Berkeley DB - Programs That Use Berkeley DB

Programs That Use Berkeley DB

Berkeley DB provides the underlying storage and retrieval system of several LDAP servers, database systems, and many other proprietary and free/open source applications. Notable software that use Berkeley DB for data storage include:

  • ARC - Advanced Resource Connector open source grid middleware introduced by NorduGrid, use BerkeleyDB in several services.
  • Asterisk PBX - A free/open source PBX.
  • Bitcoin - A distributed peer-to-peer open source digital currency.
  • Bogofilter – A free/open source spam filter that saves its wordlists using Berkeley DB.
  • Carbonado – An open source relational database access layer.
  • Citadel – A free/open source groupware platform that keeps all of its data stores, including the message base, in Berkeley DB.
  • Cyrus IMAP Server – A free/open source IMAP and POP3 server, developed by Carnegie Mellon University
  • EMEN2 - An extensible object-oriented electronic lab notebook.
  • Evolution - A free/open source mail client; contacts are stored in addressbook.db using Berkeley DB
  • Figaro DB - An embedded, native XML Database for the Microsoft's .NET Framework built upon Berkeley DB.
  • GlusterFS - A cluster filesystem which leverages industry-standard commodity hardware to build highly scalable, non-stop storage systems.
  • GRAMPS - "Genealogical Research and Analysis Management Programming System", free genealogy software.
  • HyperGraphDB - An open-source OO graph database based on generalized hypergraphs.
  • IPD OS - Oracle's Instantaneous Problem Detection OS Tool
  • Jabberd2 – An Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol server
  • J-ISIS (Java ISIS) - A new version of Winisis dtabase programme (of Unesco) being developed for library use
  • KDevelop – An IDE for Linux and other Unix-like operating systems
  • KLibido – A free/open source Newsgroup reader tailored for binary downloads
  • Movable Type (until version 4.0) – A proprietary weblog publishing system developed by California-based Six Apart
  • memcachedb - A persistence-enabled variant of memcached
  • MySQL database system – Prior to v5.1, MySQL included a BDB data storage backend.
  • OpenCOBOL - A free/open source COBOL implementation.
  • OpenDS - an open source directory server.
  • OpenLDAP – A free/open source implementation of the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP)
  • Papyrus Platform – The ISIS Papyrus Platform uses BerkeleyDB for its distributed object-relational transaction kernel for adaptive content and process management in enterprise applications
  • PiSi – The package management system of Pardus
  • Postfix – A fast, secure, easy-to-administer MTA for Linux/Unix systems
  • Parallel Virtual File System (PVFS) – A parallel file system for HPC clusters.
  • Red Dwarf - A server framework originally developed by Sun, now open sourced, commonly used for game development.
  • Redland – A RDF Application Framework can use BDB for persistent storage (triplestore)
  • RPM – The RPM Package Manager uses Berkeley DB to retain its internal database of packages installed on a system
  • Scalien Keyspace - A consistently replicated, fault-tolerant key-value store
  • Source Navigator and Source Navigator NG - A source code analysis and exploration tool
  • Spamassassin – An anti-spam application
  • Secondo – An Extensible Database System
  • Subversion – A version control system designed specifically to replace CVS
  • Sun Grid Engine – A free and open source distributed resource management system.
  • SWGEmu - An open source community project aimed to develop, maintain and expand a free Pre-CU-era Star Wars Galaxies server software set.
  • Project Voldemort – A distributed database used by LinkedIn.
  • Wialon - a GPS tracking and fleet management software with Web-interface
  • BIMserver.org - an open source Building Information Model server for IFC models.
  • Porcupine - a Web Application Server

Read more about this topic:  Berkeley DB

Famous quotes containing the words programs and/or berkeley:

    We attempt to remember our collective American childhood, the way it was, but what we often remember is a combination of real past, pieces reshaped by bitterness and love, and, of course, the video past—the portrayals of family life on such television programs as “Leave it to Beaver” and “Father Knows Best” and all the rest.
    Richard Louv (20th century)

    What doubts, what hypotheses, what labyrinths of amusement, what fields of disputation, what an ocean of false learning, may be avoided by that single notion of immaterialism!
    —George Berkeley (1685–1753)