agileweb.org - posts tagged 'database' http://www.agileweb.org/ agileweb.org - posts tagged 'database' - posts tagged 'database' http://www.agileweb.org/ http://1.asset.soup.io/asset/0129/4353_8c96.gif 128 128 Ross Lawleys tumblelog mainly on software and agile methods. Sprox {"tags":["sprox","admin","turbogeaers","generator","widget","crud","tables","sqlalchemy","database","python"],"type":"link","title":"Sprox","source":"http://www.sprox.org/index.html","body":"Sprox is a widget generation library that has a slightly different take on the problem of creating custom web content directly from database schemas. Used in TG2 for their admin interface."} <p>Sprox is a widget generation library that has a slightly different take on the problem of creating custom web content directly from database schemas. Used in TG2 for their admin interface.</p> <p><a href="http://www.sprox.org/index.html">http://www.sprox.org/index.html</a></p>Wed, 21 Oct 2009 07:53:31 GMThttp://agileweb.org/post/32070154/Sproxurn:www-soup-io:1:32070154linksproxadminturbogeaersgeneratorwidgetcrudtablessqlalchemydatabasepython LightCloud - Distributed and persistent key value database {"tags":["python","memcached","performance","distributed","opensource","database","scalability","cloud"],"type":"link","title":"LightCloud - Distributed and persistent key value database","source":"http://opensource.plurk.com/LightCloud/","body":"* Built on Tokyo Tyrant. One of the fastest key-value databases [benchmark]. Tokyo Tyrant has been in development for many years and is used in production by Plurk.com, mixi.jp and scribd.com (to name a few)...\n * Great performance (comparable to memcached!)\n * Can store millions of keys on very few servers - tested in production\n * Scale out by just adding nodes\n * Nodes are replicated via master-master replication. Automatic failover and load balancing is supported from the start\n * Ability to script and extend using Lua. Included extensions are incr and a fixed list\n * Hot backups and restore: Take backups and restore servers without shutting them down\n * LightCloud manager can control nodes, take backups and give you a status on how your nodes are doing\n * Very small foot print (lightcloud client is around ~500 lines and manager about ~400)\n * Python only, but LightCloud should be easy to port to other languages"} <p>* Built on Tokyo Tyrant. One of the fastest key-value databases [benchmark]. Tokyo Tyrant has been in development for many years and is used in production by Plurk.com, mixi.jp and scribd.com (to name a few)... * Great performance (comparable to memcached!) * Can store millions of keys on very few servers - tested in production * Scale out by just adding nodes * Nodes are replicated via master-master replication. Automatic failover and load balancing is supported from the start * Ability to script and extend using Lua. Included extensions are incr and a fixed list * Hot backups and restore: Take backups and restore servers without shutting them down * LightCloud manager can control nodes, take backups and give you a status on how your nodes are doing * Very small foot print (lightcloud client is around ~500 lines and manager about ~400) * Python only, but LightCloud should be easy to port to other languages</p> <p><a href="http://opensource.plurk.com/LightCloud/">http://opensource.plurk.com/LightCloud/</a></p>Mon, 02 Mar 2009 14:25:37 GMThttp://agileweb.org/post/13990778/LightCloud-Distributed-and-persistent-key-value-databaseurn:www-soup-io:1:13990778linkpythonmemcachedperformancedistributedopensourcedatabasescalabilitycloud How FriendFeed uses MySQL to store schema-less data - Bret Taylor's blog {"tags":["programming","performance","scaling","database","mysql","scalability","architecture","docdatabase"],"type":"link","title":"How FriendFeed uses MySQL to store schema-less data - Bret Taylor's blog","source":"http://bret.appspot.com/entry/how-friendfeed-uses-mysql","body":null} <p><a href="http://bret.appspot.com/entry/how-friendfeed-uses-mysql">http://bret.appspot.com/entry/how-friendfeed-uses-mysql</a></p>Sun, 01 Mar 2009 13:11:16 GMThttp://agileweb.org/post/13932098/How-FriendFeed-uses-MySQL-to-store-schemaurn:www-soup-io:1:13932098linkprogrammingperformancescalingdatabasemysqlscalabilityarchitecturedocdatabase