Unveiling Gavran: RavenDB re-written in C
RavenDB is written in C# and .NET, unlike most of the database engines out there. The other databases are mostly written in C, C++ and sometimes Java.
I credit the fact that I wrote RavenDB in C# as a major part of the reason I was able to drive it forward to the point it is today. That wasn’t easy and there are a number of issues that we had to struggle with as a result of that decision. And, of course, all the other databases at the playground look at RavenDB strangely for being written in C#.
In RavenDB 4.0, we have made a lot of architectural changes. One of them was to replace some of the core functionality of RavenDB with a C library to handle core operations. Here is what this looks like:
However, there is still a lot to be done in this regard and that is just a small core.
Due to the COVID restrictions, I found myself with some time on my hands and decided that I can spare a few weekends to re-write RavenDB from scratch in C. I considered using Rust, but that seemed like to be over the top.
The results of that can be seen here. I kept meticulous records of the process of building this, which I may end up publishing at some point. Here is an example of how the code looks like:
The end result is that I was able to take all the knowledge of building and running RavenDB for so long and create a compatible system in not that much code. When reading the code, you’ll note methods like defer() and ensure(). I’m using compiler extensions and some macro magic to get a much nicer language support for RAII. That is pretty awesome to do in C, even if I say so myself and has dramatically reduced the cognitive load of writing with manual memory management.
An, of course, following my naming convention, Gavran is Raven in Croatian.
I’ll probably take some time to finish the actual integration, but I have very high hopes for the future of Gavran and its capabilities. I’m currently running benchmarks, you can expect them by May 35th.
Comments
Happy 1st April
While reading in RSS: cognitive dissonance approached infinity. Finally clicked the web link where all became clear. I can't believe I fell for it.
Isn't it Bosnian?
I smell bullsh... ekhem... April Fool's Day!
Gavran -> Garvan
Even the spelling is fake :-))
Happy April Fool's!
I was thinking of writing a database system in LuaTeX and I would have named it Hrafn because Icelandic is surely as cool a language as Croatian. But your version is far more advanced (I only have \def\hrafn\raven for now) so I'm thinking of giving up :)
A 465 page long troll post ;) Looking at the date of the last commit, I wish you find the energy to finish the job and give it a proper release to the public.
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