We will no longer be actively supporting KuzuDB

(kuzudb.com)

71 points | by nrjames 2 days ago ago

58 comments

  • xdfgh1112 2 days ago ago

    Abandoned for a new project. Kuzu is Japanese for unwanted/useless scraps or garbage, so I suppose it's still living up to its name.

  • redpink 2 days ago ago

    gitlab just announced knowledge graph with kuzu db. i wonder how it will turns out

  • nrjames 2 days ago ago

    I've been excited about Kuzu DB as a SQLite-style graph database. It looks like the devs are moving on to something else and no longer will support it, as of 10 October.

    Their message reads, "Kuzu is working on something new! We will no longer be actively supporting KuzuDB. You can access the full archive of KuzuDB here: GitHub" https://github.com/kuzudb/kuzu

  • scosman 2 days ago ago

    Oh too bad. Small fast embedded graph DBs are rare. Any good alternatives?

  • OutOfHere 2 days ago ago

    If I can't trust their first project (KuzuDB), then why on earth would I trust any subsequent project by them? I won't.

    This is why I stick to SQLite or PostgreSQL when it comes to databases. An LLM can trivially write me the commonly necessary graph queries if I should need them.

    • jabr 2 days ago ago

      My best guess is the company was acqui-hired and will soon be working on implementing Kuzu's tech in a different database owned by the acquirer.

      My _hope_ is that it was some IP issue with the University of Waterloo and a new company will appear shortly and pretty much pick up where they left off, but that's probably just wishful thinking on my part.

    • SoftTalker 2 days ago ago

      Why does an MIT-licensed open source project owe you anything whatsoever?

      • rowanG077 2 days ago ago

        How did you interpret this person comment as about being owed anything? It's simply a fact of life that it's not smart to put your eggs into an unstable basket.

      • OutOfHere 2 days ago ago

        It's not about what is owed; it's about what can be trusted. The people behind Kuzu have shown that they cannot be trusted to be used.

        • SoftTalker a day ago ago

          I don't see why. Every project periodically decides what features they will move forward with and what features they will drop. Some users will have built dependencies on those dropped features. That's their problem, not the software project developers.

          Python dropped or changed a lot of things between Python 2 and Python 3, creating a lot of rework for a lot of users. Are they not to be trusted as a project? Is every project obligated to support every feature they ever released, forever, to be considered trustworthy?

          To quote from the MIT license: THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED “AS IS”, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND

          • OutOfHere a day ago ago

            Huh. Your examples are not relevant because they do not apply to killing a project altogether, let alone to killing your very first project. Kuzu did both.

            • scosman 16 hours ago ago

              They tried something hard and it didn’t work out. In the process they did some great work. Plus they gave it all away for free, allowing literally anyone in the world to continue the work. They are awesome.

              If the rest of us criticized people making open source like you do, there wouldn’t be any.

              • OutOfHere 13 hours ago ago

                That's not how open source adoption works. For open source to get used, people have to trust that it will be maintained. The people behind Kuzu ruined any trust in them. This is also why people prefer established choices over the fashion of the day.

                • scosman 8 hours ago ago

                  No that's exactly how open source works. They are under zero obligation to wake up tomorrow and continue to work on it. Everyone is lucky they open sourced it, and anyone else is welcome to pick it up where they left off. Contributing a impressive piece of work the community is an accomplishment.

                  Disparaging them and suggesting people should not trust them in the future for not providing ongoing maintenance, when that was never part of the OSS deal, shows a misunderstanding of what OSS is. Pay them for a maintenance contract, or don't expect maintenance. Stop complaining they didn't fulfill some social contract that existed only in your head.

  • adsharma 2 days ago ago
    • NewJazz 2 days ago ago

      Note that the repo mentions "some of our resources are moving from our website to GitHub: "Docs: http://kuzudb.github.io/docs, Blog: http://kuzudb.github.io/blog" but those links currently redirect to kuzudb.com. I presume they won't be covering the domain name costs in the future and that the transition is in-progress.

  • Ultimatt 2 days ago ago
    • dtenwolde 2 days ago ago

      Hi there, leading DuckPGQ developer here :) Thanks for the shoutout! I've been busy working on an internship at DuckDB labs so DuckPGQ has gotten less attention, but I'll get back to it soon (December most likely) and will update the extension to support DuckDB v1.4.0 and v1.4.1 this week hopefully.

    • adsharma 2 days ago ago

      PGQ requires you to write using SQL and read using a graph query language. GQL is a standalone language that supports reads/writes. But much of the community is still using cypher.

      More on this here:

      https://adsharma.github.io/beating-the-CAP-theorem-for-graph...

      • aftbit 2 days ago ago

        As far as I can tell, this has nothing to do with CAP theorem or distributed systems. It's just being used as an analogy.

        > [CAP theorem] states that any distributed storage system can provide only two of these three guarantees: Consistency, Availability and Partition safety.

        > In the realm of graph databases, we observe a similar “two out three” situation. You can either have scalable systems that are not fully open source or you can have open source systems designed for small graphs. Details below.

        (the article follows)

        > This is one solution to the CAP theorem for graphs. We can store a billion scale graph using this method in parquet files and use a free, cheap and open source solution to traverse them, perform joins without storage costs that are prohibitively high.

        • adsharma 2 days ago ago

          That's right - it was a fun 2 out of 3 analogy.

          The real question being raised in the blog post is - should the next generation graph databases pursue a local-only embedded strategy or build on top of object storage like many non-graph and vector embedded databases are doing.

          Specifically, DuckLake (using system catalog for metadata instead of JSON/YAML) is interesting. I became aware of Apache GraphAr (incubating) after writing the blog post. But it seems to be designed for data interchange between graph databases instead of designing for primary storage.

