- Broschiertes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
The Official Berkeley DB Documentation from the creators, Sleepycat Software!
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Pedro Nuno FurtadoModeling, Designing and Programming Database Applications: Relational, Entity-Relationship, SQL, DB and UI Programming64,99 €
- Sunil SoaresBig Data Governance: An Emerging Imperative50,99 €
- Roger E. SandersDB2 10.1 Fundamentals: Certification Study Guide84,99 €
- Roger E. SandersDB2 9.7 for Linux, UNIX, and Windows Database Administration: Certification Study Notes24,99 €
- Susan LawsonDB2 10 for z/OS Database Administration: Certification Study Guide78,99 €
- Roger E. SandersDB2 9 for Linux, Unix, and Windows Advanced Database Administration Certification: Certification Study Guide68,99 €
- Susan LawsonDB2 9 for Z/OS Database Administration: Certification Study Guide68,99 €
-
-
-
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Landmark
- Verlag: Pearson Education
- Seitenzahl: 688
- Erscheinungstermin: Juni 2001
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 232mm x 179mm x 38mm
- Gewicht: 1064g
- ISBN-13: 9780735710641
- ISBN-10: 0735710643
- Artikelnr.: 22127220
- Landmark
- Verlag: Pearson Education
- Seitenzahl: 688
- Erscheinungstermin: Juni 2001
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 232mm x 179mm x 38mm
- Gewicht: 1064g
- ISBN-13: 9780735710641
- ISBN-10: 0735710643
- Artikelnr.: 22127220
Sleepycat Software, Inc. develops, and supports Berkeley DB. Berkeley DB was originally written by Keith Bostic, Mike Olson, Margo Seltzer, and Ozan Yigit in the early 1990s. Keith Bostic, one of the principal developers of the University of California's 4.4BSD UNIX releases, approached Seltzer and Yigit to write an Open Source implementation of the UNIX C library dbm hash package for inclusion in 4.4BSD. They agreed, and created a general-purpose hashing library. Later, Bostic enlisted Olson to add a Btree access method to the package. These two projects were integrated and became the first Berkeley DB release, which was included in the 4.4BSD UNIX and related Net/2 releases. In the years that followed, Berkeley DB was adopted by an enormous number of both proprietary and Open Source projects. Its high performance, ready availability, and easy-to-use interfaces made it a natural tool for a wide variety of applications. In 1996, there were enough commercial users of the software to justify the formation of a company to enhance and support it. Bostic and Seltzer formed Sleepycat Software to do this. They spent a year adding critical features to the academic code (most notably, transactions, support for concurrent users, and recoverability), and version 2.0 of Berkeley DB was released by Sleepycat Software in 1997. Since that initial release, Berkeley DB has been deployed in network switches, email clients, wireless communication systems, mission-critical site-monitoring software, and many other applications. Sleepycat is an Open Source company, and it is committed to the development and distribution of Berkeley DB as an Open Source product. Sleepycat's license for Berkeley DB permits its use at no charge in Open Source applications.
I. REFERENCE GUIDE.
1. Introduction.
Mapping the Terrain: Theory and Practice. What Is Berkeley DB? What Is
Berkeley DB Not? Do You Need Berkeley DB? What Other Services Does Berkeley
DB Provide? What Does the Berkeley DB Distribution Include? Where Does
Berkeley DB Run? Sleepycat Software's Berkeley DB Products.
2. Getting Started: A Simple Tutorial.
Key/Data Pairs. Object Handles. Error Returns. Opening a Database. Adding
Elements to a Database. Retrieving Elements from a Database. Removing
Elements from a Database. Closing a Database.
3. Access Method Configuration.
Selecting an Access Method. Logical Record Numbers. Selecting a Page Size.
Selecting a Cache Size. Selecting a Byte Order. Non-Local Memory
Allocation. Btree Comparison. Btree Prefix Comparison. Minimum Keys Per
Page. Retrieving Btree Records by Number. Page Fill Factor. Specifying a
Database Hash. Hash Table Size. Managing Record-Based Databases. Selecting
a Queue Extent Size. Flat-Text Backing Files. Logically Renumbering
Records. Opening a Database.
