-databases within a single datafile.
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- Range lookups, including range query estimation.
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- Efficient support for short fixed length keys, including native 32/64-bit integers.
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- Ultra-efficient support for [multimaps](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multimap). Multi-values sorted, searchable and iterable. Keys stored without duplication.
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- Data is [memory-mapped](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memory-mapped_file) and accessible directly/zero-copy. Traversal of database records is extremely-fast.
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- Transactions for readers and writers, ones do not block others.
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- Writes are strongly serialized. No transaction conflicts nor deadlocks.
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- Readers are [non-blocking](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-blocking_algorithm), notwithstanding [snapshot isolation](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snapshot_isolation).
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- Nested write transactions.
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- Reads scale linearly across CPUs.
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- Continuous zero-overhead database compactification.
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- Automatic on-the-fly database size adjustment.
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- Customizable database page size.
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- `Olog(N)` cost of lookup, insert, update, and delete operations by virtue of [B+ tree characteristics](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B%2B_tree#Characteristics).
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- Online hot backup.
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- Append operation for efficient bulk insertion of pre-sorted data.
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- No [WAL](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Write-ahead_logging) nor any
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transaction journal. No crash recovery needed. No maintenance is required.
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- No internal cache and/or memory management, all done by basic OS services.
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## Limitations
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- **Page size**: a power of 2, minimum `256` (mostly for testing), maximum `65536` bytes, default `4096` bytes.
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- **Key size**: minimum `0`, maximum ≈½ pagesize (`2022` bytes for default 4K pagesize, `32742` bytes for 64K pagesize).
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- **Value size**: minimum `0`, maximum `2146435072` (`0x7FF00000`) bytes for maps, ≈½ pagesize for multimaps (`2022` bytes for default 4K pagesize, `32742` bytes for 64K pagesize).
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- **Write transaction size**: up to `1327217884` pages (`4.944272` TiB for default 4K pagesize, `79.108351` TiB for 64K pagesize).
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- **Database size**: up to `2147483648` pages (≈`8.0` TiB for default 4K pagesize, ≈`128.0` TiB for 64K pagesize).
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- **Maximum tables/sub-databases**: `32765`.
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## Gotchas
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1. There cannot be more than one writer at a time, i.e. no more than one write transaction at a time.
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2. _libmdbx_ is based on [B+ tree](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B%2B_tree), so access to database pages is mostly random.
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Thus SSDs provide a significant performance boost over spinning disks for large databases.
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3. _libmdbx_ uses [shadow paging](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shadow_paging) instead of [WAL](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Write-ahead_logging).
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Thus syncing data to disk might be a bottleneck for write intensive workload.
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4. _libmdbx_ uses [copy-on-write](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copy-on-write) for [snapshot isolation](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snapshot_isolation) during updates,
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but read transactions prevents recycling an old retired/freed pages, since it read ones. Thus altering of data during a parallel
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long-lived read operation will increase the process work set, may exhaust entire free database space,
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the database can grow quickly, and result in performance degradation.
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Try to avoid long running read transactions, otherwise use [transaction parking](https://libmdbx.dqdkfa.ru/group__c__transactions.html#ga2c2c97730ff35cadcedfbd891ac9b12f)
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and/or [Handle-Slow-Readers callback](https://libmdbx.dqdkfa.ru/group__c__err.html#ga2cb11b56414c282fe06dd942ae6cade6).
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5. _libmdbx_ is extraordinarily fast and provides minimal overhead for data access,
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so you should reconsider using brute force techniques and double check your code.
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On the one hand, in the case of _libmdbx_, a simple linear search may be more profitable than complex indexes.
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On the other hand, if you make something suboptimally, you can notice detrimentally only on sufficiently large data.
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## Comparison with other databases
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For now please refer to [chapter of "BoltDB comparison with other
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databases"](https://github.com/coreos/bbolt#comparison-with-other-databases)
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which is also (mostly) applicable to _libmdbx_.
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<!-- section-end -->
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<!-- section-begin improvements -->
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Improvements beyond LMDB
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========================
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_libmdbx_ is superior to legendary _[LMDB](https://symas.com/lmdb/)_ in
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terms of features and reliability, not inferior in performance. In
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comparison to _LMDB_, _libmdbx_ make things "just work" perfectly and
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out-of-the-box, not silently and catastrophically break down. The list
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below is pruned down to the improvements most notable and obvious from
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the user's point of view.
