Thank you. Let me give it a go.
S
On Fri, Jun 1, 2018 at 8:21 AM, Water Guo wrote:
> Hi, S
>
> Sorry to have you wait. I got some distractions in the past two days. You
> can find the steps here http://www.antsdb.com/?p=218
>
> Regards,
> ~water
>
> On May 29, 2018, at 2:45 PM, Stack
Hi, S
Sorry to have you wait. I got some distractions in the past two days. You can
find the steps here http://www.antsdb.com/?p=218
Regards,
~water
On May 29, 2018, at 2:45 PM, Stack mailto:st...@duboce.net>>
wrote:
On Mon, May 28, 2018 at 12:19 AM, Water Guo
mailto:water@antsdb.com>>
Sure thing. I will write it up.
~water
> On May 29, 2018, at 2:45 PM, Stack wrote:
>
> On Mon, May 28, 2018 at 12:19 AM, Water Guo wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> I also conducted a TPC-C benchmark using BenchmarkSQL 4.1.1 from
>> PostgreSQL community. It shows that AntsDB can handle row lock and
>>
Dima,
Thanks for the advice.
This is only my pet project. I started it off three years ago from my
experiment with Java performance. AntsDB is not like log4j or commons that you
can throw in your project easily. TBH, I not expecting it will achieve
acceptance or become an apache project
On Mon, May 28, 2018 at 12:19 AM, Water Guo wrote:
>
>
> I also conducted a TPC-C benchmark using BenchmarkSQL 4.1.1 from
> PostgreSQL community. It shows that AntsDB can handle row lock and
> transaction commit/rollback very efficiently. Result is published at
>
Hey Water,
Just as an FYI, LGPL is still considered incompatible with the Apache
license and so will generally be a non-starter for organizations who pay
attention to category X dependencies (see
https://www.apache.org/legal/resolved.html#category-x).
On Mon, May 28, 2018 at 12:22 AM Water Guo
In case people wondering what AntsDB is……….
It is a database virtualization software that brings MySQL compatibility to
HBase.
> On May 28, 2018, at 3:19 AM, Water Guo wrote:
>
> Dear HBase community:
>
> A new version of AntsDB has been released. To address some of
Dear HBase community:
A new version of AntsDB has been released. To address some of the feedback from
the community, now the source code is published under LGPL license. It is much
less restrictive than the previous AGPL license. I hope it will ease the
concerns of making derivative work.
I