Nobody has written code to use a better format, migrate old wallets, etc.


On Tue, Sep 17, 2013 at 1:41 PM, Jorge Timón <jtimon@monetize.io> wrote:
Only slightly related to this...
What's the reason why BerkleyDB is maintained for the wallet?
I think it would be a good thing to get rid of the libdb4.8++-dev
dependency that makes bitcoind harder to compile on debian and ubuntu.
Unless, of course, there's a reason I am missing...


On 9/17/13, Mike Hearn <mike@plan99.net> wrote:
> LevelDB is fast - very fast if you give it enough CPU time and disk seeks.
> But it's not the last word in performance.
>
> HyperLevelDB is a forked LevelDB with some changes, mostly, finer grained
> locking and changes to how compaction works:
>
> http://hyperdex.org/performance/leveldb/
>
> However, it comes with a caveat - one of the changes they made is to take
> away write throttling if compaction falls behind, the app itself is
> expected to do that.
>
> Sophia is a competitor to LevelDB. The website claims that in benchmarks it
> completely smokes LevelDB. I have not explored how it does this or tried to
> replicate their benchmarks myself:
>
> http://sphia.org/index.html
> http://sphia.org/benchmarks.html
>
> It's written in C and BSD licensed.
>
> As an example of the kind of speedup they claim to be capable of, they say
> LevelDB could do 167,476 random reads per second on their SSD based
> machine. Sophia could do 438,084 reads/sec. Random reads are of course the
> most interesting for us because that's what UTXO lookups involve.
>
> They also compare against HyperLevelDB, where the differences are much less
> pronounced and actually HyperLevelDB appears to be able to do random writes
> faster than Sophia.
>


--
Jorge Timón

http://freico.in/