4. Access Method Operations.
Opening Multiple Databases in a Single File. Upgrading Databases.
Retrieving Records. Storing Records. Deleting Records. Flushing the
Database Cache. Database Statistics. Closing a Database. Database Cursors.
Retrieving Records with a Cursor. Storing Records with a Cursor. Deleting
Records with a Cursor. Duplicating a Cursor. Logical Join. Data Item Count.
Closing a Cursor. Cursor Stability. Database Verification and Salvage.
Retrieved Key/Data Permanence for C/C++. Error Support.
5. Access Method Wrap-Up.
Database Limits. Disk Space Requirements. Partial Record Storage and
Retrieval.
6. Berkeley DB Architecture.
Programming Model. Programmatic APIs. Scripting Languages. Supporting
Utilities.
7. Berkeley DB Environment.
Creating a Database Environment. File Naming. Filename Resolution in
Berkeley DB. Security. Shared Memory Regions. Remote Filesystems. Opening
Databases Within the Environment. Error Support.
8. Berkeley DB Concurrent Data Store Applications.
9. Berkeley DB Transactional Data Store Applications.
Why Transactions? Terminology. Application Structure. Opening the
Environment. Opening the Databases. Recoverability and Deadlock Avoidance.
Atomicity. Repeatable Reads. Transactional Cursors. Nested Transactions.
Environment Infrastructure. Deadlock Detection. Performing Checkpoints.
Database and Log File Archival Procedures. Log File Removal. Recovery
Procedures. Recovery and Filesystem Operations. Berkeley DB Recoverability.
Transaction Throughput.
10. XA Resource Manager.
Configuring Berkeley DB with the Tuxedo System. Frequently Asked Questions.
11. Programmer Notes.
Error Returns to Applications. Environmental Variables. Building
Multithreaded Applications. Berkeley DB Handles. Name Spaces. Library
Version Information. Compatibility with Historic UNIX Interfaces. Recovery
Implementation. Application-Specific Logging and Recovery. Run-Time
Configuration.
12. The Locking Subsystem.
Page Locks. Standard Lock Modes. Locking Without Transactions. Locking with
Transactions: Two-Phase Locking. Access Method Locking Conventions.
Berkeley DB Concurrent Data Store Locking Conventions. Deadlocks and
Deadlock Avoidance. Configuring Locking. Locking and Non-Berkeley DB
Applications.
13. The Logging Subsystem.
Configuring Logging. Log File Limits.
14. The Memory Pool Subsystem.
Configuring the Memory Pool.
15. The Transaction Subsystem.
Transaction Limits. Configuring Transactions. Transactions and Non-Berkeley
DB Applications.
16. RPC/Client Server.
Client Program. Server Program.
17. Java API.
Compatibility. Java Programming Notes. Java FAQ. Loading Berkeley DB with
Tcl.
18. Tcl API.
Using Berkeley DB with Tcl. Tcl API Programming Notes. Tcl Error Handling.
Tcl FAQ. The db_dump and db_load Utilities.
19. Dumping and Reloading Databases.
Dump Output Formats. Loading Text into Databases.
20. Debugging Applications.
Compile- time Configuration. Run-time Error Information. Reviewing Berkeley
DB Log Files. Common Errors. Building for UNIX.
21. Building Berkeley DB for UNIX and QNX Systems.
Configuring Berkeley DB. Changing Compile or Load Options. Installing
Berkeley DB. Dynamic Shared Libraries. Running the Test Suite Under UNIX.
Architecture-Independent FAQs. AIX. FreeBSD. HP-UX. IRIX. Linux. OSF/1.
SCO. Solaris. SunOS. Ultrix. Building for Win32.
22. Building Berkeley DB for Win32 Platforms.
Running the Test Suite Under Windows. Windows Notes. Windows FAQ.
23. Building Berkeley DB for VxWorks Systems.
VxWorks Notes. VxWorks FAQ. Upgrading Berkeley DB Installations.
24. Upgrading Berkeley DB Applications.
Running the Test Suite.
25. Test Suite.
Test Suite FAQ.
26. Distribution.
Technical Papers on Berkeley DB.