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## Some Added Features
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1. Keys could be more than 2 times longer than _LMDB_.
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> For DB with default page size _libmdbx_ support keys up to 2022 bytes
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> and up to 32742 bytes for 64K page size. _LMDB_ allows key size up to
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> 511 bytes and may silently loses data with large values.
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2. Up to 30% faster than _LMDB_ in [CRUD](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Create,_read,_update_and_delete) benchmarks.
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> Benchmarks of the in-[tmpfs](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tmpfs) scenarios,
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> that tests the speed of the engine itself, showned that _libmdbx_ 10-20% faster than _LMDB_,
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> and up to 30% faster when _libmdbx_ compiled with specific build options
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> which downgrades several runtime checks to be match with LMDB behaviour.
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>
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> These and other results could be easily reproduced with [ioArena](https://abf.io/erthink/ioarena) just by `make bench-quartet` command,
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> including comparisons with [RockDB](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RocksDB)
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> and [WiredTiger](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WiredTiger).
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3. Automatic on-the-fly database size adjustment, both increment and reduction.
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> _libmdbx_ manages the database size according to parameters specified
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> by `mdbx_env_set_geometry()` function,
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> ones include the growth step and the truncation threshold.
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>
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> Unfortunately, on-the-fly database size adjustment doesn't work under [Wine](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wine_(software))
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> due to its internal limitations and unimplemented functions, i.e. the `MDBX_UNABLE_EXTEND_MAPSIZE` error will be returned.
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4. Automatic continuous zero-overhead database compactification.
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> During each commit _libmdbx_ merges a freeing pages which adjacent with the unallocated area
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> at the end of file, and then truncates unused space when a lot enough of.
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5. The same database format for 32- and 64-bit builds.
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> _libmdbx_ database format depends only on the [endianness](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endianness) but not on the [bitness](https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/bitness).
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6. The "Big Foot" feature than solves speific performance issues with huge transactions and extra-large page-number-lists.
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7. LIFO policy for Garbage Collection recycling. This can significantly increase write performance due write-back disk cache up to several times in a best case scenario.
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> LIFO means that for reuse will be taken the latest becomes unused pages.
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> Therefore the loop of database pages circulation becomes as short as possible.
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> In other words, the set of pages, that are (over)written in memory and on disk during a series of write transactions, will be as small as possible.
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> Thus creates ideal conditions for the battery-backed or flash-backed disk cache efficiency.
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8. Parking of read transactions with ousting and auto-restart, [Handle-Slow-Readers callback](https://libmdbx.dqdkfa.ru/group__c__err.html#ga2cb11b56414c282fe06dd942ae6cade6) to resolve an issues due to long-lived read transactions.
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9. Fast estimation of range query result volume, i.e. how many items can
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be found between a `KEY1` and a `KEY2`. This is a prerequisite for build
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and/or optimize query execution plans.
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> _libmdbx_ performs a rough estimate based on common B-tree pages of the paths from root to corresponding keys.
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10. Database integrity check API both with standalone `mdbx_chk` utility.
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11. Support for opening databases in the exclusive mode, including on a network share.
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12. Extended information of whole-database, tables/sub-databases, transactions, readers enumeration.
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> _libmdbx_ provides a lot of information, including dirty and leftover pages
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> for a write transaction, reading lag and holdover space for read transactions.
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13. Support of Zero-length for keys and values.
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14. Useful runtime options for tuning engine to application's requirements and use cases specific.
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15. Automated steady sync-to-disk upon several thresholds and/or timeout via cheap polling.
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16. Ability to determine whether the particular data is on a dirty page
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or not, that allows to avoid copy-out before updates.
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17. Extended update and delete operations.
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> _libmdbx_ allows one _at once_ with getting previous value
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> and addressing the particular item from multi-value with the same key.
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18. Sequence generation and three persistent 64-bit vector-clock like markers.
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## Other fixes and specifics
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1. Fixed more than 10 significant errors, in particular: page leaks,
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wrong table/sub-database statistics, segfault in several conditions,
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nonoptimal page merge strategy, updating an existing record with
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a change in data size (including for multimap), etc.
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2. All cursors can be reused and should be closed explicitly,
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regardless ones were opened within a write or read transaction.
