Derby is a lightweight relational database implemented completely in Java. Using the JDBC driver provided, Derby can be embedded in any Java applications.[05][06]
- Source Code
- https://github.com/apache/derby[02]
- Developer
- Country of Origin
- US
- Start Year
- 1997 [07]
- Former Names
- JBMS, Cloudscape, Java DB
- Acquired By
- Project Type
- Open Source
- Written in
- Java
- Supported Languages
- Java
- Derived From
- Aerospike
- Operating System
- All OS with Java VM
- License
- Apache v2
History[07]
In 1997, Cloudscape Inc., a start-up in Oakland, California, developed a database engine called JBMS, which was later renamed as Cloudscape. From 1999 to 2001, Cloudscape was acquired first by Informix Software, and by IBM, and its name was changed to IBM Cloudscape. In 2004, IBM contributed the code to the Apache Software Foundation as Derby. In 2005, Derby became a Apache DB subproject.
Checkpoints[08]
Derby implements ARIES with slight variance. It allows fuzzy checkpointing. However, unlike ARIES implementation, it does not store a dirty page list in checkpoint records. Instead, during checkpoint, Derby flushes all database pages to disk. The checkpoint control files contains "undoLWM" and "RedoLWM". "UndoLWM" is set as the the starting LSN of the oldest active transaction when checkpoint starts, and "RedoLWM" is the the current LSN of the checkpoint.
Foreign Keys[09]
Foreign key is implemented as one of the CONSTAINT clauses. There are two levels of CONSTAINTS, column level and table level. Foreign key constraint in a column level enforces that the values in the column must corresponds to the values in the referenced column marked as primary key or unique key. Table level constraint works similarly, but it is for multiple columns.
Insert, update or delete instructions will be rejected with a statement exception if the foreign key constraint is violated. The constraint check can be at statement execution or commit depending on the constraint mode. (IMMEDIATE or DEFERRED).
Isolation Levels[10]
It supports all four level of isolations. Isolation levels only differ for SELECT statements. They behave the same for other operations.
Logging[11][12]
Derby implements a combination of physical and logical logging. For actions on the same page, it uses physical logging. For BTree operations, which might affect several pages, it uses physical redo and logical undo.
Citations
12 sources- Apache Derby apache.org
- GitHub - apache/derby: Mirror of Apache Derby · GitHub github.com
- Apache Derby: Documentation apache.org
- Apache Derby - Wikipedia wikipedia.org
- https://wiki.apache.org/db-derby/ apache.org
- Apache Derby apache.org
- Apache Derby Project Charter apache.org
- Derby Logging and Recovery apache.org
- CONSTRAINT clause apache.org
- Isolation levels and concurrency apache.org
- Derby Logging and Recovery apache.org
- org.apache.derby.impl.store.access.btree apache.org