27. Additional References.
Background on Berkeley DB Features. Database Systems Theory.
II. API MANUAL.
28. C API.
29. C++ API.
30. Java API.
31. Tcl API.
32. Supporting Utilities.
1. Introduction.
Mapping the Terrain: Theory and Practice. What Is Berkeley DB? What Is
Berkeley DB Not? Do You Need Berkeley DB? What Other Services Does Berkeley
DB Provide? What Does the Berkeley DB Distribution Include? Where Does
Berkeley DB Run? Sleepycat Software's Berkeley DB Products.
2. Getting Started: A Simple Tutorial.
Key/Data Pairs. Object Handles. Error Returns. Opening a Database. Adding
Elements to a Database. Retrieving Elements from a Database. Removing
Elements from a Database. Closing a Database.
3. Access Method Configuration.
Selecting an Access Method. Logical Record Numbers. Selecting a Page Size.
Selecting a Cache Size. Selecting a Byte Order. Non-Local Memory
Allocation. Btree Comparison. Btree Prefix Comparison. Minimum Keys Per
Page. Retrieving Btree Records by Number. Page Fill Factor. Specifying a
Database Hash. Hash Table Size. Managing Record-Based Databases. Selecting
a Queue Extent Size. Flat-Text Backing Files. Logically Renumbering
Records. Opening a Database.
4. Access Method Operations.
Opening Multiple Databases in a Single File. Upgrading Databases.
Retrieving Records. Storing Records. Deleting Records. Flushing the
Database Cache. Database Statistics. Closing a Database. Database Cursors.
Retrieving Records with a Cursor. Storing Records with a Cursor. Deleting
Records with a Cursor. Duplicating a Cursor. Logical Join. Data Item Count.
Closing a Cursor. Cursor Stability. Database Verification and Salvage.
Retrieved Key/Data Permanence for C/C++. Error Support.
5. Access Method Wrap-Up.
Database Limits. Disk Space Requirements. Partial Record Storage and
Retrieval.
6. Berkeley DB Architecture.
Programming Model. Programmatic APIs. Scripting Languages. Supporting
Utilities.
7. Berkeley DB Environment.
Creating a Database Environment. File Naming. Filename Resolution in
Berkeley DB. Security. Shared Memory Regions. Remote Filesystems. Opening
Databases Within the Environment. Error Support.
8. Berkeley DB Concurrent Data Store Applications.
9. Berkeley DB Transactional Data Store Applications.
Why Transactions? Terminology. Application Structure. Opening the
Environment. Opening the Databases. Recoverability and Deadlock Avoidance.
Atomicity. Repeatable Reads. Transactional Cursors. Nested Transactions.
Environment Infrastructure. Deadlock Detection. Performing Checkpoints.
Database and Log File Archival Procedures. Log File Removal. Recovery
Procedures. Recovery and Filesystem Operations. Berkeley DB Recoverability.
Transaction Throughput.
10. XA Resource Manager.
Configuring Berkeley DB with the Tuxedo System. Frequently Asked Questions.
11. Programmer Notes.
Error Returns to Applications. Environmental Variables. Building
Multithreaded Applications. Berkeley DB Handles. Name Spaces. Library
Version Information. Compatibility with Historic UNIX Interfaces. Recovery
Implementation. Application-Specific Logging and Recovery. Run-Time
Configuration.
12. The Locking Subsystem.
Page Locks. Standard Lock Modes. Locking Without Transactions. Locking with
Transactions: Two-Phase Locking. Access Method Locking Conventions.
Berkeley DB Concurrent Data Store Locking Conventions. Deadlocks and
Deadlock Avoidance. Configuring Locking. Locking and Non-Berkeley DB
Applications.
13. The Logging Subsystem.
Configuring Logging. Log File Limits.
14. The Memory Pool Subsystem.
Configuring the Memory Pool.
15. The Transaction Subsystem.
Transaction Limits. Configuring Transactions. Transactions and Non-Berkeley
DB Applications.
16. RPC/Client Server.
Client Program. Server Program.
17. Java API.
Compatibility. Java Programming Notes. Java FAQ. Loading Berkeley DB with
Tcl.
