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- /*
- package bbolt implements a low-level key/value store in pure Go. It supports
- fully serializable transactions, ACID semantics, and lock-free MVCC with
- multiple readers and a single writer. Bolt can be used for projects that
- want a simple data store without the need to add large dependencies such as
- Postgres or MySQL.
-
- Bolt is a single-level, zero-copy, B+tree data store. This means that Bolt is
- optimized for fast read access and does not require recovery in the event of a
- system crash. Transactions which have not finished committing will simply be
- rolled back in the event of a crash.
-
- The design of Bolt is based on Howard Chu's LMDB database project.
-
- Bolt currently works on Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux.
-
-
- Basics
-
- There are only a few types in Bolt: DB, Bucket, Tx, and Cursor. The DB is
- a collection of buckets and is represented by a single file on disk. A bucket is
- a collection of unique keys that are associated with values.
-
- Transactions provide either read-only or read-write access to the database.
- Read-only transactions can retrieve key/value pairs and can use Cursors to
- iterate over the dataset sequentially. Read-write transactions can create and
- delete buckets and can insert and remove keys. Only one read-write transaction
- is allowed at a time.
-
-
- Caveats
-
- The database uses a read-only, memory-mapped data file to ensure that
- applications cannot corrupt the database, however, this means that keys and
- values returned from Bolt cannot be changed. Writing to a read-only byte slice
- will cause Go to panic.
-
- Keys and values retrieved from the database are only valid for the life of
- the transaction. When used outside the transaction, these byte slices can
- point to different data or can point to invalid memory which will cause a panic.
-
-
- */
- package bbolt
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