tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2219161987892290710.post6756267552608600836..comments2023-04-11T08:28:54.716-07:00Comments on Designed to scale (and fly :): What is Koda (in one sentence)?Vladimir Rodionovhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18159080975174540442noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2219161987892290710.post-9944392280736399922011-07-13T17:11:17.530-07:002011-07-13T17:11:17.530-07:00Eventually it will be open-sourced but as a part o...Eventually it will be open-sourced but as a part of another (much bigger project I am working on currently). This is my own (not my employer) project and I am borrowing time from my family. If you want to discuss your requirements and needs (for scalable caching solution) you can contact me at:<br />vladrodionov at gmail.com - and I will be happy to help you.Vladimir Rodionovhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18159080975174540442noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2219161987892290710.post-39070031527219678212011-07-11T11:14:16.659-07:002011-07-11T11:14:16.659-07:00Interested in hearing more about this! Our company...Interested in hearing more about this! Our company is looking for ways to scale cached data. I dug into the concept of using NIO's direct allocation as a way to get around the constraints of garbage collection, and your approach seems to be right on the money. Are you planning for this to be an open-source project? Are you mostly using it to solve some problems at work? The cool thing about off-heap caching in my case is that I'm already storing most data as arrays of primitives anyway, so there would be little serialization overhead in using buffers.<br /><br />Thanks!fourth horsehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06272243813548316681noreply@blogger.com