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3. Opening database handles are spared from race conditions and
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pre-opening is not needed.
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4. Returning `MDBX_EMULTIVAL` error in case of ambiguous update or delete.
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5. Guarantee of database integrity even in asynchronous unordered write-to-disk mode.
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> _libmdbx_ propose additional trade-off by `MDBX_SAFE_NOSYNC` with append-like manner for updates,
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> that avoids database corruption after a system crash contrary to LMDB.
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> Nevertheless, the `MDBX_UTTERLY_NOSYNC` mode is available to match LMDB's behaviour for `MDB_NOSYNC`.
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6. On **MacOS & iOS** the `fcntl(F_FULLFSYNC)` syscall is used _by
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default_ to synchronize data with the disk, as this is [the only way to
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guarantee data
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durability](https://developer.apple.com/library/archive/documentation/System/Conceptual/ManPages_iPhoneOS/man2/fsync.2.html)
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in case of power failure. Unfortunately, in scenarios with high write
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intensity, the use of `F_FULLFSYNC` significantly degrades performance
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compared to LMDB, where the `fsync()` syscall is used. Therefore,
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_libmdbx_ allows you to override this behavior by defining the
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`MDBX_OSX_SPEED_INSTEADOF_DURABILITY=1` option while build the library.
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7. On **Windows** the `LockFileEx()` syscall is used for locking, since
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it allows place the database on network drives, and provides protection
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against incompetent user actions (aka
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[poka-yoke](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poka-yoke)). Therefore
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_libmdbx_ may be a little lag in performance tests from LMDB where the
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named mutexes are used.
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<!-- section-end -->
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<!-- section-begin history -->
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# History
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Historically, _libmdbx_ is a deeply revised and extended descendant of the
|
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[Lightning Memory-Mapped Database](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lightning_Memory-Mapped_Database).
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At first the development was carried out within the
|
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[ReOpenLDAP](https://web.archive.org/web/https://github.com/erthink/ReOpenLDAP) project. About a
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year later _libmdbx_ was separated into a standalone project, which was
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[presented at Highload++ 2015
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conference](http://www.highload.ru/2015/abstracts/1831.html).
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Since 2017 _libmdbx_ is used in [Fast Positive Tables](https://gitflic.ru/project/erthink/libfpta),
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and development is funded by [Positive Technologies](https://www.ptsecurity.com).
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On 2022-04-15 the Github administration, without any warning nor
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explanation, deleted _libmdbx_ along with a lot of other projects,
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simultaneously blocking access for many developers. Therefore on
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2022-04-21 we have migrated to a reliable trusted infrastructure.
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The origin for now is at [GitFlic](https://gitflic.ru/project/erthink/libmdbx)
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with backup at [ABF by ROSA Лаб](https://abf.rosalinux.ru/erthink/libmdbx).
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For the same reason ~~Github~~ is blacklisted forever.
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Начиная с 2021 года наблюдаются устойчивые тенденции к распространению
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||
недостоверной информации о libmdbx в странах НАТО, политизированной
|
||
критики, а также отказу от использования библиотеки в пользу LMDB,
|
||
несмотря на явные проблемы с одной стороны и преимущества с другой.
|
||
Поэтому, начиная с 17 марта 2024 года, прекращается документирование и
|
||
сопровождение проекта на английском языке. Новая функциональность будет
|
||
документироваться только на русском языке, однако, целенаправленного
|
||
переписывания/перевода документации пока не планируется.
|
||
|
||
Since May 2024 and version v0.13 _libmdbx_ was re-licensed under Apache-2.0 license.
|
||
Please refer to the `COPYRIGHT` file for license change explanations.
|
||
|
||
|
||
## Acknowledgments
|
||
Howard Chu <hyc@openldap.org> and Hallvard Furuseth
|
||
<hallvard@openldap.org> are the authors of _LMDB_, from which _libmdbx_
|
||
was forked in 2015.
|
||
|
||
Martin Hedenfalk <martin@bzero.se> is the author of `btree.c` code, which
|
||
was used to begin development of _LMDB_.
|
||
|
||
<!-- section-end -->
|
||
|
||
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Usage
|
||
=====
|
||
|
||
<!-- section-begin usage -->
|
||
|
||
Currently, libmdbx is only available in a
|
||
[source code](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Source_code) form.
