π | .travis.yml |
π | LICENSE |
π | README.md |
π | benchmark |
π | datastore.js |
π | docs |
π | index.js |
π | package-lock.json |
π | package.json |
π | tests |
π | treeNode.js |
README.md
Synopsis
:evergreen_tree: This implements a binary merkle radix tree. The point of using a binary radix
tree is that it generates smaller proof size then trees with larger radixes.
This tree is well suited for storing large dictonaries of fairly random keys.
And is optimized for storing keys of the same length. If the keys are not
random better performance can be achived by hashing them first. It builds on
top of ipld-graph-builder
and the resulting state and proofs are generated using it.
Install
npm install dfinity-radix-tree
Usage
const RadixTree = require('js-dfinity-radix-tree')
const level = require('level')
const db = level('./tempdb')
async function main () {
const prover = new RadixTree({
db: db
})
await prover.set('test', Buffer.from('value'))
await prover.set('doge', Buffer.from('coin'))
await prover.set('cat', Buffer.from('dog'))
await prover.set('monkey', Buffer.from('wrench'))
// create a merkle root and save the tree
const merkleroot = await prover.flush()
// start a new Instance with the root
const verifier = new RadixTree({
db: db,
root: merkleroot
})
const value = await verifier.get('monkey')
console.log(value.toString())
}
main()
API
Spefication
Benchmarks
The result of the benchmarks show that the binary radix tree produces proofs on average %67 small then the Ethereum Trie with 100000 keys stored.
License
All code and designs are open sourced under GPL V3.
Built with git-ssb-web