Jussi Saurio d086ab29a6 Merge 'Update Unique constraint for Primary Keys and Indexes' from Pedro Muniz
This PR attempts to implement Primary Key and Indexes. It supports
Update for Primary Keys as a RowId Alias, Composite Primary Keys, and
Indexes. I tried to resemble as much as possible how SQLite emits the
Opcodes.
~Additionally, to support this I had to fix a bug in the how we searched
for the next records in the `Next` opcode, by introducing a Set of seen
row id's. The problem was that, you need to delete the previous record
and then insert the new record to update. When we did that in a `Rewind`
loop, the current cell index in the cursor was always pointing to the
incorrect place because we were searching for the next record without
checking if we had seen it before. However, I am not sure how this
affects the Btree.~
EDIT: After seeing how bad my fix was, I tried a different approach that
is more in line with what SQLite does. When performing a `Delete` in the
btree, we can save the current `rowid` (`TableBtree`) or the current
`record` for (`IndexBtree`), and then restore the correct position later
in the `next` function by seeking to the saved context. I'm just not
knowledgeable enough yet to be efficient  of when we can avoid saving
the context and doing the seek later.

Closes #1429
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Limbo

Project Limbo

Limbo is a project to build the modern evolution of SQLite.

PyPI PyPI PyPI

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Features and Roadmap

Limbo is a work-in-progress, in-process OLTP database engine library written in Rust that has:

  • Asynchronous I/O support on Linux with io_uring
  • SQLite compatibility [doc] for SQL dialect, file formats, and the C API
  • Language bindings for JavaScript/WebAssembly, Rust, Go, Python, and Java
  • OS support for Linux, macOS, and Windows

In the future, we will be also working on:

  • Integrated vector search for embeddings and vector similarity.
  • BEGIN CONCURRENT for improved write throughput.
  • Improved schema management including better ALTER support and strict column types by default.

Getting Started

💻 Command Line
You can install the latest `limbo` release with:
curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -LsSf \
  https://github.com/tursodatabase/limbo/releases/latest/download/limbo_cli-installer.sh | sh

Then launch the shell to execute SQL statements:

Limbo
Enter ".help" for usage hints.
Connected to a transient in-memory database.
Use ".open FILENAME" to reopen on a persistent database
limbo> CREATE TABLE users (id INT PRIMARY KEY, username TEXT);
limbo> INSERT INTO users VALUES (1, 'alice');
limbo> INSERT INTO users VALUES (2, 'bob');
limbo> SELECT * FROM users;
1|alice
2|bob

You can also build and run the latest development version with:

cargo run
🦀 Rust
cargo add limbo

Example usage:

let db = Builder::new_local("sqlite.db").build().await?;
let conn = db.connect()?;

let res = conn.query("SELECT * FROM users", ()).await?;
JavaScript
npm i limbo-wasm

Example usage:

import { Database } from 'limbo-wasm';

const db = new Database('sqlite.db');
const stmt = db.prepare('SELECT * FROM users');
const users = stmt.all();
console.log(users);
🐍 Python
pip install pylimbo

Example usage:

import limbo

con = limbo.connect("sqlite.db")
cur = con.cursor()
res = cur.execute("SELECT * FROM users")
print(res.fetchone())
🐹 Go
  1. Clone the repository
  2. Build the library and set your LD_LIBRARY_PATH to include limbo's target directory
cargo build --package limbo-go
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/path/to/limbo/target/debug:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH
  1. Use the driver
go get github.com/tursodatabase/limbo
go install github.com/tursodatabase/limbo

Example usage:

import (
    "database/sql"
    _"github.com/tursodatabase/limbo"
)

conn, _ = sql.Open("sqlite3", "sqlite.db")
defer conn.Close()

stmt, _ := conn.Prepare("select * from users")
defer stmt.Close()

rows, _ = stmt.Query()
for rows.Next() {
    var id int
    var username string
    _ := rows.Scan(&id, &username)
    fmt.Printf("User: ID: %d, Username: %s\n", id, username)
}
Java

We integrated Limbo into JDBC. For detailed instructions on how to use Limbo with java, please refer to the README.md under bindings/java.

Contributing

We'd love to have you contribute to Limbo! Please check out the contribution guide to get started.

FAQ

How is Limbo different from Turso's libSQL?

Limbo is a project to build the modern evolution of SQLite in Rust, with a strong open contribution focus and features like native async support, vector search, and more. The libSQL project is also an attempt to evolve SQLite in a similar direction, but through a fork rather than a rewrite.

Rewriting SQLite in Rust started as an unassuming experiment, and due to its incredible success, replaces libSQL as our intended direction. At this point, libSQL is production ready, Limbo is not - although it is evolving rapidly. As the project starts to near production readiness, we plan to rename it to just "Turso". More details here.

Publications

  • Pekka Enberg, Sasu Tarkoma, Jon Crowcroft Ashwin Rao (2024). Serverless Runtime / Database Co-Design With Asynchronous I/O. In EdgeSys 24. [PDF]
  • Pekka Enberg, Sasu Tarkoma, and Ashwin Rao (2023). Towards Database and Serverless Runtime Co-Design. In CoNEXT-SW 23. [PDF] [Slides]

License

This project is licensed under the MIT license.

Contribution

Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in Limbo by you, shall be licensed as MIT, without any additional terms or conditions.

Contributors

Thanks to all the contributors to Limbo!

Description
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Readme 43 MiB
Languages
Rust 76.8%
Tcl 6.6%
C 6.4%
Dart 2.4%
Java 2.3%
Other 5.3%