Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
MEMORY is a storage engine for MySQL and MariaDB relational database management systems, developed by Oracle and MariaDB. Before the version 4.1 of MySQL it was called Heap. The SHOW ENGINES command describes MEMORY as: Hash based, stored in memory, useful for temporary tables. MEMORY writes table data in-memory.
This is a comparison between notable database engines for the MySQL database management system (DBMS). A database engine (or "storage engine") is the underlying software component that a DBMS uses to create, read, update and delete (CRUD) data from a database.
Note (2): MariaDB and MySQL provide ACID compliance through the default InnoDB storage engine. [71] [72] Note (3): "For other than InnoDB storage engines, MySQL Server parses and ignores the FOREIGN KEY and REFERENCES syntax in CREATE TABLE statements. The CHECK clause is parsed but ignored by all storage engines." [73]
In 2014, Firebase launched two products: Firebase Hosting [6] and Firebase Authentication. [7] This positioned the company as a mobile backend as a service. [citation needed] In October 2014, Firebase was acquired by Google. [8] A year later, in October 2015, Google acquired Divshot, an HTML5 web-hosting platform, to merge it with the Firebase ...
MariaDB is intended to maintain high compatibility with MySQL, with exact matching with MySQL APIs and commands, allowing it in many cases to function as a drop-in replacement for MySQL. However, new features are diverging. [7] It includes new storage engines like Aria, ColumnStore, and MyRocks.
MyRocks is open-source software developed at Facebook in order to use MySQL features with RocksDB implementations. It is based on Oracle MySQL 5.6. Starting from version 10.2.5, MariaDB includes MyRocks as an alpha-stage storage engine. [1] [2] MariaDB 10.3.7 includes MyRocks as a storage engine. [3] MyRocks is also shipped with Percona Server.
Falcon is a discontinued [1] transactional storage engine being developed for the MySQL relational database management system. Development was stopped after Oracle purchased MySQL. [2] It was based on the Netfrastructure database engine. Falcon was designed to take advantage of Sun's ZFS file system.
[7] [8] SDK version 1.2.2 added support for bulk downloads of data using Python. [9] App Engine's integrated Google Cloud Datastore database has a SQL-like syntax called "GQL" (Google Query Language). GQL does not support the join statement. [10] Instead, one-to-many and many-to-many relationships can be accomplished using ReferenceProperty(). [11]