|
||
Packages support for common Linux distributions is planned in the future,
|
||
since release the version 1.0.
|
||
|
||
## Source code embedding
|
||
|
||
_libmdbx_ provides two official ways for integration in source code form:
|
||
|
||
1. Using an amalgamated source code which available in the [releases section](https://gitflic.ru/project/erthink/libmdbx/release) on GitFlic.
|
||
> An amalgamated source code includes all files required to build and
|
||
> use _libmdbx_, but not for testing _libmdbx_ itself.
|
||
> Beside the releases an amalgamated sources could be created any time from the original clone of git
|
||
> repository on Linux by executing `make dist`. As a result, the desired
|
||
> set of files will be formed in the `dist` subdirectory.
|
||
|
||
2. Adding the complete source code as a `git submodule` from the [origin git repository](https://gitflic.ru/project/erthink/libmdbx) on GitFlic.
|
||
> This allows you to build as _libmdbx_ and testing tool.
|
||
> On the other hand, this way requires you to pull git tags, and use C++11 compiler for test tool.
|
||
|
||
_**Please, avoid using any other techniques.**_ Otherwise, at least
|
||
don't ask for support and don't name such chimeras `libmdbx`.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
## Building and Testing
|
||
|
||
Both amalgamated and original source code provides build through the use
|
||
[CMake](https://cmake.org/) or [GNU
|
||
Make](https://www.gnu.org/software/make/) with
|
||
[bash](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bash_(Unix_shell)). All build ways
|
||
are completely traditional and have minimal prerequirements like
|
||
`build-essential`, i.e. the non-obsolete C/C++ compiler and a
|
||
[SDK](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Software_development_kit) for the
|
||
target platform. Obviously you need building tools itself, i.e. `git`,
|
||
`cmake` or GNU `make` with `bash`. For your convenience, `make help`
|
||
and `make options` are also available for listing existing targets
|
||
and build options respectively.
|
||
|
||
The only significant specificity is that git' tags are required
|
||
to build from complete (not amalgamated) source codes.
|
||
Executing **`git fetch --tags --force --prune`** is enough to get ones,
|
||
and `--unshallow` or `--update-shallow` is required for shallow cloned case.
|
||
|
||
So just using CMake or GNU Make in your habitual manner and feel free to
|
||
fill an issue or make pull request in the case something will be
|
||
unexpected or broken down.
|
||
|
||
### Testing
|
||
The amalgamated source code does not contain any tests for or several reasons.
|
||
Please read [the explanation](https://libmdbx.dqdkfa.ru/dead-github/issues/214#issuecomment-870717981) and don't ask to alter this.
|
||
So for testing _libmdbx_ itself you need a full source code, i.e. the clone of a git repository, there is no option.
|
||
|
||
The full source code of _libmdbx_ has a [`test` subdirectory](https://gitflic.ru/project/erthink/libmdbx/tree/master/test) with minimalistic test "framework".
|
||
Actually yonder is a source code of the `mdbx_test` – console utility which has a set of command-line options that allow construct and run a reasonable enough test scenarios.
|
||
This test utility is intended for _libmdbx_'s developers for testing library itself, but not for use by users.
|
||
Therefore, only basic information is provided:
|
||
|
||
- There are few CRUD-based test cases (hill, TTL, nested, append, jitter, etc),
|
||
which can be combined to test the concurrent operations within shared database in a multi-processes environment.
|
||
This is the `basic` test scenario.
|
||
- The `Makefile` provide several self-described targets for testing: `smoke`, `test`, `check`, `memcheck`, `test-valgrind`,
|
||
`test-asan`, `test-leak`, `test-ubsan`, `cross-gcc`, `cross-qemu`, `gcc-analyzer`, `smoke-fault`, `smoke-singleprocess`,
|
||
`test-singleprocess`, 'long-test'. Please run `make --help` if doubt.
|
||
- In addition to the `mdbx_test` utility, there is the script [`long_stochastic.sh`](https://gitflic.ru/project/erthink/libmdbx/blob/master/test/long_stochastic.sh),
|
||
which calls `mdbx_test` by going through set of modes and options, with gradually increasing the number of operations and the size of transactions.
|
||
This script is used for mostly of all automatic testing, including `Makefile` targets and Continuous Integration.
|
||
- Brief information of available command-line options is available by `--help`.