18. Tcl API.
Using Berkeley DB with Tcl. Tcl API Programming Notes. Tcl Error Handling.
Tcl FAQ. The db_dump and db_load Utilities.
19. Dumping and Reloading Databases.
Dump Output Formats. Loading Text into Databases.
20. Debugging Applications.
Compile- time Configuration. Run-time Error Information. Reviewing Berkeley
DB Log Files. Common Errors. Building for UNIX.
21. Building Berkeley DB for UNIX and QNX Systems.
Configuring Berkeley DB. Changing Compile or Load Options. Installing
Berkeley DB. Dynamic Shared Libraries. Running the Test Suite Under UNIX.
Architecture-Independent FAQs. AIX. FreeBSD. HP-UX. IRIX. Linux. OSF/1.
SCO. Solaris. SunOS. Ultrix. Building for Win32.
22. Building Berkeley DB for Win32 Platforms.
Running the Test Suite Under Windows. Windows Notes. Windows FAQ.
23. Building Berkeley DB for VxWorks Systems.
VxWorks Notes. VxWorks FAQ. Upgrading Berkeley DB Installations.
24. Upgrading Berkeley DB Applications.
Running the Test Suite.
25. Test Suite.
Test Suite FAQ.
26. Distribution.
Technical Papers on Berkeley DB.
27. Additional References.
Background on Berkeley DB Features. Database Systems Theory.
II. API MANUAL.
28. C API.
29. C++ API.
30. Java API.
31. Tcl API.
32. Supporting Utilities.
I. REFERENCE GUIDE.
1. Introduction.
Mapping the Terrain: Theory and Practice. What Is Berkeley DB? What Is
Berkeley DB Not? Do You Need Berkeley DB? What Other Services Does Berkeley
DB Provide? What Does the Berkeley DB Distribution Include? Where Does
Berkeley DB Run? Sleepycat Software's Berkeley DB Products.
2. Getting Started: A Simple Tutorial.
Key/Data Pairs. Object Handles. Error Returns. Opening a Database. Adding
Elements to a Database. Retrieving Elements from a Database. Removing
Elements from a Database. Closing a Database.
3. Access Method Configuration.
Selecting an Access Method. Logical Record Numbers. Selecting a Page Size.
Selecting a Cache Size. Selecting a Byte Order. Non-Local Memory
Allocation. Btree Comparison. Btree Prefix Comparison. Minimum Keys Per
Page. Retrieving Btree Records by Number. Page Fill Factor. Specifying a
Database Hash. Hash Table Size. Managing Record-Based Databases. Selecting
a Queue Extent Size. Flat-Text Backing Files. Logically Renumbering
Records. Opening a Database.
4. Access Method Operations.
Opening Multiple Databases in a Single File. Upgrading Databases.
Retrieving Records. Storing Records. Deleting Records. Flushing the
Database Cache. Database Statistics. Closing a Database. Database Cursors.
Retrieving Records with a Cursor. Storing Records with a Cursor. Deleting
Records with a Cursor. Duplicating a Cursor. Logical Join. Data Item Count.
Closing a Cursor. Cursor Stability. Database Verification and Salvage.
Retrieved Key/Data Permanence for C/C++. Error Support.
5. Access Method Wrap-Up.
Database Limits. Disk Space Requirements. Partial Record Storage and
Retrieval.
6. Berkeley DB Architecture.
Programming Model. Programmatic APIs. Scripting Languages. Supporting
Utilities.
7. Berkeley DB Environment.
Creating a Database Environment. File Naming. Filename Resolution in
Berkeley DB. Security. Shared Memory Regions. Remote Filesystems. Opening
Databases Within the Environment. Error Support.
8. Berkeley DB Concurrent Data Store Applications.
9. Berkeley DB Transactional Data Store Applications.
Why Transactions? Terminology. Application Structure. Opening the
Environment. Opening the Databases. Recoverability and Deadlock Avoidance.
Atomicity. Repeatable Reads. Transactional Cursors. Nested Transactions.
Environment Infrastructure. Deadlock Detection. Performing Checkpoints.
Database and Log File Archival Procedures. Log File Removal. Recovery
Procedures. Recovery and Filesystem Operations. Berkeley DB Recoverability.
