Skip to content

Scalable datastore for metrics, events, and real-time analytics

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

Cistern/influxdb

This branch is 25688 commits behind influxdata/influxdb:master.

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date
Feb 25, 2016
Jan 10, 2016
Feb 11, 2016
Feb 25, 2016
Feb 25, 2016
Feb 9, 2016
Feb 25, 2016
Feb 25, 2016
Feb 20, 2016
Feb 17, 2016
Feb 10, 2016
Feb 8, 2016
Feb 25, 2016
Feb 10, 2016
Feb 10, 2016
Feb 10, 2016
Feb 10, 2016
Feb 25, 2016
Feb 10, 2016
Dec 14, 2015
Dec 29, 2015
Feb 25, 2016
Feb 2, 2016
Feb 25, 2016
Aug 19, 2015
Aug 7, 2015
Feb 10, 2016
Feb 10, 2016
Feb 10, 2016
Feb 10, 2016
Feb 23, 2016
Jan 16, 2016
Nov 4, 2015
Feb 23, 2016
Oct 28, 2015
Feb 12, 2016
Feb 4, 2016
Feb 26, 2016
Feb 10, 2016
Feb 2, 2016
Dec 14, 2015
Oct 15, 2015
Dec 16, 2015
Feb 10, 2016
Sep 8, 2015
Jan 4, 2016
Feb 16, 2016
Jan 10, 2016
Feb 26, 2016

Repository files navigation

InfluxDB Circle CI

An Open-Source, Distributed, Time Series Database

InfluxDB is an open source distributed time series database with no external dependencies. It's useful for recording metrics, events, and performing analytics.

Features

  • Built-in HTTP API so you don't have to write any server side code to get up and running.
  • Data can be tagged, allowing very flexible querying.
  • SQL-like query language.
  • Clustering is supported out of the box, so that you can scale horizontally to handle your data. Clustering is currently in an alpha state.
  • Simple to install and manage, and fast to get data in and out.
  • It aims to answer queries in real-time. That means every data point is indexed as it comes in and is immediately available in queries that should return in < 100ms.

Installation

We recommend installing InfluxDB using one of the pre-built packages. Then start InfluxDB using:

  • service influxdb start if you have installed InfluxDB using an official Debian or RPM package.
  • systemctl start influxdb if you have installed InfluxDB using an official Debian or RPM package, and are running a distro with systemd. For example, Ubuntu 15 or later.
  • $GOPATH/bin/influxd if you have built InfluxDB from source.

Getting Started

Create your first database

curl -G 'http://localhost:8086/query' --data-urlencode "q=CREATE DATABASE mydb"

Insert some data

curl -XPOST 'http://localhost:8086/write?db=mydb' \
-d 'cpu,host=server01,region=uswest load=42 1434055562000000000'

curl -XPOST 'http://localhost:8086/write?db=mydb' \
-d 'cpu,host=server02,region=uswest load=78 1434055562000000000'

curl -XPOST 'http://localhost:8086/write?db=mydb' \
-d 'cpu,host=server03,region=useast load=15.4 1434055562000000000'

Query for the data

curl -G http://localhost:8086/query?pretty=true --data-urlencode "db=mydb" \
--data-urlencode "q=SELECT * FROM cpu WHERE host='server01' AND time < now() - 1d"

Analyze the data

curl -G http://localhost:8086/query?pretty=true --data-urlencode "db=mydb" \
--data-urlencode "q=SELECT mean(load) FROM cpu WHERE region='uswest'"

Documentation

Contributing

If you're feeling adventurous and want to contribute to InfluxDB, see our contributing doc for info on how to make feature requests, build from source, and run tests.

Looking for Support?

InfluxDB offers a number of services to help your project succeed. We offer Developer Support for organizations in active development, Managed Hosting to make it easy to move into production, and Enterprise Support for companies requiring the best response times, SLAs, and technical fixes. Visit our support page or contact [email protected] to learn how we can best help you succeed.

About

Scalable datastore for metrics, events, and real-time analytics

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Go 96.3%
  • Shell 1.5%
  • Python 0.8%
  • JavaScript 0.4%
  • Protocol Buffer 0.3%
  • HTML 0.3%
  • Other 0.4%