foundationdb
7.2.5
About: FoundationDB is a distributed, transactional key-value store (database).
Pre-release. ![]() ![]() |
FoundationDB is a distributed database designed to handle large volumes of structured data across clusters of commodity servers. It organizes data as an ordered key-value store and employs ACID transactions for all operations. It is especially well-suited for read/write workloads but also has excellent performance for write-intensive workloads. Users interact with the database using API language binding.
To learn more about FoundationDB, visit foundationdb.org
Documentation can be found online at https://apple.github.io/foundationdb/. The documentation covers details of API usage, background information on design philosophy, and extensive usage examples. Docs are built from the source in this repo.
The FoundationDB Forums are the home for most of the discussion and communication about the FoundationDB project. We welcome your participation! We want FoundationDB to be a great project to be a part of and, as part of that, have established a Code of Conduct to establish what constitutes permissible modes of interaction.
Contributing to FoundationDB can be in contributions to the code base, sharing your experience and insights in the community on the Forums, or contributing to projects that make use of FoundationDB. Please see the contributing guide for more specifics.
Developers interested in using FoundationDB can get started by downloading and installing a binary package. Please see the downloads page for a list of available packages.
Developers on an OS for which there is no binary package, or who would like to start hacking on the code, can get started by compiling from source.
The official docker image for building is foundationdb/build
which has all dependencies installed. The Docker image definitions used
by FoundationDB team members can be found in the dedicated
repository..
To build outside the official docker image you'll need at least these dependencies:
If compiling for local development, please set
-DUSE_WERROR=ON
in cmake. Our CI compiles with
-Werror
on, so this way you'll find out about compiler
warnings that break the build earlier.
Once you have your dependencies, you can run cmake and then build:
cd <PATH_TO_BUILD_DIRECTORY>
cmake -G Ninja <PATH_TO_FOUNDATIONDB_DIRECTORY>
ninja # If this crashes it probably ran out of memory. Try ninja -j1
The language bindings that are supported by cmake will have a
corresponding README.md
file in the corresponding
bindings/lang
directory.
Generally, cmake will build all language bindings for which it can find all necessary dependencies. After each successful cmake run, cmake will tell you which language bindings it is going to build.
compile_commands.json
CMake can build a compilation database for you. However, the default
generated one is not too useful as it operates on the generated files.
When running make, the build system will create another
compile_commands.json
file in the source directory. This
can than be used for tools like CCLS, CQuery, etc. This
way you can get code-completion and code navigation in flow. It is not
yet perfect (it will show a few errors) but we are constantly working on
improving the development experience.
CMake will not produce a compile_commands.json
, you must
pass -DCMAKE_EXPORT_COMPILE_COMMANDS=ON
. This also enables
the target processed_compile_commands
, which rewrites
compile_commands.json
to describe the actor compiler source
file, not the post-processed output files, and places the output file in
the source directory. This file should then be picked up automatically
by any tooling.
Note that if building inside of the foundationdb/build
docker image, the resulting paths will still be incorrect and require
manual fixing. One will wish to re-run cmake
with
-DCMAKE_EXPORT_COMPILE_COMMANDS=OFF
to prevent it from
reverting the manual changes.
CMake has built in support for a number of popular IDEs. However, because flow files are precompiled with the actor compiler, an IDE will not be very useful as a user will only be presented with the generated code - which is not what she wants to edit and get IDE features for.
The good news is, that it is possible to generate project files for
editing flow with a supported IDE. There is a CMake option called
OPEN_FOR_IDE
which will generate a project which can be
opened in an IDE for editing. You won't be able to build this project,
but you will be able to edit the files and get most edit and navigation
features your IDE supports.
For example, if you want to use XCode to make changes to FoundationDB you can create a XCode-project with the following command:
cmake -G Xcode -DOPEN_FOR_IDE=ON <FDB_SOURCE_DIRECTORY>
You should create a second build-directory which you will use for building and debugging.
Check out this repo on your server.
Install compile-time dependencies from ports.
(Optional) Use tmpfs & ccache for significantly faster repeat builds
(Optional) Install a JDK for Java Bindings. FoundationDB currently builds with Java 8.
Navigate to the directory where you checked out the foundationdb repo.
Build from source.
sudo pkg install -r FreeBSD \
shells/bash devel/cmake devel/ninja devel/ccache \
lang/mono lang/python3 \
devel/boost-libs devel/libeio \
security/openssl
mkdir .build && cd .build
cmake -G Ninja \
-DUSE_CCACHE=on \
-DUSE_DTRACE=off \
..
ninja -j 10
# run fast tests
ctest -L fast
# run all tests
ctest --output-on-failure -v
There are no special requirements for Linux. A docker image can be
pulled from foundationdb/build
that has all of
FoundationDB's dependencies pre-installed, and is what the CI uses to
build and test PRs.
cmake -G Ninja <FDB_SOURCE_DIR>
ninja
cpack -G DEB
For RPM simply replace DEB
with RPM
.
The build under MacOS will work the same way as on Linux. To get boost and ninja you can use Homebrew.
cmake -G Ninja <PATH_TO_FOUNDATIONDB_SOURCE>
To generate a installable package,
ninja
$SRCDIR/packaging/osx/buildpkg.sh . $SRCDIR
Under Windows, only Visual Studio with ClangCl is supported
-DBOOST_ROOT=<PATH_TO_BOOST>
with cmake
if unpacked elsewheremkdir build && cd build
cmake -G "Visual Studio 16 2019" -A x64 -T ClangCl <PATH_TO_FOUNDATIONDB_SOURCE>
msbuild /p:Configuration=Release foundationdb.sln
/p:UseMultiToolTask=true
and
/p:CL_MPCount=<NUMBER_OF_PARALLEL_JOBS>