1
1
mirror of https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea synced 2024-12-27 02:54:27 +00:00
gitea/vendor/github.com/lunny/nodb/README.md
Mura Li d77176912b Use Go1.11 module (#5743)
* Migrate to go modules

* make vendor

* Update mvdan.cc/xurls

* make vendor

* Update code.gitea.io/git

* make fmt-check

* Update github.com/go-sql-driver/mysql

* make vendor
2019-03-27 19:15:23 +08:00

2.2 KiB

NoDB

中文

Nodb is a fork of ledisdb and shrink version. It's get rid of all C or other language codes and only keep Go's. It aims to provide a nosql database library rather than a redis like server. So if you want a redis like server, ledisdb is the best choose.

Nodb is a pure Go and high performance NoSQL database library. It supports some data structure like kv, list, hash, zset, bitmap, set.

Nodb now use goleveldb as backend to store data.

Features

  • Rich data structure: KV, List, Hash, ZSet, Bitmap, Set.
  • Stores lots of data, over the memory limit.
  • Supports expiration and ttl.
  • Easy to embed in your own Go application.

Install

go get github.com/lunny/nodb

Package Example

Open And Select database

import(
  "github.com/lunny/nodb"
  "github.com/lunny/nodb/config"
)

cfg := new(config.Config)
cfg.DataDir = "./"
dbs, err := nodb.Open(cfg)
if err != nil {
  fmt.Printf("nodb: error opening db: %v", err)
}

db, _ := dbs.Select(0)

KV

KV is the most basic nodb type like any other key-value database.

err := db.Set(key, value)
value, err := db.Get(key)

List

List is simply lists of values, sorted by insertion order. You can push or pop value on the list head (left) or tail (right).

err := db.LPush(key, value1)
err := db.RPush(key, value2)
value1, err := db.LPop(key)
value2, err := db.RPop(key)

Hash

Hash is a map between fields and values.

n, err := db.HSet(key, field1, value1)
n, err := db.HSet(key, field2, value2)
value1, err := db.HGet(key, field1)
value2, err := db.HGet(key, field2)

ZSet

ZSet is a sorted collections of values. Every member of zset is associated with score, a int64 value which used to sort, from smallest to greatest score. Members are unique, but score may be same.

n, err := db.ZAdd(key, ScorePair{score1, member1}, ScorePair{score2, member2})
ay, err := db.ZRangeByScore(key, minScore, maxScore, 0, -1)

Thanks

Gmail: siddontang@gmail.com