.. | ||
database | ||
cell.h | ||
column.h | ||
comparator.h | ||
db.h | ||
delta.h | ||
index.h | ||
json.h | ||
merge.h | ||
opts.h | ||
prefix.h | ||
README.md | ||
row.h | ||
txn.h |
IRCd Database
The database is an object store built from the primitives of cell
, column
, and row
.
Columns
While a simple key-value store could naively store a JSON document as a textual
value, we provide additional structure schematized before opening a database:
Every member of a JSON object is a column
in this database. There is no
specific support for recursion at this time, though that could be addressed
by adding additional columns for the nested values.
Rows
Since columns
are technically independent key-value stores (they have their own
index), when an index key is the same between columns we call this a row
. For basic
object storage the schema is such that we use the same keys between all columns. For
example, an index would be a username in a user database. The user database itself
takes the form of a single JSON object and any member lookup happens on a user's row.
Cells
A cell
is a single value in a column
indexed by a key that should be able to form
a row
between columns. Consider the following near-json expression:
Important notes
!!! The database system is plugged into the userspace context system to facilitate IO. This means that an expensive database call (mostly on the read side) that has to do disk IO will suspend your userspace context. Remember that when your userspace context resumes on the other side of the call, the state of IRCd and even the database itself may have changed. We have a suite of tools to mitigate this. !!!
- While the database schema is modifiable at runtime (we can add and remove columns on the fly) the database is very picky about opening the exact same way it last closed. This means, for now, we have the full object schema explicitly specified when the DB is first opened. All columns exist for the lifetime of the DB, whether or not you have a handle to them.