|
||
However, you should dive into source code to get all, there is no option.
|
||
|
||
Anyway, no matter how thoroughly the _libmdbx_ is tested, you should rely only on your own tests for a few reasons:
|
||
|
||
1. Mostly of all use cases are unique.
|
||
So it is no warranty that your use case was properly tested, even the _libmdbx_'s tests engages stochastic approach.
|
||
2. If there are problems, then your test on the one hand will help to verify whether you are using _libmdbx_ correctly,
|
||
on the other hand it will allow to reproduce the problem and insure against regression in a future.
|
||
3. Actually you should rely on than you checked by yourself or take a risk.
|
||
|
||
|
||
### Common important details
|
||
|
||
#### Build reproducibility
|
||
By default _libmdbx_ track build time via `MDBX_BUILD_TIMESTAMP` build option and macro.
|
||
So for a [reproducible builds](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reproducible_builds) you should predefine/override it to known fixed string value.
|
||
For instance:
|
||
|
||
- for reproducible build with make: `make MDBX_BUILD_TIMESTAMP=unknown ` ...
|
||
- or during configure by CMake: `cmake -DMDBX_BUILD_TIMESTAMP:STRING=unknown ` ...
|
||
|
||
Of course, in addition to this, your toolchain must ensure the reproducibility of builds.
|
||
For more information please refer to [reproducible-builds.org](https://reproducible-builds.org/).
|
||
|
||
#### Containers
|
||
There are no special traits nor quirks if you use libmdbx ONLY inside the single container.
|
||
But in a cross-container cases or with a host-container(s) mix the two major things MUST be
|
||
guaranteed:
|
||
|
||
1. Coherence of memory mapping content and unified page cache inside OS
|
||
kernel for host and all container(s) operated with a DB. Basically this
|
||
means must be only a single physical copy of each memory mapped DB' page
|
||
in the system memory.
|
||
|
||
2. Uniqueness of [PID](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Process_identifier) values and/or a common space for ones:
|
||
- for POSIX systems: PID uniqueness for all processes operated with a DB.
|
||
I.e. the `--pid=host` is required for run DB-aware processes inside Docker,
|
||
either without host interaction a `--pid=container:<name|id>` with the same name/id.
|
||
- for non-POSIX (i.e. Windows) systems: inter-visibility of processes handles.
|
||
I.e. the `OpenProcess(SYNCHRONIZE, ..., PID)` must return reasonable error,
|
||
including `ERROR_ACCESS_DENIED`,
|
||
but not the `ERROR_INVALID_PARAMETER` as for an invalid/non-existent PID.
|
||
|
||
#### DSO/DLL unloading and destructors of Thread-Local-Storage objects
|
||
When building _libmdbx_ as a shared library or use static _libmdbx_ as a
|
||
part of another dynamic library, it is advisable to make sure that your
|
||
system ensures the correctness of the call destructors of
|
||
Thread-Local-Storage objects when unloading dynamic libraries.
|
||
|
||
If this is not the case, then unloading a dynamic-link library with
|
||
_libmdbx_ code inside, can result in either a resource leak or a crash
|
||
due to calling destructors from an already unloaded DSO/DLL object. The
|
||
problem can only manifest in a multithreaded application, which makes
|
||
the unloading of shared dynamic libraries with _libmdbx_ code inside,
|
||
after using _libmdbx_. It is known that TLS-destructors are properly
|
||
maintained in the following cases:
|
||
|
||
- On all modern versions of Windows (Windows 7 and later).
|
||
|
||
- On systems with the
|
||
[`__cxa_thread_atexit_impl()`](https://sourceware.org/glibc/wiki/Destructor%20support%20for%20thread_local%20variables)
|
||
function in the standard C library, including systems with GNU libc
|
||
version 2.18 and later.
|
||
|
||
- On systems with libpthread/ntpl from GNU libc with bug fixes
|
||
[#21031](https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=21031) and
|
||
[#21032](https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=21032), or
|
||
where there are no similar bugs in the pthreads implementation.
|
||
|
||
### Linux and other platforms with GNU Make
|
||
To build the library it is enough to execute `make all` in the directory
|
||
of source code, and `make check` to execute the basic tests.
|
||
|
||
If the `make` installed on the system is not GNU Make, there will be a
|
||
lot of errors from make when trying to build. In this case, perhaps you
|
||
should use `gmake` instead of `make`, or even `gnu-make`, etc.
