Falcon (storage engine)

Summary

Falcon is a discontinued[1] transactional storage engine being developed for the MySQL relational database management system. Development was stopped after Oracle purchased MySQL.[2] It was based on the Netfrastructure database engine. Falcon was designed to take advantage of Sun's ZFS file system.

Falcon
Original author(s)Jim Starkey
Developer(s)Sun Microsystems
Preview release
MySQL 6.0.9 / January 10, 2009 (2009-01-10)
Operating systemCross-platform
TypeDatabase engine
LicenseGNU General Public License
Websitewww.mysql.com/mysql60/ Edit this on Wikidata

Architecture analysis showed an interesting mixture of possible performance properties, while low level benchmarks on the first alpha release in 5.1.14-falcon showed that Falcon performed differently from both InnoDB and MyISAM.[3][4] It did better in several tests,[citation needed] worse in others, with inefficient support for the MySQL LIMIT operation a limitation. Its biggest advantage though is known to be ease of use; Falcon requires minimum maintenance and designed to reconfigure itself automatically to handle all types of loads efficiently.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Oracle Discusses MySQL Database Plans".[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ "Oracle Commits to MySQL with InnoDB". 13 April 2010.
  3. ^ "Falcon Storage Engine Design Review". 2007-01-12.
  4. ^ "InnoDB vs MyISAM vs Falcon benchmarks - part 1". 2007-01-08.