A fork of tm-db.
Common database interface for various database backends. Primarily meant for applications built on CometBFT, such as the Cosmos SDK.
NB: As per cometbft/cometbft#48, the CometBFT team plans on eventually totally deprecating and removing this library from CometBFT. As such, we do not recommend depending on this library for new projects.
Go 1.22+
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GoLevelDB [stable]: A pure Go implementation of LevelDB (see below). Currently the default on-disk database used in the Cosmos SDK.
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MemDB [stable]: An in-memory database using Google's B-tree package. Has very high performance both for reads, writes, and range scans, but is not durable and will lose all data on process exit. Does not support transactions. Suitable for e.g. caches, working sets, and tests. Used for IAVL working sets when the pruning strategy allows it.
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RocksDB [experimental]: A Go wrapper around RocksDB. Similarly to LevelDB (above) it uses LSM-trees for on-disk storage, but is optimized for fast storage media such as SSDs and memory. Supports atomic transactions, but not full ACID transactions.
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BadgerDB [experimental]: A key-value database written as a pure-Go alternative to e.g. LevelDB and RocksDB, with LSM-tree storage. Makes use of multiple goroutines for performance, and includes advanced features such as serializable ACID transactions, write batches, compression, and more.
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PebbleDB [experimental]: Pebble is a LevelDB/RocksDB inspired key-value store focused on performance and internal usage by CockroachDB. Pebble inherits the RocksDB file formats and a few extensions such as range deletion tombstones, table-level bloom filters, and updates to the MANIFEST format.
CAVEAT: there are reports of broken upgrade process when using Cosmos SDK.
- PrefixDB [stable]: A database which wraps another database and uses a static prefix for all keys. This allows multiple logical databases to be stored in a common underlying databases by using different namespaces. Used by the Cosmos SDK to give different modules their own namespaced database in a single application database.
To test common databases, run make test
. If all databases are available on the
local machine, use make test-all
to test them all.
To test all databases within a Docker container, run:
make docker-test-image
make docker-test