|
||
|
||
### FreeBSD and related platforms
|
||
As a rule on BSD and it derivatives the default is to use Berkeley Make and
|
||
[Bash](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bash_(Unix_shell)) is not installed.
|
||
|
||
So you need to install the required components: GNU Make, Bash, C and C++
|
||
compilers compatible with GCC or CLANG. After that, to build the
|
||
library, it is enough to execute `gmake all` (or `make all`) in the
|
||
directory with source code, and `gmake check` (or `make check`) to run
|
||
the basic tests.
|
||
|
||
### Windows
|
||
For build _libmdbx_ on Windows the _original_ CMake and [Microsoft Visual
|
||
Studio 2019](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft_Visual_Studio) are
|
||
recommended. Please use the recent versions of CMake, Visual Studio and Windows
|
||
SDK to avoid troubles with C11 support and `alignas()` feature.
|
||
|
||
For build by MinGW the 10.2 or recent version coupled with a modern CMake are required.
|
||
So it is recommended to use [chocolatey](https://chocolatey.org/) to install and/or update the ones.
|
||
|
||
Another ways to build is potentially possible but not supported and will not.
|
||
The `CMakeLists.txt` or `GNUMakefile` scripts will probably need to be modified accordingly.
|
||
Using other methods do not forget to add the `ntdll.lib` to linking.
|
||
|
||
It should be noted that in _libmdbx_ was efforts to avoid
|
||
runtime dependencies from CRT and other MSVC libraries.
|
||
For this is enough to pass the `-DMDBX_WITHOUT_MSVC_CRT:BOOL=ON` option
|
||
during configure by CMake.
|
||
|
||
An example of running a basic test script can be found in the
|
||
[CI-script](appveyor.yml) for [AppVeyor](https://www.appveyor.com/). To
|
||
run the [long stochastic test scenario](test/long_stochastic.sh),
|
||
[bash](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bash_(Unix_shell)) is required, and
|
||
such testing is recommended with placing the test data on the
|
||
[RAM-disk](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RAM_drive).
|
||
|
||
### Windows Subsystem for Linux
|
||
_libmdbx_ could be used in [WSL2](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_Subsystem_for_Linux#WSL_2)
|
||
but NOT in [WSL1](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_Subsystem_for_Linux#WSL_1) environment.
|
||
This is a consequence of the fundamental shortcomings of _WSL1_ and cannot be fixed.
|
||
To avoid data loss, _libmdbx_ returns the `ENOLCK` (37, "No record locks available")
|
||
error when opening the database in a _WSL1_ environment.
|
||
|
||
### MacOS
|
||
Current [native build tools](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xcode) for
|
||
MacOS include GNU Make, CLANG and an outdated version of Bash.
|
||
Therefore, to build the library, it is enough to run `make all` in the
|
||
directory with source code, and run `make check` to execute the base
|
||
tests. If something goes wrong, it is recommended to install
|
||
[Homebrew](https://brew.sh/) and try again.
|
||
|
||
To run the [long stochastic test scenario](test/long_stochastic.sh), you
|
||
will need to install the current (not outdated) version of
|
||
[Bash](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bash_(Unix_shell)). To do this, we
|
||
recommend that you install [Homebrew](https://brew.sh/) and then execute
|
||
`brew install bash`.
|
||
|
||
### Android
|
||
We recommend using CMake to build _libmdbx_ for Android.
|
||
Please refer to the [official guide](https://developer.android.com/studio/projects/add-native-code).
|
||
|
||
### iOS
|
||
To build _libmdbx_ for iOS, we recommend using CMake with the
|
||
["toolchain file"](https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/variable/CMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE.html)
|
||
from the [ios-cmake](https://github.com/leetal/ios-cmake) project.
|
||
|
||
<!-- section-end -->
|
||
|
||
## API description
|
||
|
||
Please refer to the online [_libmdbx_ API reference](https://libmdbx.dqdkfa.ru/docs)
|
||
and/or see the [mdbx.h++](mdbx.h%2B%2B) and [mdbx.h](mdbx.h) headers.
