streamly-lmdb
Stream data to or from LMDB databases using the Haskell streamly library.
Requirements
Install LMDB on your system:
- Debian Linux:
sudo apt-get install liblmdb-dev
.
- macOS:
brew install lmdb
.
Quick start
{-# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings #-}
module Main where
import Data.Function
import qualified Streamly.Data.Fold as F
import qualified Streamly.Data.Stream.Prelude as S
import Streamly.External.LMDB
main :: IO ()
main = do
-- Open an environment. There should already exist a file or
-- directory at the given path. (Empty for a new environment.)
env <-
openEnvironment
"/path/to/lmdb-database"
defaultLimits {mapSize = tebibyte}
-- Get the main database.
-- Note: It is common practice with LMDB to create the database
-- once and reuse it for the remainder of the program’s execution.
db <- getDatabase env Nothing
-- Stream key-value pairs into the database.
withReadWriteTransaction env $ \txn ->
[("baz", "a"), ("foo", "b"), ("bar", "c")]
& S.fromList
& S.fold (writeLMDB defaultWriteOptions db txn)
-- Stream key-value pairs out of the
-- database, printing them along the way.
-- Output:
-- ("bar","c")
-- ("baz","a")
-- ("foo","b")
S.unfold readLMDB (defaultReadOptions, db, LeftTxn Nothing)
& S.mapM print
& S.fold F.drain
Benchmarks
See bench/README.md
. Summary (with rough figures from our machine†):
- Reading (iterating through a fully cached LMDB database):
- When using the ordinary
readLMDB
(which creates intermediate key/value ByteString
s managed by the RTS), the overhead compared to C depends on the key/value sizes; for 480-byte keys and 2400-byte values, the overhead is roughly 815 ns/pair.
- By using
unsafeReadLMDB
instead of readLMDB
(to avoid the intermediate ByteString
s), we can get the overhead compared to C down to roughly 90 ns/pair. (Plain Haskell IO
code has roughly a 50 ns/pair overhead compared to C. The two preceding figures being similar fulfills the promise of streamly and stream fusion.)
- Writing:
- The overhead of this library compared to C depends on the size of the key/value pairs (
ByteString
s managed by the RTS). For 480-byte keys and 2400-byte values, the overhead is around 4.3 μs/pair.
- For now, we don’t provide “unsafe” write functionality (to avoid the key/value
ByteString
s) because this write performance is currently good enough for our purposes.
- For reference, we note that opening and reading 1 byte [16 KiB] from a file on disk with C takes us around 2.8 μs [20 μs].
† September 2024; NixOS 24.11; Intel i7-12700K (3.6 GHz, 12 cores); Corsair VENGEANCE LPX DDR4 RAM 64GB (2 x 32GB) 3200MHz; Samsung 970 EVO Plus SSD 2TB (M.2 NVMe).