          • aftbit 2 days ago ago

            I only mentioned it because I clicked it wondering if someone had found a way to "cheat" CAP for graph databases. When I saw that it was being used as an analogy and not literally, I figured I'd comment.

            I still don't quite get the analogy. What are the 2 out of 3 that you can have? The second paragraph I quoted gives a classic 1 out of 2 dilemma - either scalable _or_ open-source.

            • adsharma 2 days ago ago

              DuckDB is scalable (can handle TPC-H 1TB) and open source, but doesn't support graphs natively. It supports some graph queries on a SQL native columnar storage.

              With the proposed solution, you'll be able to query larger graphs on an open source graph native engine. Thus beating the "CAP theorem for graphs".

    • jabr 2 days ago ago

      DuckPGQ is an interesting option, but unfortunately, that project hasn't been touched in a few months and does not currently work with the latest version of DuckDB.

      • dtenwolde 2 days ago ago

        Hi there, leading DuckPGQ developer here. I've been busy with other projects but will get back to it soon enough :)

  • mark_l_watson 2 days ago ago

    I use the Python Kuzu graph database library, super convenient for local experiments. I see no reason to stop using it. The underlying database is archived on GitHub so it isn’t going anywhere.

    • adsharma 2 days ago ago

      One thing you might want to watch out for is that the storage format on disk is not stabilized.

      Last few releases, you couldn't open a file written by a previous version of kuzu. You had to constantly export/import as new versions were released.

      This is no longer a problem for kuzu because development has stopped. But any open source fork needs to think about how to stabilize storage.

      In the past few releases kuzu switched from database as a directory to a single file database.

  • mentalgear 2 days ago ago

    Strangely enough, it was just that day when I discovered this formidable embeddable graph database that the "archived" banner also appeared. Bummer. I wonder why they stopped as there was a long string of commits for years.

  • canadiantim 2 days ago ago

    Kuzudb was actively working on their cloud/enterprise solution and talking with people signing up for it. Wonder if the timing is related

  • lmeyerov 2 days ago ago

    Reposting:

    --

    Rough news on kuzu being archived - startups are hard and Semih + Prashanth did so much in ways I value!

    For those left in the lurch for compute-tier Apache Arrow-native graph queries for modern OSS ecosystems, GFQL [1] should be pretty fascinating, and hopefully less stress due to a sustainable governance model. Likewise, as an oss deeptech community, we add interesting new bits like the optional record-breaking GPU mode with NVIDIA Rapids [4].

    GFQL, the graph dataframe-native query language, is increasingly how Graphistry, Inc. and our community work with graphs at the compute tier. Whether the data comes from a tabular ETL pipeline, a file, SQL, nosql, or a graph storage DB, GFQL makes it easy to do on-the-fly graph transforms and queries at the compute tier at sub-second speeds for graphs anywhere from 100 edges to 1,000,000,000 [3]. Currently, we support arrow/pandas, and arrow / nvidia rapids as the main engine modes.

    While we're not marketing it much yet, GFQL is already used daily by every single Graphistry user behind-the-scenes, and directly by analysts & developers at banks, startups, etc around the world. We built it because we needed an OSS compute-tier graph solution for working with modern data systems that separate storage from compute. Likewise, data is a team sport, so it is used by folks on teams who have to rapidly wrangle graphs, whether for analysis, data science, ETL, visualization, or AI. Imagine an ETL pipeline or notebook flow or web app where data comes from files, elastic search, databricks, and neo4j, and you need to do more on-the-fly graph stuff with it.

    We started [4] building what became GFQL before Kuzu because it solves real architectural & graph productivity problems that have been challenging our team, our users, and the broader graph community for years now. Likewise, by going dataframe-native & GPU-mode from day 1, it's now a large part of how we approach GPU graph deep tech investments throughout our stack, and means it's a sustainably funded system. We are looking at bigger R&D and commercial support contracts with organizations needing to do subsecond billion+-scale with us so we can build even more, faster (hit me up if that's you!), but overall, most of our users are just like ourselves, and the day-to-day is wanting an easy OSS way to wrangle graphs in our apps & notebooks. As we continue to smooth it out (ex: we'll be adding a familiar Cypher syntax), we'll be writing about it a lot more.

    Links:

    * ReadTheDocs: SQL <> Cypher <> GFQL - https://pygraphistry.readthedocs.io/en/latest/gfql/translate...

    * pip install: https://pypi.org/project/graphistry/

    * 2025 keynote - OSS interactive billion-edge GFQL analytics on 1 gpu: https://www.linkedin.com/posts/graphistry_at-graph-the-plane...

    * 2022 blogpost w/ Ben Lorica first painting the vision: https://thedataexchange.media/the-graph-intelligence-stack/

  • ellisv 2 days ago ago

    With property graphs being adopting in the SQL standard, this isn’t surprising.

    • gkorland 2 days ago ago

      The fact that GQL is now supported by some of the relational Database, doesn't mean they'll become an alternative to native Graph Databases.

      • Xenoamorphous 2 days ago ago

        Yeah I guess it’s like saying that relational DBs supporting native JSON type meant the end of NoSQL DBs.

        • vovavili 2 days ago ago

          >relational DBs supporting native JSON type meant the end of NoSQL DBs

          This holds true for 95% of cases of well-made software.

        • monero-xmr 2 days ago ago

          It pretty much did except for very specific use cases

  • wey-gu 2 days ago ago

    Yeah, so sad as a contributor and downstream user.

    Hopefully they will ship cool new things.

  • badmonster 2 days ago ago

    kuzu is a great project.