Transaction Throughput.
10. XA Resource Manager.
Configuring Berkeley DB with the Tuxedo System. Frequently Asked Questions.
11. Programmer Notes.
Error Returns to Applications. Environmental Variables. Building
Multithreaded Applications. Berkeley DB Handles. Name Spaces. Library
Version Information. Compatibility with Historic UNIX Interfaces. Recovery
Implementation. Application-Specific Logging and Recovery. Run-Time
Configuration.
12. The Locking Subsystem.
Page Locks. Standard Lock Modes. Locking Without Transactions. Locking with
Transactions: Two-Phase Locking. Access Method Locking Conventions.
Berkeley DB Concurrent Data Store Locking Conventions. Deadlocks and
Deadlock Avoidance. Configuring Locking. Locking and Non-Berkeley DB
Applications.
13. The Logging Subsystem.
Configuring Logging. Log File Limits.
14. The Memory Pool Subsystem.
Configuring the Memory Pool.
15. The Transaction Subsystem.
Transaction Limits. Configuring Transactions. Transactions and Non-Berkeley
DB Applications.
16. RPC/Client Server.
Client Program. Server Program.
17. Java API.
Compatibility. Java Programming Notes. Java FAQ. Loading Berkeley DB with
Tcl.
18. Tcl API.
Using Berkeley DB with Tcl. Tcl API Programming Notes. Tcl Error Handling.
Tcl FAQ. The db_dump and db_load Utilities.
19. Dumping and Reloading Databases.
Dump Output Formats. Loading Text into Databases.
20. Debugging Applications.
Compile- time Configuration. Run-time Error Information. Reviewing Berkeley
DB Log Files. Common Errors. Building for UNIX.
21. Building Berkeley DB for UNIX and QNX Systems.
Configuring Berkeley DB. Changing Compile or Load Options. Installing
Berkeley DB. Dynamic Shared Libraries. Running the Test Suite Under UNIX.
Architecture-Independent FAQs. AIX. FreeBSD. HP-UX. IRIX. Linux. OSF/1.
SCO. Solaris. SunOS. Ultrix. Building for Win32.
22. Building Berkeley DB for Win32 Platforms.
Running the Test Suite Under Windows. Windows Notes. Windows FAQ.
23. Building Berkeley DB for VxWorks Systems.
VxWorks Notes. VxWorks FAQ. Upgrading Berkeley DB Installations.
24. Upgrading Berkeley DB Applications.
Running the Test Suite.
25. Test Suite.
Test Suite FAQ.
26. Distribution.
Technical Papers on Berkeley DB.
27. Additional References.
Background on Berkeley DB Features. Database Systems Theory.
II. API MANUAL.
28. C API.
29. C++ API.
30. Java API.
31. Tcl API.
32. Supporting Utilities.
1. Introduction.
Mapping the Terrain: Theory and Practice. What Is Berkeley DB? What Is
Berkeley DB Not? Do You Need Berkeley DB? What Other Services Does Berkeley
DB Provide? What Does the Berkeley DB Distribution Include? Where Does
Berkeley DB Run? Sleepycat Software's Berkeley DB Products.
2. Getting Started: A Simple Tutorial.
Key/Data Pairs. Object Handles. Error Returns. Opening a Database. Adding
Elements to a Database. Retrieving Elements from a Database. Removing
Elements from a Database. Closing a Database.
3. Access Method Configuration.
Selecting an Access Method. Logical Record Numbers. Selecting a Page Size.
Selecting a Cache Size. Selecting a Byte Order. Non-Local Memory
Allocation. Btree Comparison. Btree Prefix Comparison. Minimum Keys Per
Page. Retrieving Btree Records by Number. Page Fill Factor. Specifying a
Database Hash. Hash Table Size. Managing Record-Based Databases. Selecting
a Queue Extent Size. Flat-Text Backing Files. Logically Renumbering
Records. Opening a Database.
4. Access Method Operations.
Opening Multiple Databases in a Single File. Upgrading Databases.
Retrieving Records. Storing Records. Deleting Records. Flushing the
Database Cache. Database Statistics. Closing a Database. Database Cursors.
