Category Archives: TokuView

Posts to the TokuView Blog

268x Query Performance Increase for MongoDB with...

Posted on by Tim Callaghan

Last week I wrote about our 10x insertion performance increase with MongoDB. We’ve continued our experimental integration of Fractal Tree® Indexes into MongoDB, adding support for clustered indexes….  A clustered index stores all non-index fields as the “value”

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10x Insertion Performance Increase for MongoDB...

Posted on by Tim Callaghan

The challenge of handling massive data processing workloads has spawned many new innovations and techniques in the database world, from indexing innovations like our Fractal Tree® technology to a myriad of “NoSQL” solutions (here… is our Chief Scientist’s perspective).

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Webinar: Introduction to TokuDB

Posted on by Gerry Narvaja

Businesses increasingly operate in a 24×7 environment, where complex analytics must be performed on live, continuously incoming “Big Data.” To address this, TokuDB has developed Fractal Tree®  technology, a revolutionary new indexing capability that enables SQL databases running advanced web applications to…

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FROSCON and VLDB

Posted on by Bradley C. Kuszmaul

Next week I (Bradley) will be traveling to FROSCON near Bonn, Germany, and then on to VLDB… in Istanbul.
At FROSCON I’ll be talking about fast data structures for maintaining indexes. The talk will share some content with my upcoming

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Dagstuhl Seminar on Database Workload Management

Posted on by Michael Bender

A few weeks ago Bradley Kuszmaul and I attended the Dagstuhl Seminar on Database Workload Management….
The Dagstuhl computer science research center is (remotely) located in the countryside in Saarland, Germany. The actual building is an 18th Century Manor

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Real World Compression

Posted on by Tim Callaghan

Benchmarking is a tricky thing, especially when it comes to compression. Some data compresses quite well while other data does not compress at all. Storing jpeg images in a BLOB column produces 0% compression, but storing the string “AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA” in…

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