Abstract
In this paper, we propose a method to construct a lightweight key-value store based on the Windows native features. The main idea is providing a thin wrapper for the key-value store on top of a built-in storage inWindows, calledWindows registry. First, we define a mapping of the components in the key-value store onto the components in the Windows registry. Then, we present a hash-based multi-level registry index so as to distribute the key-value data balanced and to efficiently access them. Third, we implement basic operations of the key-value store (i.e., Get, Put, and Delete) by manipulating the Windows registry using the Windows native APIs. We call the proposed key-value store WR-Store. Finally, we propose an efficient ETL (Extract-Transform-Load) method to migrate data stored in WR-Store into any other environments that support existing key-value stores. Because the performance of the Windows registry has not been studied much, we perform the empirical study to understand the characteristics of WR-Store, and then, tune the performance of WR-Store to find the best parameter setting. Through extensive experiments using synthetic and real data sets, we show that the performance of WR-Store is comparable to or even better than the state-of-the-art systems (i.e., RocksDB, BerkeleyDB, and LevelDB). Especially, we show the scalability of WR-Store. That is, WR-Store becomes much more efficient than the other key-value stores as the size of data set increases. In addition, we show that the performance of WR-Store is maintained even in the case of intensive registry workloads where 1000 processes accessing to the registry actively are concurrently running.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 3801 |
| Journal | Applied Sciences (Switzerland) |
| Volume | 9 |
| Issue number | 18 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - 1 Sep 2019 |
Keywords
- Data stores
- Databases
- Key-value stores
- Performance evaluation
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