
On Thu, Jan 17, 2019 at 07:45:32AM -0500, Steve Petrie, P.Eng. via talk wrote:
BerkelyDB might be another option for storing an enbedded application's non-volatile data.
BerkelyDB is now owned by Oracle, but I believe there is an open-source version available) BerkelyDB could be more performant than SQLite and also could have a smaller footprint. In complexity, BerkelyDB would fit between SQLite and parsing the embedded app's non-volatile date out of a file(s) in the barebones filesystem.
I myself an considering migrating a PostgreSQL database (used by a PHP-based website app) to (an open source version of) BerkelyDB, because of the BerkelyDB claim that it requires "zero administration". If true, this "zero administration" feature sounds to me like a great fit for an embedded app..
Well some people have a problem with the AGPL 3.0 license that berkeley db uses. Depends entirely on what you are doing whether that is a problem or not. -- Len Sorensen