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Apache Cassandra is a free and open-source database management system designed to handle large volumes of data across multiple commodity servers. The system prioritizes availability and scalability over consistency , making it particularly suited for systems with high write throughput requirements due to its LSM tree indexing storage layer. [ 2 ]
Apache Doris Java & C++ Open source (since 2017), database for high-concurrency point queries and high-throughput analysis. Apache Druid: Java Started in 2011 for low-latency massive ingestion and queries. Support and extensions available from Imply Data. Apache Kudu: C++ Released in 2016 to complete the Apache Hadoop ecosystem Apache Pinot: Java
Apache CouchDB is an open-source document-oriented NoSQL database, implemented in Erlang. CouchDB uses multiple formats and protocols to store, transfer, and process its data. It uses JSON to store data, JavaScript as its query language using MapReduce , and HTTP for an API .
Empress Embedded Database is a full-function, relational database that has been embedded into applications by organizations small to large, with deployment environments including medical systems, network routers, nuclear power plant monitors, satellite management systems, and other embedded system applications that require reliability and power ...
Apache Derby (previously distributed as IBM Cloudscape) is a relational database management system (RDBMS) developed by the Apache Software Foundation that can be embedded in Java programs and used for online transaction processing. It has a 3.5 MB disk-space footprint. [1] Apache Derby is developed as an open source project under the Apache 2. ...
The following databases are dbm-inspired, but they do not directly provide a dbm interface, even though it would be trivial to wrap one: cdb ("constant database"), database by Daniel J. Bernstein, database files can only be created and read, but never be modified; Tkrzw, an Apache 2.0 licensed successor to Kyoto Cabinet and Tokyo Cabinet
Apache HBase began as a project by the company Powerset out of a need to process massive amounts of data for the purposes of natural-language search. Since 2010 it is a top-level Apache project. Facebook elected to implement its new messaging platform using HBase in November 2010, but migrated away from HBase in 2018. [4]
Apache Ignite's database uses RAM as the default storage and processing tier, thus, belonging to the class of in-memory computing platforms. [2] The disk tier is optional but, once enabled, will hold the full data set whereas the memory tier [ 3 ] will cache the full or partial data set depending on its capacity.