Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

Database kernels have some of the strictest resource behavior constraints of all software. Every one I have worked on in vaguely recent memory has managed memory. There is no dynamic allocation from the OS. Many invariants important to databases rely on strict control of resource behavior. An enormous amount of optimization is dependent on this, so performance-engineered systems generally don’t have issues with memory safety.

Modern database kernels are memory-bandwidth bound. Micro-managing the memory is a core mechanic as a consequence. It is difficult to micro-manage memory with extreme efficiency if it isn’t implicitly safe. Companies routinely run formal model checkers like TLA+ on these implementations. It isn’t a rando spaffing C++ code.

I’ve used PostgreSQL a lot but no one thinks of it as highly optimized.



Ok but can you give one example?

You can micro-manage memory in Rust if you really want so I'm not sure why this would be a factor.




Consider applying for YC's Winter 2026 batch! Applications are open till Nov 10

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: