Libraries tagged by key value storage
tschoffelen/memory
3318 Downloads
Key-value storage in memory. As a storage can be used: APC, Redis, Memcache, Shared memory. All storage objects have one interface, so you can switch them without changing the working code. Contains PHP Redis client.
techdivision/lemcachecontainer
686 Downloads
A memcache API compatible PHP implementation of a key value storage server
elnooronline/laravel-settings
1737 Downloads
Persistent key-value storage for Laravel
vicgarcia/kaavii
1468 Downloads
KaaVii (pronounced kay-vee) is a package to provide components to interact with Redis for cache and key-value data storage
rawphp/laravel-options
6 Downloads
Easy application key->value option storage.
leewillis77/setting-store
582 Downloads
Laravel package to provide a simple model / facade for key/value storage.
laravel-api-server/core
32 Downloads
This project provides everything you need for building an advanced application. It provides a base model and a base policy as well as a user, permission and role model and a database based key/value storage.
hexcores/metadata
35 Downloads
Metadata storage(key, value) for laravel
netr0n/shmestage
9 Downloads
Simple storage of key value based data in PHP shared memory
czogori/propel-postgres-hstore-behavior
2529 Downloads
Storage of key-value items using Postgres hstore.
victory7/ezsession
9 Downloads
ezsession is a versatile PHP session handler designed to provide seamless session management by combining the strengths of relational databases (MySQL), key-value stores (Redis), and JWT tokens. It offers developers flexible, secure, and scalable session storage, making it ideal for applications requiring high-performance, distributed, and stateless authentication systems. With ezsession, you can customize your session storage strategy to suit a variety of use cases while ensuring enhanced security and simplified management.
91ahmed/secure-cogs
7 Downloads
SecureCogs is a PHP data storage package that allows you to store data in an encrypted key-value pair format, providing various methods to simplify data accessibility and maintainability.
nodeum-io/nodeum-sdk-php
0 Downloads
The Nodeum API makes it easy to tap into the digital data mesh that runs across your organisation. Make requests to our API endpoints and we’ll give you everything you need to interconnect your business workflows with your storage. All production API requests are made to: http://nodeumhostname/api/ The current production version of the API is v1. **REST** The Nodeum API is a RESTful API. This means that the API is designed to allow you to get, create, update, & delete objects with the HTTP verbs GET, POST, PUT, PATCH, & DELETE. **JSON** The Nodeum API speaks exclusively in JSON. This means that you should always set the Content-Type header to application/json to ensure that your requests are properly accepted and processed by the API. **Authentication** All API calls require user-password authentication. **Cross-Origin Resource Sharing** The Nodeum API supports CORS for communicating from Javascript for these endpoints. You will need to specify an Origin URI when creating your application to allow for CORS to be whitelisted for your domain. **Pagination** Some endpoints such as File Listing return a potentially lengthy array of objects. In order to keep the response sizes manageable the API will take advantage of pagination. Pagination is a mechanism for returning a subset of the results for a request and allowing for subsequent requests to “page” through the rest of the results until the end is reached. Paginated endpoints follow a standard interface that accepts two query parameters, limit and offset, and return a payload that follows a standard form. These parameters names and their behavior are borrowed from SQL LIMIT and OFFSET keywords. **Versioning** The Nodeum API is constantly being worked on to add features, make improvements, and fix bugs. This means that you should expect changes to be introduced and documented. However, there are some changes or additions that are considered backwards-compatible and your applications should be flexible enough to handle them. These include: - Adding new endpoints to the API - Adding new attributes to the response of an existing endpoint - Changing the order of attributes of responses (JSON by definition is an object of unordered key/value pairs) **Filter parameters** When browsing a list of items, multiple filter parameters may be applied. Some operators can be added to the value as a prefix: - `=` value is equal. Default operator, may be omitted - `!=` value is different - `>` greater than - `>=` greater than or equal - `=` lower than or equal - `>