That sounds like a typical application for a
tied hash to me, the replacement of perl4's
dbmopen and related functions.
As for backend, you might want to choose between the various backends as supported by AnyDBM_File; BerkeleyDB, in particular BerkeleyDB::Hash might be a good choice.
The advantage is that no rewriting of your code is necessary: it's just a hash. You will likely lose raw speed, though.
If you don't mind rewriting, you might want to look into DBD::SQLite as a backend for DBI, which gives you a SQL interface to your data.
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