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  2. Elasticsearch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elasticsearch

    Elasticsearch is a search engine based on Apache Lucene, a free and open-source search engine. It provides a distributed, multitenant -capable full-text search engine with an HTTP web interface and schema-free JSON documents.

  3. Kibana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kibana

    Kibana also provides a presentation tool, referred to as Canvas, that allows users to create slide decks that pull live data directly from Elasticsearch. [ 5 ] The combination of Elasticsearch, Logstash , and Kibana, referred to as the " Elastic Stack " (formerly the "ELK stack"), is available as a product or service. [ 6 ]

  4. Elastic NV - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elastic_NV

    It was founded in 2012 in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, and was previously known as Elasticsearch. [ 3 ] The company develops the Elastic Stack— Elasticsearch , Kibana , Beats, and Logstash—previously known as the ELK Stack, [ 4 ] free and paid proprietary features (formerly called X-Pack), Elastic Cloud (a family of SaaS offerings including ...

  5. Optimistic concurrency control - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optimistic_concurrency_control

    Microsoft's Entity Framework (including Code-First) has built-in support for OCC based on a binary timestamp value. [9] Most revision control systems support the "merge" model for concurrency, which is OCC. [citation needed] Mimer SQL is a DBMS that only implements optimistic concurrency control. [10] Google App Engine data store uses OCC. [11]

  6. Document-oriented database - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Document-oriented_database

    The difference [contradictory] lies in the way the data is processed; in a key-value store, the data is considered to be inherently opaque to the database, whereas a document-oriented system relies on internal structure in the document in order to extract metadata that the database engine uses for further optimization.

  7. Graph database - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graph_database

    A native graph system with index-free adjacency does not have to move through any other type of data structures to find links between the nodes. Directly related nodes in a graph are stored in the cache once one of the nodes are retrieved, making the data lookup even faster than the first time a user fetches a node.

  8. Multitier architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multitier_architecture

    Overview of a three-tier application. Three-tier architecture is a client-server software architecture pattern in which the user interface (presentation), functional process logic ("business rules"), computer data storage and data access are developed and maintained as independent modules, most often on separate platforms. [14]

  9. Inverted index - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_index

    In computer science, an inverted index (also referred to as a postings list, postings file, or inverted file) is a database index storing a mapping from content, such as words or numbers, to its locations in a table, or in a document or a set of documents (named in contrast to a forward index, which maps from documents to content). [1]