|
||
|
||
<!-- section-begin bindings -->
|
||
|
||
Bindings
|
||
========
|
||
|
||
| Runtime | Repo | Author |
|
||
| ------- | ------ | ------ |
|
||
| Scala | [mdbx4s](https://github.com/david-bouyssie/mdbx4s) | [David Bouyssié](https://github.com/david-bouyssie) |
|
||
| Haskell | [libmdbx-hs](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/libmdbx) | [Francisco Vallarino](https://github.com/fjvallarino) |
|
||
| NodeJS, [Deno](https://deno.land/) | [lmdbx-js](https://github.com/kriszyp/lmdbx-js) | [Kris Zyp](https://github.com/kriszyp/)
|
||
| NodeJS | [node-mdbx](https://www.npmjs.com/package/node-mdbx/) | [Сергей Федотов](mailto:sergey.fedotov@corp.mail.ru) |
|
||
| Ruby | [ruby-mdbx](https://rubygems.org/gems/mdbx/) | [Mahlon E. Smith](https://github.com/mahlonsmith) |
|
||
| Go | [mdbx-go](https://github.com/torquem-ch/mdbx-go) | [Alex Sharov](https://github.com/AskAlexSharov) |
|
||
| [Nim](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nim_(programming_language)) | [NimDBX](https://github.com/snej/nimdbx) | [Jens Alfke](https://github.com/snej)
|
||
| Lua | [lua-libmdbx](https://github.com/mah0x211/lua-libmdbx) | [Masatoshi Fukunaga](https://github.com/mah0x211) |
|
||
| Rust | [libmdbx-rs](https://github.com/vorot93/libmdbx-rs) | [Artem Vorotnikov](https://github.com/vorot93) |
|
||
| Rust | [mdbx](https://crates.io/crates/mdbx) | [gcxfd](https://github.com/gcxfd) |
|
||
| Java | [mdbxjni](https://github.com/castortech/mdbxjni) | [Castor Technologies](https://castortech.com/) |
|
||
| Python (draft) | [python-bindings](https://libmdbx.dqdkfa.ru/dead-github/commits/python-bindings) branch | [Noel Kuntze](https://github.com/Thermi)
|
||
| .NET (obsolete) | [mdbx.NET](https://github.com/wangjia184/mdbx.NET) | [Jerry Wang](https://github.com/wangjia184) |
|
||
|
||
<!-- section-end -->
|
||
|
||
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
<!-- section-begin performance -->
|
||
|
||
Performance comparison
|
||
======================
|
||
|
||
All benchmarks were done in 2015 by [IOArena](https://abf.io/erthink/ioarena)
|
||
and multiple [scripts](https://github.com/pmwkaa/ioarena/tree/HL%2B%2B2015)
|
||
runs on Lenovo Carbon-2 laptop, i7-4600U 2.1 GHz (2 physical cores, 4 HyperThreading cores), 8 Gb RAM,
|
||
SSD SAMSUNG MZNTD512HAGL-000L1 (DXT23L0Q) 512 Gb.
|
||
|
||
## Integral performance
|
||
|
||
Here showed sum of performance metrics in 3 benchmarks:
|
||
|
||
- Read/Search on the machine with 4 logical CPUs in HyperThreading mode (i.e. actually 2 physical CPU cores);
|
||
|
||
- Transactions with [CRUD](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CRUD)
|
||
operations in sync-write mode (fdatasync is called after each
|
||
transaction);
|
||
|
||
- Transactions with [CRUD](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CRUD)
|
||
operations in lazy-write mode (moment to sync data to persistent storage
|
||
is decided by OS).
|
||
|
||
*Reasons why asynchronous mode isn't benchmarked here:*
|
||
|
||
1. It doesn't make sense as it has to be done with DB engines, oriented
|
||
for keeping data in memory e.g. [Tarantool](https://tarantool.io/),
|
||
[Redis](https://redis.io/)), etc.
|
||
|
||
2. Performance gap is too high to compare in any meaningful way.
|
||
|
||
![Comparison #1: Integral Performance](https://libmdbx.dqdkfa.ru/img/perf-slide-1.png)
|
||
|
||
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
## Read Scalability
|
||
|
||
Summary performance with concurrent read/search queries in 1-2-4-8
|
||
threads on the machine with 4 logical CPUs in HyperThreading mode (i.e. actually 2 physical CPU cores).
