Automic VaultAutomic Vault

brew

tokyo-cabinet mit Homebrew installieren

Prüfe Installationswege, Executables, Metadaten und Sicherheitshinweise für tokyo-cabinet in AI-Agent-Workflows.

Installation

Weitere Installationsbefehle

macOS

Homebrewverifiziert · 100%
brew install tokyo-cabinet

local Homebrew formula metadata

Überblick

Paketzusammenfassung

Lightweight database library

Befehle und Aliase

  • tcamgr
  • tcamttest
  • tcatest
  • tcbmgr
  • tcbmttest
  • tcbtest
  • tcfmgr
  • tcfmttest
  • tcftest
  • tchmgr
  • tchmttest
  • tchtest
  • tctmgr
  • tctmttest
  • tcttest
  • tcucodec
  • tcumttest
  • tcutest

Verlauf

Projektgeschichte und Nutzung

Tokyo Cabinet is FAL Labs' C library for embedded database files, positioned by its official documentation as a modern DBM implementation and a successor to GDBM and QDBM. It stores key/value records in hash tables, B+ trees, fixed-length arrays, and a table-style database, with no separate server required.

Projektgeschichte

The project page carries a 2006-2011 FAL Labs copyright notice and the fundamental specification carries a 2006-2010 notice, with the public page last updated on 2010-08-05. The official overview says Tokyo Cabinet was written and maintained by FAL Labs and developed to improve space efficiency, time efficiency, multithreaded parallelism, usability, robustness, and 64-bit support over earlier DBM products.

The specification is unusually explicit about Tokyo Cabinet's DBM lineage: it compares the API to UNIX DBM/NDBM/GDBM access methods, says Tokyo Cabinet is an alternative for DBM because of higher performance, and lists restrictions of traditional DBM and QDBM that Tokyo Cabinet removed. That makes it part of the classic Unix embedded-database family rather than the later networked NoSQL-server lineage.

Adoptionsgeschichte

Official documentation says Tokyo Cabinet shipped C, Perl, Ruby, Java, and Lua APIs, ran on C99/POSIX platforms, and provided source packages while directing binary-package users to distributors. The Homebrew formula reflects that distributor adoption: package managers kept it available for developers who needed the library and its command-line inspection/test tools long after the upstream page had become mostly archival.

Wie es verwendet wird

The documented install flow is the standard source-package sequence: `./configure`, `make`, `make check`, and `make install`. The installed payload includes headers, `libtokyocabinet`, pkg-config metadata, many `tc*` command-line programs, man pages, and API docs; the specification says those command-line interfaces are useful for prototyping, testing, and debugging.

In practical package-manager use, Tokyo Cabinet is the sort of dependency installed because another program wants a compact embedded key/value store, or because a developer wants direct access to `tchmgr`, `tcbmgr`, `tctmgr`, and related tools for inspecting hash, B+ tree, fixed, table, and abstract database files.

Warum Paket-Nerds sich dafür interessieren

Tokyo Cabinet matters to package nerds because it sits at the intersection of old Unix DBM culture and the late-2000s key/value-store boom: tiny C library, source tarballs, pkg-config file, language bindings, and many CLI utilities. It also spawned or sat beside a recognizable Tokyo/FAL Labs ecosystem, including Tokyo Tyrant for remote service, Tokyo Dystopia for full-text search, Tokyo Promenade, Kyoto Cabinet, and later Tkrzw.

Zeitleiste

  • 2006: Official copyright range begins for Tokyo Cabinet.
  • 2010: Official pages last updated and latest source package listed as 1.4.48.
  • 2011: Official project page copyright range ends.
  • Current: Upstream page recommends Tkrzw as a more powerful and convenient successor.

Related projects

  • The official page names Tokyo Tyrant, Tokyo Dystopia, Tokyo Promenade, and Kyoto Cabinet as sibling projects, and recommends Tkrzw as a later successor. The specification also frames Tokyo Cabinet as a successor to GDBM and QDBM.

Sicherheitslage

Risikostufe: blue

broad file, network, media, or database tool signal.

Risikoklassifikator

blue Risiko · mittel Konfidenz · tool

Warum

  • broad file, network, media, or database tool signal

Signale

  • text:database

Installationsverhalten

  • In den Formelmetadaten ist kein Homebrew-Post-install-Hook erfasst.
  • Homebrew-Bottle-Metadaten sind für 6 Plattformziele verfügbar.

Empfohlene Prüfung

Prüfe vor unbeaufsichtigter Agent-Nutzung, ob das Tool Klartext-Credentials liest, Remote-Zustand schreibt, Artefakte veröffentlicht oder Plugins ausführt.

Executables

Installierte Executables

BefehlArtSichtbarkeitHinweis
tcamgrcliglobales Executable
tcamttestcliglobales Executable
tcatestcliglobales Executable
tcbmgrcliglobales Executable
tcbmttestcliglobales Executable
tcbtestcliglobales Executable
tcfmgrcliglobales Executable
tcfmttestcliglobales Executable
tcftestcliglobales Executable
tchmgrcliglobales Executable
tchmttestcliglobales Executable
tchtestcliglobales Executable
tctmgrcliglobales Executable
tctmttestcliglobales Executable
tcttestcliglobales Executable
tcucodeccliglobales Executable
tcumttestcliglobales Executable
tcutestcliglobales Executable

Aktualität

Version und Aktualität

Diese Signale trennen das Alter der Seitengenerierung, Aktivität des Paketmanagers und Upstream-Release-Vergleich. Versionsrückstand wird nur gemeldet, wenn eine Evidenz-URL und vergleichbare Versionen vorhanden sind.

Seite generiert2026-07-10
Manager-Version1.4.48
Manager aktualisiert
lokale DatenOK
Upstreamnot checked
neueste erkannte Versionnicht erkannt

https://dbmx.net/tokyocabinet/

  • InfoNo package-manager update timestamp was available.niedrig Konfidenz
  • InfoRelease/tag comparison is only available for GitHub repositories.https://dbmx.net/tokyocabinet/none Konfidenz

Installationsmetadaten

Paketmetadaten

Paketschlüsselbrew:tokyo-cabinet
Version1.4.48
PaketmanagerHomebrew
Paketmanager-Seitehttps://formulae.brew.sh/formula/tokyo-cabinet
Homepagehttps://dbmx.net/tokyocabinet/
Upstream-Dokumentationhttps://dbmx.net/tokyocabinet
LizenzLGPL-2.1-or-later
Quellarchivhttps://dbmx.net/tokyocabinet/tokyocabinet-1.4.48.tar.gz
Von macOS bereitgestellte Bibliothekenbzip2
Bottleverfügbar (auf arm64_linux, arm64_sequoia, arm64_sonoma, arm64_tahoe, sonoma, x86_64_linux)
Homebrew post-installnicht definiert
Dienstkeiner deklariert

Registry-Fakten

Details aus der Quelldatenbank

Source DatabaseHomebrew formula API
Taphomebrew/core
Full Nametokyo-cabinet
Version Scheme0
Revision0
Bottle Stable Root URLhttps://ghcr.io/v2/homebrew/core
Deprecatedno
Disabledno
Keg Onlyno
URL Keys
  • stable

Quellspur

Aus Repository-Daten generiert

Diese Seite wird von av-web aus dem privaten Paket-SQLite-Artefakt bereitgestellt, das scripts/generate-pkg-sqlite.py erstellt.

Verwendete Quellen

  • Geiger risk classifier
  • Nucleus package database
  • av.db category and tag curation
  • cross-ecosystem install command graph
  • curated package history
  • package relationship graph
  • package version freshness
  • package-page enrichment