Retrieving Records with a Cursor. Storing Records with a Cursor. Deleting
Records with a Cursor. Duplicating a Cursor. Logical Join. Data Item Count.
Closing a Cursor. Cursor Stability. Database Verification and Salvage.
Retrieved Key/Data Permanence for C/C++. Error Support.
5. Access Method Wrap-Up.
Database Limits. Disk Space Requirements. Partial Record Storage and
Retrieval.
6. Berkeley DB Architecture.
Programming Model. Programmatic APIs. Scripting Languages. Supporting
Utilities.
7. Berkeley DB Environment.
Creating a Database Environment. File Naming. Filename Resolution in
Berkeley DB. Security. Shared Memory Regions. Remote Filesystems. Opening
Databases Within the Environment. Error Support.
8. Berkeley DB Concurrent Data Store Applications.
9. Berkeley DB Transactional Data Store Applications.
Why Transactions? Terminology. Application Structure. Opening the
Environment. Opening the Databases. Recoverability and Deadlock Avoidance.
Atomicity. Repeatable Reads. Transactional Cursors. Nested Transactions.
Environment Infrastructure. Deadlock Detection. Performing Checkpoints.
Database and Log File Archival Procedures. Log File Removal. Recovery
Procedures. Recovery and Filesystem Operations. Berkeley DB Recoverability.
Transaction Throughput.
10. XA Resource Manager.
Configuring Berkeley DB with the Tuxedo System. Frequently Asked Questions.
11. Programmer Notes.
Error Returns to Applications. Environmental Variables. Building
Multithreaded Applications. Berkeley DB Handles. Name Spaces. Library
Version Information. Compatibility with Historic UNIX Interfaces. Recovery
Implementation. Application-Specific Logging and Recovery. Run-Time
Configuration.
12. The Locking Subsystem.
Page Locks. Standard Lock Modes. Locking Without Transactions. Locking with
Transactions: Two-Phase Locking. Access Method Locking Conventions.
Berkeley DB Concurrent Data Store Locking Conventions. Deadlocks and
Deadlock Avoidance. Configuring Locking. Locking and Non-Berkeley DB
Applications.
13. The Logging Subsystem.
Configuring Logging. Log File Limits.
14. The Memory Pool Subsystem.
Configuring the Memory Pool.
15. The Transaction Subsystem.
Transaction Limits. Configuring Transactions. Transactions and Non-Berkeley
DB Applications.
16. RPC/Client Server.
Client Program. Server Program.
17. Java API.
Compatibility. Java Programming Notes. Java FAQ. Loading Berkeley DB with
Tcl.
18. Tcl API.
Using Berkeley DB with Tcl. Tcl API Programming Notes. Tcl Error Handling.
Tcl FAQ. The db_dump and db_load Utilities.
19. Dumping and Reloading Databases.
Dump Output Formats. Loading Text into Databases.
20. Debugging Applications.
Compile- time Configuration. Run-time Error Information. Reviewing Berkeley
DB Log Files. Common Errors. Building for UNIX.
21. Building Berkeley DB for UNIX and QNX Systems.
Configuring Berkeley DB. Changing Compile or Load Options. Installing
Berkeley DB. Dynamic Shared Libraries. Running the Test Suite Under UNIX.
Architecture-Independent FAQs. AIX. FreeBSD. HP-UX. IRIX. Linux. OSF/1.
SCO. Solaris. SunOS. Ultrix. Building for Win32.
22. Building Berkeley DB for Win32 Platforms.
Running the Test Suite Under Windows. Windows Notes. Windows FAQ.
23. Building Berkeley DB for VxWorks Systems.
VxWorks Notes. VxWorks FAQ. Upgrading Berkeley DB Installations.
24. Upgrading Berkeley DB Applications.
Running the Test Suite.
25. Test Suite.
Test Suite FAQ.
26. Distribution.
Technical Papers on Berkeley DB.
27. Additional References.
Background on Berkeley DB Features. Database Systems Theory.
II. API MANUAL.
28. C API.
29. C++ API.
30. Java API.
31. Tcl API.
32. Supporting Utilities.