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  2. InnoDB - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/InnoDB

    InnoDB is a storage engine for the database management system MySQL and MariaDB. [1] Since the release of MySQL 5.5.5 in 2010, it replaced MyISAM as MySQL's default table type. [2] [3] It provides the standard ACID-compliant transaction features, along with foreign key support (declarative referential integrity).

  3. Embedded database - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Embedded_database

    Empress is an ACID compliant, SQL database engine with C, C++, Java, JDBC, ODBC, SQL, ADO.NET and kernel level APIs. Applications developed using these APIs may be run in standalone and/or server modes. Empress Embedded Database runs on Linux, Unix, Microsoft Windows and real-time operating systems.

  4. Apache Cassandra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apache_Cassandra

    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 ]

  5. Durability (database systems) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Durability_(database_systems)

    In database systems, durability is the ACID property that guarantees that the effects of transactions that have been committed will survive permanently, even in cases of failures, [1] including incidents and catastrophic events. For example, if a flight booking reports that a seat has successfully been booked, then the seat will remain booked ...

  6. Oracle NoSQL Database - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oracle_NoSQL_Database

    Oracle NoSQL Database provides ACID compliant transactions for full create, read, update and delete operations, with adjustable durability and consistency transaction guarantees. A sequence of operations can operate as a single atomic unit as long as all the affected records share the same major key path.

  7. ACID - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ACID

    Guaranteeing ACID properties in a distributed transaction across a distributed database, where no single node is responsible for all data affecting a transaction, presents additional complications. Network connections might fail, or one node might successfully complete its part of the transaction and then be required to roll back its changes ...

  8. Apache Ignite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apache_Ignite

    The consistency guarantees are met for both memory and disk tiers. Transactions in Apache Ignite are ACID-compliant and can span multiple cluster nodes and caches. The database supports pessimistic and optimistic concurrency modes, deadlock-free transactions and deadlock detection techniques.

  9. 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."