|
||
|
||
![Comparison #2: Read Scalability](https://libmdbx.dqdkfa.ru/img/perf-slide-2.png)
|
||
|
||
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
## Sync-write mode
|
||
|
||
- Linear scale on left and dark rectangles mean arithmetic mean
|
||
transactions per second;
|
||
|
||
- Logarithmic scale on right is in seconds and yellow intervals mean
|
||
execution time of transactions. Each interval shows minimal and maximum
|
||
execution time, cross marks standard deviation.
|
||
|
||
**10,000 transactions in sync-write mode**. In case of a crash all data
|
||
is consistent and conforms to the last successful transaction. The
|
||
[fdatasync](https://linux.die.net/man/2/fdatasync) syscall is used after
|
||
each write transaction in this mode.
|
||
|
||
In the benchmark each transaction contains combined CRUD operations (2
|
||
inserts, 1 read, 1 update, 1 delete). Benchmark starts on an empty database
|
||
and after full run the database contains 10,000 small key-value records.
|
||
|
||
![Comparison #3: Sync-write mode](https://libmdbx.dqdkfa.ru/img/perf-slide-3.png)
|
||
|
||
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
## Lazy-write mode
|
||
|
||
- Linear scale on left and dark rectangles mean arithmetic mean of
|
||
thousands transactions per second;
|
||
|
||
- Logarithmic scale on right in seconds and yellow intervals mean
|
||
execution time of transactions. Each interval shows minimal and maximum
|
||
execution time, cross marks standard deviation.
|
||
|
||
**100,000 transactions in lazy-write mode**. In case of a crash all data
|
||
is consistent and conforms to the one of last successful transactions, but
|
||
transactions after it will be lost. Other DB engines use
|
||
[WAL](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Write-ahead_logging) or transaction
|
||
journal for that, which in turn depends on order of operations in the
|
||
journaled filesystem. _libmdbx_ doesn't use WAL and hands I/O operations
|
||
to filesystem and OS kernel (mmap).
|
||
|
||
In the benchmark each transaction contains combined CRUD operations (2
|
||
inserts, 1 read, 1 update, 1 delete). Benchmark starts on an empty database
|
||
and after full run the database contains 100,000 small key-value
|
||
records.
|
||
|
||
|
||
![Comparison #4: Lazy-write mode](https://libmdbx.dqdkfa.ru/img/perf-slide-4.png)
|
||
|
||
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
## Async-write mode
|
||
|
||
- Linear scale on left and dark rectangles mean arithmetic mean of
|
||
thousands transactions per second;
|
||
|
||
- Logarithmic scale on right in seconds and yellow intervals mean
|
||
execution time of transactions. Each interval shows minimal and maximum
|
||
execution time, cross marks standard deviation.
|
||
|
||
**1,000,000 transactions in async-write mode**.
|
||
In case of a crash all data is consistent and conforms to the one of last successful transactions,
|
||
but lost transaction count is much higher than in
|
||
lazy-write mode. All DB engines in this mode do as little writes as
|
||
possible on persistent storage. _libmdbx_ uses
|
||
[msync(MS_ASYNC)](https://linux.die.net/man/2/msync) in this mode.
|
||
|
||
In the benchmark each transaction contains combined CRUD operations (2
|
||
inserts, 1 read, 1 update, 1 delete). Benchmark starts on an empty database
|
||
and after full run the database contains 10,000 small key-value records.
|
||
|
||
![Comparison #5: Async-write mode](https://libmdbx.dqdkfa.ru/img/perf-slide-5.png)
|
||
|
||
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
## Cost comparison
|
||
|
||
Summary of used resources during lazy-write mode benchmarks:
|
||
|
||
- Read and write IOPs;
|
||
|
||
- Sum of user CPU time and sys CPU time;
|
||
|
||
- Used space on persistent storage after the test and closed DB, but not
|
||
waiting for the end of all internal housekeeping operations (LSM
|
||
compactification, etc).
|
||
|
||
_ForestDB_ is excluded because benchmark showed it's resource
|
||
consumption for each resource (CPU, IOPs) much higher than other engines
|
||
which prevents to meaningfully compare it with them.
|
||
|
||
All benchmark data is gathered by
|
||
[getrusage()](http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/getrusage.2.html)
|
||
syscall and by scanning the data directory.
|
||
|
||
![Comparison #6: Cost comparison](https://libmdbx.dqdkfa.ru/img/perf-slide-6.png)
|
||
|
||
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