- From: Anthony Durity <a.durity@umail.ucc.ie>
- Date: Wed, 1 Nov 2017 15:38:27 +0000
- To: Niels Vandekeybus <niels@vandekeybus.eu>
- Cc: W3C Ruby RDF mailing list <public-rdf-ruby@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <CALp_+5SdnkbUuKS+bURPOJh=rUzukNdxu-HUtHQFiVy9_ub4Lw@mail.gmail.com>
Thank you for this. I was thinking Virtuoso was too heavyweight for my needs but I will try it out. Can somebody tell me why docker images have gotten so popular? On 1 November 2017 at 15:03, Niels Vandekeybus <niels@vandekeybus.eu> wrote: > Hey Anthony, > > You can give our virtuoso docker a try if you want > > docker run -p 8890:8890 tenforce/virtuoso > > More information on GitHub.com/tenforce/docker-tenforce. > > Kr, > > Niels > > On 1 Nov 2017 12:32, "Anthony Durity" <a.durity@umail.ucc.ie> wrote: > >> Hullo all, >> >> Apologies if this is a stupid question. >> >> I would like to know if there is any tech that would be the triple-store >> equivalent to Sqlite? What I want is to create my only local graph based on >> nodes in Wikidata and data I generate myself. >> >> What technology do people use? Is there a recommended stack? I don't >> necessarily mean something like Ruby on Rails which is convention over >> configuration and "batteries included" by I don't mean Opengraph Virtuoso >> either, that's way too heavyweight. >> >> I'm running Ubuntu 17.10, a fairly popular distro. I can't seem to >> compile Redstone and anyway it appears unmaintained. Cayley looks cool but >> doesn't have its own on-disk back-end? (I don't understand that). Franz >> Allegrograph seems too commercial and lispy (maybe I'm wrong about this.). >> I don't want to use Jena because, um, Java. >> >> I can't find a single simple tutorial about using ruby-rdf to write to, >> modify, and query my own local triple-store. >> >> Most of the time I think it would be easier to define a relational model >> and map to triples on the fly and then I'd use tech that I'm familiar. >> >> For small projects what do people use? I don't want to spend a week >> setting up a local triple-store. I want something that is robust, I can set >> up nearly as easily as Rails, is actively maintained, and supports most of >> the current Semantic Web tech. >> >> Is there something obvious I'm not getting or that I'm overlooking? >> >> Thanks! >> Anthony >> >
Received on Wednesday, 1 November 2017 15:38:57 UTC