Stasis is a flexible transactional storage library for high-performance applications and system developers. It supports concurrent transactional storage and no-FORCE/STEAL buffer management.
benchmarks | ||
blast | ||
doc | ||
examples | ||
libdfa | ||
m4 | ||
pbl | ||
pobj | ||
src | ||
stasis | ||
test | ||
utilities | ||
.cvsignore | ||
AUTHORS | ||
bootstrap | ||
ChangeLog | ||
clean.sh | ||
CMakeLists.txt | ||
configure.in | ||
COPYING | ||
CTestConfig.cmake | ||
cvs-branch-info | ||
lladd.prj | ||
lladd.pws | ||
Makefile.am | ||
mkinstalldirs | ||
NEWS | ||
NOTES | ||
README | ||
reconf | ||
reconf-1.8 | ||
stamp-h.in |
Stasis is an experimental flexible transactional storage library. Please see the COPYING file for licensing information. More information about installation, a tutorial and API documentation are available at: http://lladd.sourceforge.net/developers/html/ First, make sure you have the appropriate dependencies: 'make check' requires the GNU check library, 'make doc' requires Doxygen. You'll need Berkeley DB to build; it isn't actually used by Stasis, but I haven't gotten around to making it optional. You also need libconfuse; it is used by some of the programs that ship with Stasis. To build, do: ./reconf or ./reconf-1.8 You'll need to have a version of automake >= 1.7 for ./reconf to work, or have automake 1.8 for ./reconf-1.8 to work. Different packages of automake should be able to coexist on the same system, and probably ship with your distribution. ./configure make make check make install To build the API and internals documentation, run: make docs after configure. We don't support "make install". ;) For up-to date coverage reports and unit test pass rates, see http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~sears/stasis/ The unit test logs for lcov describe how the coverage report was generated.