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Pronounced (influxdb eye-ox), short for iron oxide. This is the new core of InfluxDB written in Rust on top of Apache Arrow.

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InfluxDB IOx

TODO: Blog post summary here

Quick Start

To compile and run InfluxDB IOx from source, you'll need a Rust compiler and a flatc FlatBuffers compiler.

Cloning the Repository

Using git, check out the code by cloning this repository. If you use the git command line, this looks like:

$ git clone git@github.com:influxdata/influxdb_iox.git

Then change into the directory containing the code:

$ cd influxdb_iox

The rest of the instructions assume you are in this directory.

Installing Rust

The easiest way to install Rust is by using rustup, a Rust version manager. Follow the instructions on the rustup site for your operating system.

By default, rustup will install the latest stable verison of Rust. InfluxDB IOx is currently using a nightly version of Rust to get performance benefits from the unstable simd feature. The exact nightly version is specified in the rust-toolchain file. When you're in the directory containing this repository's code, rustup will look in the rust-toolchain file and automatically install and use the correct Rust version for you. Test this out with:

$ rustc --version

and you should see a nightly version of Rust!

Installing flatc

InfluxDB IOx uses the FlatBuffer serialization format for its write-ahead log. The flatc compiler reads the schema in generated_types/wal.fbs and generates the corresponding Rust code.

Install flatc >= 1.12.0 with one of these methods as appropriate to your operating system:

Once you have installed the packages, you should be able to run:

$ flatc --version

and see the version displayed.

You won't have to run flatc directly; once it's available, Rust's Cargo build tool manages the compilation process by calling flatc for you.

Specifying Configuration

OPTIONAL: There are a number of configuration variables you can choose to customize by specifying values for environment variables in a .env file. To get an example file to start from, run:

cp docs/env.example .env

then edit the newly-created .env file.

For development purposes, the most relevant environment variables are the INFLUXDB_IOX_DB_DIR and TEST_INFLUXDB_IOX_DB_DIR variables that configure where files are stored on disk. The default values are shown in the comments in the example file; to change them, uncomment the relevant lines and change the values to the directories in which you'd like to store the files instead:

INFLUXDB_IOX_DB_DIR=/some/place/else
TEST_INFLUXDB_IOX_DB_DIR=/another/place

Compiling and Starting the Server

InfluxDB IOx is built using Cargo, Rust's package manager and build tool.

To compile for development, run:

$ cargo build

which will create a binary in target/debug that you can run with:

$ ./target/debug/influxdb_iox

You can compile and run with one command by using:

$ cargo run

When compiling for performance testing, build in release mode by using:

$ cargo build --release

which will create the corresponding binary in target/release:

$ ./target/release/influxdb_iox

Similarly, you can do this in one step with:

$ cargo run --release

The server will, by default, start an HTTP API server on port 8080 and a gRPC server on port 8082.

Writing and Reading Data

Data can be stored in InfluxDB IOx by sending it in line protocol format to the /api/v2/write endpoint. Data is stored by organization and bucket names. Here's an example using curl with the organization name company and the bucket name sensors that will send the data in the tests/fixtures/lineproto/metrics.lp file in this repository, assuming that you're running the server on the default port:

curl -v "http://127.0.0.1:8080/api/v2/write?org=company&bucket=sensors" --data-binary @tests/fixtures/lineproto/metrics.lp

To query stored data, use the /api/v2/read endpoint with a SQL query. This example will return all data in the company organization's sensors bucket for the processes measurement:

$ curl -v -G -d 'org=company' -d 'bucket=sensors' --data-urlencode 'sql_query=select * from processes' "http://127.0.0.1:8080/api/v2/read"

Contributing

If you want to contribute to InfluxDB IOx you will need to sign InfluxData's CLA, which can be found with more information on our website.

InfluxDB IOx is written mostly in idiomatic Rust -- please see the Style Guide for more details.

Running Tests

The cargo build tool runs tests as well. Run:

$ cargo test --workspace

Running rustfmt and clippy

CI will check the code formatting with rustfmt and Rust best practices with clippy.

To automatically format your code according to rustfmt style, first make sure rustfmt is installed using rustup:

$ rustup component add rustfmt

Then, whenever you make a change and want to reformat, run:

$ cargo fmt --all

Similarly with clippy, install with:

$ rustup component add clippy

And run with:

$ cargo clippy  --all-targets --workspace

About

Pronounced (influxdb eye-ox), short for iron oxide. This is the new core of InfluxDB written in Rust on top of Apache Arrow.

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