Today
FlockDB is celebrated, a date/reason that invites us to reflect on the importance of
FlockDB in our lives.
FlockDB is a topic that has gained relevance in recent years, generating great interest in society. In this article we are going to explore
FlockDB in depth, analyzing its impact on different aspects of our daily lives. From its origin to its evolution over time, through its influence on current culture and society,
FlockDB is a topic that continues to arouse the curiosity and interest of many people. Join us on this tour of
FlockDB and discover everything there is still to know about this fascinating topic.
Graph-based distributed data manager, project no longer maintained since 2012
FlockDB was an open-source distributed, fault-tolerant graph database for managing wide but shallow network graphs. It was initially used by Twitter to store relationships between users, e.g. followings and favorites. FlockDB differs from other graph databases, e.g. Neo4j in that it was not designed for multi-hop graph traversal but rather for rapid set operations, not unlike the primary use-case for Redis sets. FlockDB was posted on GitHub shortly after Twitter released its Gizzard framework, which it used to query the FlockDB distributed datastore. The database is licensed under the Apache License.
Twitter no longer supports FlockDB.
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