A Go interface for SQLite3, modelled after the C interface.
gqlplus is a drop-in replacement for sqlplus, an Oracle SQL client, for
UNIX platforms. The difference between gqlplus and sqlplus is command-line
editing and history, plus tablename completion. As you know if you have
used sqlplus, it is notoriously difficult to correct typing errors and
other mistakes in your SQL statements. sqlplus does give you ability to
use external editor to edit a statement, but only the last statement you
typed. gqlplus solves this problem by providing the familiar command-line
editing and history as in tcsh or bash shells, and tablename completion,
while otherwise retaining compatibility with sqlplus. Thus, no user training
is needed - simply use gqlplus instead of sqlplus. In addition,
configuration/installation is trivial: gqlplus is a single binary compiled
executable (written in C), so all you need is download it and put it anywhere
in your PATH. After that, you'll be ready to use it.
Credis is a client library in plain C for communicating with Redis servers.
Geographic Resources Analysis Support System
(GRASS GIS)
An open source Geographical Information System (GIS) with raster,
topological vector, image processing, and graphics production functionality
that operates on various platforms through a graphical user interface and
shell in X-Windows. It is released under GNU General Public License (GPL).
hamsterdb is a lightweight embedded database engine. It is
in development for more than three years and concentrates
on ease of use, high performance, stability and portability.
The hamsterdb API is simple and self-documenting. The interface
is similar to other widely-used database engines. Fast algorithms
and data structures guarantee high performance for all scenarios.
Hamsterdb has hundreds of unittests with a test coverage of over
90%. Each release is tested with thousands of acceptance tests in
many different configurations, tested on up to six different
hardware architectures and operating systems. Written in plain
ANSI-C, hamsterdb runs on many architectures: Intel-compatible
(x86, x64), PowerPC, SPARC, ARM, RISC and others. Tested operating
systems include Microsoft Windows, Microsoft Windows CE, Linux,
SunOS and other Unices.
The Akonadi framework is responsible for providing applications with a
centralized database to store, index and retrieve the user's personal
information. This includes the user's emails, contacts, calendars,
events, journals, alarms, notes, etc.
Hiredis is a minimalistic C client library for the Redis database.
It is minimalistic because it just adds minimal support for the protocol,
but at the same time it uses an high level printf-alike API in order to make
it much higher level than otherwise suggested by its minimal code base and
the lack of explicit bindings for every Redis command.
Apart from supporting sending commands and receiving replies, it comes with
a reply parser that is decoupled from the I/O layer. It is a stream parser
designed for easy reusability, which can for instance be used in higher
level language bindings for efficient reply parsing.
Hiredis only supports the binary-safe Redis protocol, so you can use it with
any Redis version >= 1.2.0.
The library comes with multiple APIs. There is the synchronous API, the
asynchronous API and the reply parsing API.
c3p0 is an easy-to-use Java library for augmenting traditional
(DriverManager-based) JDBC drivers with JNDI-bindable DataSources,
including DataSources that implement Connection and Statement
Pooling, as described by the jdbc3 spec and jdbc2 std extension.
An open-source, distributed, time series database with no external
dependencies. InfluxDB is the new home for all of your metrics,
events, and analytics.
InfluxDB is a time series, metrics, and analytics database. It'written
in Go and has no external dependencies. That means once you install
it there's nothing else to manage (like Redis, ZooKeeper, HBase,
or whatever).
InfluxDB is targeted at use cases for DevOps, metrics, sensor data,
and real-time analytics. It arose from our need for a database like
this on more than a few previous products we' built. You can read
more about our jurney from SaaS application to open source time
series database.
innotop connects to a MySQL database server and retrieves
information from it, then displays it in a manner similar
to the UNIX top program.
It runs on most Unix systems which have Perl, DBI, and
Term::ReadKey installed.