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  2. Graph database - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graph_database

    Graph databases are commonly referred to as a NoSQL database. Graph databases are similar to 1970s network model databases in that both represent general graphs, but network-model databases operate at a lower level of abstraction [3] and lack easy traversal over a chain of edges. [4] The underlying storage mechanism of graph databases can vary.

  3. List of in-memory databases - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_in-memory_databases

    ArangoDB is a transactional native multi-model database supporting two major NoSQL data models (graph and document [1]) with one query language. Written in C++ and optimized for in-memory computing. In addition ArangoDB integrated RocksDB for persistent storage. ArangoDB supports Java, JavaScript, Python, PHP, NodeJS, C++ and Elixir.

  4. NebulaGraph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NebulaGraph

    NebulaGraph was developed in 2018 by Vesoft Inc. [3] In May 2019, NebulaGraph made free software on GitHub and its alpha version was released same year. [4]In June 2020, NebulaGraph raised $8M in a series pre-A funding round led by Redpoint China Ventures and Matrix Partners China.

  5. Aerospike (database) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aerospike_(database)

    Aerospike Database is a real-time, high performance NoSQL database. Designed for applications that cannot experience any downtime and require high read & write throughput. Aerospike is optimized to run on NVMe SSDs capable of efficiently storing large datasets (Gigabytes to Petabytes

  6. Document-oriented database - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Document-oriented_database

    Aerospike is a flash-optimized and in-memory distributed key value NoSQL database which also supports a document store model. [5] Yes [6] AllegroGraph: Franz, Inc. Proprietary: Java, Python, Common Lisp, Ruby, Scala, C#, Perl: The database platform supports document store and graph data models in a single database.

  7. ArangoDB - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ArangoDB

    ArangoDB is a graph database system developed by ArangoDB Inc. ArangoDB is a multi-model database system since it supports three data models (graphs, JSON documents, key/value) [1] with one database core and a unified query language AQL (ArangoDB Query Language).

  8. FoundationDB - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FoundationDB

    FoundationDB is a free and open-source multi-model distributed NoSQL database developed by Apple Inc. with a shared-nothing architecture. [3] The product was designed around a "core" database, with additional features supplied in "layers." [4] The core database exposes an ordered key–value store with transactions. [5]

  9. Ontotext - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ontotext

    Ontotext GraphDB (previously known as BigOWLIM) is a graph-based database [6] capable of working with knowledge graphs [7] produced by Ontotext, compliant with the RDF graph data model [8] and the SPARQL query language. [9] Some categorize it as a NoSQL database, meaning that it does not use tables like some other databases. [10]