From b74189ce76ce2c69087eaa3eebd845ae4b6d0cf8 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "Brian S. O'Neill" Date: Fri, 20 Oct 2006 21:29:12 +0000 Subject: Minor fixes. --- src/site/apt/index.apt | 30 +++++++++++++++--------------- 1 file changed, 15 insertions(+), 15 deletions(-) (limited to 'src/site') diff --git a/src/site/apt/index.apt b/src/site/apt/index.apt index f9a1ec1..197d3d2 100644 --- a/src/site/apt/index.apt +++ b/src/site/apt/index.apt @@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ Carbonado Carbonado is an extensible, high performance persistence abstraction layer for Java applications, providing a relational view to the underlying -persistence technology. The persistence layer can be a JDBC accessible SQL +persistence technology. Persistence can be provided by a JDBC accessible SQL relational database, or it can be a BDB. It can also be fully replicated between the two. @@ -31,7 +31,7 @@ configuration files. All the code to implement types is auto-generated, yet there are no extra build time steps. Carbonado is able to achieve high performance by imposing very low overhead -when accessing the storage layer. Low overhead is achieved in part by auto +when accessing the actual storage. Low overhead is achieved in part by auto generating performance critical code, via the open source Cojen library. * Terminology @@ -74,16 +74,16 @@ replacement for JDBC. These kinds of applications may choose a blend of Carbonado and JDBC. To facilitate this, access to the JDBC connection in use by the current transaction is supported. - The Carbonado repositories that are backed by BDB use a simple rule-based -query optimizer to come up with a query plan. Cost-based optimizers are -generally much more effective, since they estimate I/O costs. Carbonado has a -rule-based optimizer mainly because it is easier to write. + The Carbonado repositories that are backed by BDB use a rule-based query +optimizer to come up with a query plan. Cost-based optimizers are generally +much more effective, since they estimate I/O costs. Carbonado has a rule-based +optimizer mainly because it is easier to write. -* Persistence Layer Requirements +* Persistence Technology Requirements Carbonado is capable of supporting many different kinds of persistence -layers. A minimum set of features is required, however, in order to provide -enough Carbonado features to justify the effort: +technologies. A minimum set of features is required, however, in order to +provide enough Carbonado features to justify the effort: * Arbitrary keys and values @@ -99,12 +99,12 @@ enough Carbonado features to justify the effort: [] - Ideally, the persistence layer should support transactions. If it does not, -then its transactions must be implemented by batching updates in memory. Upon -commit, the updates are made to the persistence layer. If atomic batch updates -are supported, then the repository can report supporting an isolation level of -"read committed". Otherwise, it can only support the lowest level of "read -uncommitted". + Ideally, the persistence technology should support transactions. If it does +not, then its transactions must be implemented by batching updates in +memory. The updates are not persisted until the transaction is committed. If +atomic batch updates are supported, then the repository can report supporting +an isolation level of "read committed". Otherwise, it can only support the +lowest level of "read uncommitted". Additional features which are nice to have, but not strictly required: -- cgit v1.2.3