TigerBeetle is a financial transactions database designed for mission critical safety and performance to power the next 30 years of OLTP.
First, download a prebuilt copy of TigerBeetle.
On macOS/Linux:
git clone https://github.com/tigerbeetle/tigerbeetle && cd tigerbeetle && ./bootstrap.sh
On Windows:
git clone https://github.com/tigerbeetle/tigerbeetle && cd tigerbeetle && .\bootstrap.ps1
Want to build from source locally? Add -build
as an argument to the bootstrap script.
Then create the TigerBeetle data file.
./tigerbeetle format --cluster=0 --replica=0 --replica-count=1 0_0.tigerbeetle
info(io): creating "0_0.tigerbeetle"...
info(io): allocating 660.140625MiB...
And start the replica.
./tigerbeetle start --addresses=3000 0_0.tigerbeetle
info(io): opening "0_0.tigerbeetle"...
info(main): 0: cluster=0: listening on 127.0.0.1:3000
Now that you've got a cluster running, let's connect to it and do some accounting!
First let's create two accounts. (Don't worry about the details, you can read about them later.)
./tigerbeetle repl --cluster=0 --addresses=3000
TigerBeetle Client
Hit enter after a semicolon to run a command.
Examples:
create_accounts id=1 code=10 ledger=700,
id=2 code=10 ledger=700;
create_transfers id=1 debit_account_id=1 credit_account_id=2 amount=10 ledger=700 code=10;
lookup_accounts id=1;
lookup_accounts id=1, id=2;
create_accounts id=1 code=10 ledger=700,
id=2 code=10 ledger=700;
info(message_bus): connected to replica 0
Now create a transfer of 10
(of some amount/currency) between the two accounts.
create_transfers id=1 debit_account_id=1 credit_account_id=2 amount=10 ledger=700 code=10;
Now, the amount of 10
has been credited to account 2
and debited
from account 1
. Let's query TigerBeetle for these two accounts to
verify!
lookup_accounts id=1, id=2;
{
"id": "1",
"user_data": "0",
"ledger": "700",
"code": "10",
"flags": "",
"debits_pending": "0",
"debits_posted": "10",
"credits_pending": "0",
"credits_posted": "0"
}
{
"id": "2",
"user_data": "0",
"ledger": "700",
"code": "10",
"flags": "",
"debits_pending": "0",
"debits_posted": "0",
"credits_pending": "0",
"credits_posted": "10"
}
And indeed you can see that account 1
has debits_posted
as 10
and account 2
has credits_posted
as 10
. The 10
amount is fully
accounted for!
For further reading:
Watch an introduction to TigerBeetle on The Primeagen for our design decisions regarding performance, safety, and financial accounting debit/credit primitives:
Read more about the history of TigerBeetle, the problem of balance tracking at scale, and the solution of a purpose-built financial transactions database.
Check out our DESIGN doc to see an overview of TigerBeetle's data structures, take a look at our roadmap, and join one of our communities to stay in the loop about fixes and features!
Check out docs.tigerbeetle.com.
Here are a few key pages you might be interested in:
- Deployment
- Usage
- Reference
- Projects using TigerBeetle developed by community members.
- Join the TigerBeetle chat on Slack.
- Follow us on Twitter, YouTube, and Twitch.
- Subscribe to our monthly newsletter for the backstory on recent database changes.
- Check out past and upcoming talks.
First grab the sources and run the setup script:
git clone https://github.com/tigerbeetle/tigerbeetle.git
cd tigerbeetle
scripts/install.sh
With TigerBeetle installed, you are ready to benchmark!
./tigerbeetle benchmark
Read docs/HACKING.md.
See tigerbeetle#259.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use these files except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.