When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  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. Cosmos DB - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmos_DB

    five different compatibility APIs, exposing endpoints that are partially compatible with the wire protocols of MongoDB, Gremlin, Cassandra, Azure Table Storage, and etcd; these compatibility APIs make it possible for any compatible application to connect to and use Cosmos DB through standard drivers or SDKs, while also benefiting from Cosmos DB ...

  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. Consistency (database systems) - Wikipedia

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

    The CAP theorem is based on three trade-offs, one of which is "atomic consistency" (shortened to "consistency" for the acronym), about which the authors note, "Discussing atomic consistency is somewhat different than talking about an ACID database, as database consistency refers to transactions, while atomic consistency refers only to a property of a single request/response operation sequence.

  6. ACID - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ACID

    In the context of databases, a sequence of database operations that satisfies the ACID properties (which can be perceived as a single logical operation on the data) is called a transaction. For example, a transfer of funds from one bank account to another, even involving multiple changes such as debiting one account and crediting another, is a ...

  7. Embedded database - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Embedded_database

    Firebird Embedded is a relational database engine. As an open-source fork of InterBase, it is ACID compliant, supports triggers and stored procedures, and is available on Linux, OSX and Windows systems. It has the same features as the classic and superserver version of Firebird; two or more threads (and applications) can access the same ...

  8. Eventual consistency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eventual_consistency

    Eventually-consistent services are often classified as providing BASE semantics (basically-available, soft-state, eventual consistency), in contrast to traditional ACID (atomicity, consistency, isolation, durability). [5] [6] In chemistry, a base is the opposite of an acid, which helps in remembering the acronym. [7]

  9. YugabyteDB - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/YugabyteDB

    YugabyteDB is a distributed SQL database that aims to be strongly transactionally consistent across failure zones (i.e. ACID compliance]. [20] [21] Jepsen testing, the de facto industry standard for verifying correctness, has never fully passed, mainly due to race conditions during schema changes. [22]