A modern NoSQL database, powered by BlueQL.
Skytable is a NoSQL database implemented using modern design paradigms, that focuses on performance, flexibility, and scalability.
Skytable is primarily in-memory, uses multithreaded asynchronous I/O and a custom AOF-based storage engine with advanced delayed durability transactions for efficient disk I/O. Skytable's data model is based on a column-oriented structure with support for additional data models(WIP). Querying is done using BlueQL, a SQL-based query language hardened against injection attacks, written specifically for Skytable.
Skytable is best-suited for applications that need to store large-scale data, need high-performance and low latencies.
You can read more about Skytable's architecture, including information on the clustering and HA implementation that we're currently working on, and limitations on this page.
- Spaces, models and more: For flexible data definition
- Powerful querying with BlueQL: A modern query language based on SQL
- Rich data modeling: Use
model
s to define data with complex types, collections and more - Performant: Optimized multithreaded network I/O, write batching and several other optimizations
- Secure: Injection deterrence using BlueQL and other memory safety measures
- Enforces best practices: If you're building with Skytable today, the practices you'll get used to here will let you easily take on the job of building performant systems, even outside Skytable
Learn more about Skytable's features here.
- Set up Skytable on your machine: You'll need to download a bundled release file from the releases page. Unzip the files and you're ready to go.
- Start the database server:
./skyd --auth-root-password <password>
with your choice of a password for theroot
account. Theroot
account is just like aroot
account on Unix based systems that has control over everything. - Start the interactive client REPL:
./skysh
and then enter your password. - Your setup is now complete.
For a more detailed guide on installation and deployment, follow the guide here.
Skytable has SPACE
s instead of DATABASE
s due to signficant operational differences (and because SPACE
s store a lot more than tabular data).
With the REPL started, follow this guide:
-
Create a
space
and switch to it:CREATE SPACE myspace USE myspace
-
Create a
model
:CREATE MODEL myspace.mymodel(username: string, password: string, notes: list { type: string })
The rough representation for this in Rust would be:
pub struct MyModel { username: String, password: String, notes: Vec<String>, }
-
INSERT
some data:INSERT INTO mymodel('sayan', 'pass123', [])
-
UPDATE
some data:UPDATE mymodel SET notes = "my first note" WHERE username = 'sayan'
-
SELECT
some dataSELECT * FROM mymodel WHERE username = 'sayan'
-
Modify and run your own queries to understand how things work. And then make sure you read the documentation learn BlueQL.
For a complete guide on Skytable, it's architecture, BlueQL, queries and more we strongly recommend you to read the documentation here.
While you're seeing strings and other values being used here, this is so because the REPL client smartly parameterizes queries behind the scenes. BlueQL has mandatory parameterization. (See below to see how the Rust client handles this)
You need a client driver to use Skytable in your programs. Officially, we maintain a regularly updated Rust client driver which is liberally license under the Apache-2.0 license so that you can use it anywhere.
Using the Rust client driver, it's very straightforward to run queries thanks to Rust's powerful type system and macros:
use skytable::{Config, query};
fn main() {
let mut db = Config::new_default("username", "password").connect().unwrap();
let query = query!("select username, password from myspace.mymodel where username = ?", "sayan");
let (username, password): (String, Vec<u8>) = db.query_parse(&query).unwrap();
// do something with it
}
You can find more information on client drivers on this page. If you want to help write a client driver for your language of choice, we're here to support your work. Please reach out to: [email protected] or leave a message on our Discord server.
We exclusively use Discord for most real-time communications — you can chat with developers, maintainers, and our amazing users. Outside that, we recommend that you use our GitHub Discussions page for any questions or open a new issue if you think you've found a bug.
Please read the contributing guide here.
Please read the acknowledgements document.
Skytable is distributed under the AGPL-3.0 License. You may not use Skytable's logo for other projects.