# LevelDB JNI ## Description LevelDB JNI gives you a Java interface to the [LevelDB](http://code.google.com/p/leveldb/) C++ library which is a fast key-value storage library written at Google that provides an ordered mapping from string keys to string values.. ## Using as a Maven Dependency You just nee to add the following repositories and dependencies to your Maven pom. fusesource.nexus.snapshot FuseSource Community Snapshot Repository http://repo.fusesource.com/nexus/content/groups/public-snapshots org.fusesource.leveldbjni leveldbjni-all 1.1 ## API Usage: Recommended Package imports: import org.iq80.leveldb.*; import static org.fusesource.leveldbjni.JniDBFactory.*; import java.io.*; Opening and closing the database. Options options = new Options(); options.createIfMissing(true); DB db = factory.open(new File("example"), options); try { // Use the db in here.... } finally { // Make sure you close the db to shutdown the // database and avoid resource leaks. db.close(); } Putting, Getting, and Deleting key/values. db.put(bytes("Tampa"), bytes("rocks")); String value = asString(db.get(bytes("Tampa"))); db.delete(wo, bytes("Tampa")); Performing Batch/Bulk/Atomic Updates. WriteBatch batch = db.createWriteBatch(); try { batch.delete(bytes("Denver")); batch.put(bytes("Tampa"), bytes("green")); batch.put(bytes("London"), bytes("red")); db.write(batch); } finally { // Make sure you close the batch to avoid resource leaks. batch.close(); } Iterating key/values. DBIterator iterator = db.iterator(); try { for(iterator.seekToFirst(); iterator.hasNext(); iterator.next()) { String key = asString(iterator.peekNext().getKey()); String value = asString(iterator.peekNext().getValue()); System.out.println(key+" = "+value); } } finally { // Make sure you close the iterator to avoid resource leaks. iterator.close(); } Working against a Snapshot view of the Database. ReadOptions ro = new ReadOptions(); ro.snapshot(db.getSnapshot()); try { // All read operations will now use the same // consistent view of the data. ... = db.iterator(ro); ... = db.get(bytes("Tampa"), ro); } finally { // Make sure you close the snapshot to avoid resource leaks. ro.snapshot().close(); } Using a custom Comparator. DBComparator comparator = new DBComparator(){ public int compare(byte[] key1, byte[] key2) { return new String(key1).compareTo(new String(key2)); } public String name() { return "simple"; } public byte[] findShortestSeparator(byte[] start, byte[] limit) { return start; } public byte[] findShortSuccessor(byte[] key) { return key; } }; Options options = new Options(); options.comparator(comparator); DB db = factory.open(new File("example"), options); Disabling Compression Options options = new Options(); options.compressionType(CompressionType.NONE); DB db = factory.open(new File("example"), options); Configuring the Cache Options options = new Options(); options.cacheSize(100 * 1048576); // 100MB cache DB db = factory.open(new File("example"), options); Getting approximate sizes. long[] sizes = db.getApproximateSizes(new Range(bytes("a"), bytes("k")), new Range(bytes("k"), bytes("z"))); System.out.println("Size: "+sizes[0]+", "+sizes[1]); Getting database status. String stats = db.getProperty("leveldb.stats"); System.out.println(stats); Getting informational log messages. Logger logger = new Logger() { public void log(String message) { System.out.println(message); } }; Options options = new Options(); options.logger(logger); DB db = factory.open(new File("example"), options); Destroying a database. Options options = new Options(); factory.destroy(new File("example"), options); Repairing a database. Options options = new Options(); factory.repair(new File("example"), options); Using a memory pool to make native memory allocations more efficient: JniDBFactory.pushMemoryPool(1024 * 512); try { // .. work with the DB in here, } finally { JniDBFactory.popMemoryPool(); } ## Building ### Prerequisites * GNU compiler toolchain * [Maven 3](http://maven.apache.org/download.html) ### Supported Platforms The following worked for me on: * OS X Lion with X Code 4 * CentOS 5.6 (32 and 64 bit) * Ubuntu 12.04 (32 and 64 bit) * apt-get install autoconf libtool ### Build Procedure Then download the snappy, leveldb, and leveldbjni project source code: wget http://snappy.googlecode.com/files/snappy-1.0.5.tar.gz tar -zxvf snappy-1.0.5.tar.gz git clone git://github.com/chirino/leveldb.git git clone git://github.com/fusesource/leveldbjni.git export SNAPPY_HOME=`cd snappy-1.0.5; pwd` export LEVELDB_HOME=`cd leveldb; pwd` export LEVELDBJNI_HOME=`cd leveldbjni; pwd` Compile the snappy project. This produces a static library. cd ${SNAPPY_HOME} ./configure --disable-shared --with-pic make Patch and Compile the leveldb project. This produces a static library. cd ${LEVELDB_HOME} export LIBRARY_PATH=${SNAPPY_HOME} export C_INCLUDE_PATH=${LIBRARY_PATH} export CPLUS_INCLUDE_PATH=${LIBRARY_PATH} git apply ../leveldbjni/leveldb.patch make libleveldb.a Now use maven to build the leveldbjni project. cd ${LEVELDBJNI_HOME} mvn clean install -P download -P ${platform} Replace ${platform} with one of the following platform identifiers (depending on the platform your building on): * osx * linux32 * linux64 * win32 * win64 If your platform does not have the right auto-tools levels available just copy the `leveldbjni-${version}-SNAPSHOT-native-src.zip` artifact from a platform the does have the tools available then add the following argument to your maven build: -Dnative-src-url=file:leveldbjni-${verision}-SNAPSHOT-native-src.zip ### Build Results * `leveldbjni/target/leveldbjni-${version}.jar` : The java class file to the library. * `leveldbjni/target/leveldbjni-${version}-native-src.zip` : A GNU style source project which you can use to build the native library on other systems. * `leveldbjni-${platform}/target/leveldbjni-${platform}-${version}.jar` : A jar file containing the built native library using your currently platform.