On Wed, Sep 24, 2014 at 01:33:02PM -0300, Esteban A. Maringolo wrote: > How does SQLite scale in terms of table size and so on?
According to https://www.sqlite.org/whentouse.html: An SQLite database is limited in size to 140 terabytes (2^47 bytes, 128 tibibytes). And even if it could handle larger databases, SQLite stores the entire database in a single disk file and many filesystems limit the maximum size of files to something less than this. SQLite will normally work fine as the database backend to a website. But if you website is so busy that you are thinking of splitting the database component off onto a separate machine, then you should definitely consider using an enterprise-class client/server database engine instead of SQLite. > I was surprised to know it is based on an old version of PostgreSQL > according to this presentation: > http://www.pgcon.org/2014/schedule/events/736.en.html That is a very interesting talk. As it says, SQLite is a replacement for fopen(), not a replacement for PostgreSQL. In the context of my writing tools and applications in Smalltalk, I'd like to enjoy SQLite's robustness, hence my interest in having/building a good Smalltalk wrapper. Pierce