Like MySQL, Drizzle had a client/server architecture and uses SQL as its primary command language. Old Drizzle files are distributed under version 2 and 3 of the GNU General Public License (GPL) with portions, including the protocol drivers and replication messaging under the BSD license.
In October 2010, Drizzle had 13,478 total contributions, 96 total contributors, and 37 active contributors.[6] It was also announced that Drizzle had entered Beta.[7] The first GA version was released in March 2011.[8] Drizzle has actively participated in the Google Summer of Code Project since 2010.[9][10][11][12]
By late 2013 the project's active phase had come to an end. In July 2016 the maintainers concluded that the time had come for "winding things up officially" because "none of us have any time to dedicate to Drizzle anymore".[13]
Uses
Drizzle is targeted at the web-infrastructure and cloud computing markets. The developers of the product describe it as a "smaller, slimmer and (hopefully) faster version of MySQL".[14]
Drizzle is a re-designed version of the MySQL v6.0 codebase and is designed around a central concept of having a microkernel architecture. Features such as the query cache and authentication system are now plugins to the database, which follow the general theme of "pluggable storage engines" that were introduced in MySQL 5.1. It supports PAM, LDAP, and HTTP AUTH for authentication via plugins it ships. Via its plugin system it supports logging to files, syslog, and remote services such as RabbitMQ and Gearman. Drizzle is an ACID-compliant relational database that supports transactions via an MVCC design.[15]
Like MySQL, Drizzle supports concurrent multiple engines. Via this, Drizzle includes built-in support for B+ tree and hash indexes. Drizzle's query planner is capable of using multiple indexes, from multiple engines to satisfy complex queries, using temporary in-memory bitmap index of operations.
Triggers
Database triggers in Drizzle are supported for DML, DDL, and a number of an additional event-based operations in the server. The PrimeBase BLOB streaming system, which allows Drizzle to stream binary large objects (BLOBs) via HTTP, makes use of this system. All triggers for Drizzle currently must be written in C++.
Query rewrite
Any query can be matched and rewritten dynamically that is sent to the server. This action is done before parsing occurs.
Data types
A wide variety of native data types are supported, including:
Variable-length arrays (including text and composite types) up to 4 GB in total storage size
An enumerated type (enum) that supports current 10,000 types
Dynamic SQL
Through support of the EXECUTE command Drizzle can operate dynamic multi-statement SQL. Via the keyword CONCURRENT it can operate these statements in parallel.
Replication
Replication in Drizzle is done by generating "messages" using the Google Protocol Buffers library. These messages are then stored and executed on remote servers. The message format is a non-SQL neutral format which has allowed Drizzle to have replication appliers to RabbitMQ, Memcached, MySQL, Voldemort, and Apache Cassandra.
Support and licensing
Drizzle is licensed under version two and three of the GPL, with some parts, such as libdrizzle client library, under the BSD license.