3.3 KiB
kissdb
(Keep It) Simple Stupid Database
KISSDB is about the simplest key/value store you'll ever see, anywhere. It's written in plain vanilla C using only the standard string and FILE I/O functions, and should port to just about anything with a disk or something that acts like one.
It stores keys and values of fixed length in a stupid-simple file format based on fixed-size hash tables. If a hash collision occurrs, a new "page" of hash table is appended to the database. The format is append-only. There is no delete. Puts that replace an existing value, however, will not grow the file as they will overwrite the existing entry.
Hash table size is a space/speed trade-off parameter. Larger hash tables will reduce collisions and speed things up a bit, at the expense of memory and disk space. A good size is usually about 1/2 the average number of entries you expect.
Features:
- Tiny, compiles to ~4k on an x86_64 Linux system
- Small memory footprint (only caches hash tables)
- Very space-efficient (on disk) if small hash tables are used
- Makes a decent effort to be robust on power loss
- Pretty respectably fast, especially given its simplicity
- 64-bit, file size limit is 2^64 bytes
- Ports to anything with a C compiler and stdlib/stdio
- Public domain
Limitations:
- Fixed-size keys and values, must recreate and copy to change any init size parameter
- Add/update only, no delete
- Iteration is supported but key order is undefined
- No search for subsets of keys/values
- No indexes
- No transactions
- No special recovery features if a database gets corrupted
- No built-in thread-safety (guard it with a mutex in MT code)
- No built-in caching of data (only hash tables are cached for lookup speed)
- No endian-awareness (currently), so big-endian DBs won't read on little-endian machines
Alternative key/value stores and embedded databases:
- MDB uses mmap() and is very fast (not quite as tiny/simple/portable)
- CDB is also minimal and fast, probably the closest thing to this (but has a 4gb size limit)
- Kyoto Cabinet is very fast, full-featured, and modern (license required for commercial use)
- SQLite gives you a complete embedded SQL server (public domain, very mature, much larger)
- Others include GDBM, NDBM, Berkeley DB, etc. Use your Googles. :)
KISSDB is good if you want space-efficient relatively fast write-once/read-many storage of keys mapped to values. It's not a good choice if you need searches, indexes, delete, structured storage, or widely varying key/value sizes. It's also probably not a good choice if you need a long-lived database for critical data, since it lacks recovery features and is brittle if its internals are modified. It would be better for a cache of data that can be restored or "re-learned," such as keys, Bitcoin transactions, nodes on a peer-to-peer network, log analysis results, rendered web pages, session cookies, auth tokens, etc.
KISSDB is in the public domain. One reason it was written was the poverty of simple key/value databases with wide open licensing. Even old ones like GDBM have GPL, not LGPL, licenses.
See comments in kissdb.h for documentation. Makefile can be used to build a test program on systems with gcc.
Author: Adam Ierymenko / ZeroTier Networks LLC