Eric: This is pretty different from redis, but a Java Collections interface to redis would be awesome, too.
Cheers, Anthony On Wed, Dec 8, 2010 at 3:33 PM, Eric Hauser <[email protected]> wrote: > Out of curiosity, why not just use Redis for this? > > On Wed, Dec 8, 2010 at 6:15 PM, Ted Dunning <[email protected]> wrote: >> This looks very useful and looks like nice work. >> >> I note that the methods used are prone to race conditions, but if you are >> just thinking about shared maps, this probably isn't important. >> >> On Wed, Dec 8, 2010 at 12:40 PM, Anthony Urso <[email protected]>wrote: >> >>> I am pleased to announce the initial release of KeptCollections, a >>> library of drop-in replacements for standard Java Collections that use >>> Apache ZooKeeper as a backing store. >>> >>> KeptCollections are designed to make it easy for anyone to write >>> distributed applications without having to learn the intricacies of >>> ZooKeeper, or distributed programming in general. >>> >>> The collections use the well-known JDK APIs, yet any changes made to >>> any of these collections by one node are seen by all other nodes >>> within milliseconds, allowing for easy communication between processes in a >>> computing cluster. >>> >>> More information here: >>> >>> https://github.com/anthonyu/KeptCollections/wiki >>> >>> and all code is available from: >>> >>> https://github.com/anthonyu/KeptCollections >>> >>> Please try it out, and let me know any problems you experience via >>> github issues or this email address. >>> >>> Cheers, >>> Anthony >>> >> >
