dqlite is a C library that implements an embeddable and replicated SQL database engine with high-availability and automatic failover.
The acronym "dqlite" stands for "distributed SQLite", meaning that dqlite extends SQLite with a network protocol that can connect together various instances of your application and have them act as a highly-available cluster, with no dependency on external databases.
- Asynchronous single-threaded implementation using libuv as event loop.
- Custom wire protocol optimized for SQLite primitives and data types.
- Data replication based on the Raft algorithm and its efficient C-raft implementation.
The dqlite library is released under a slightly modified version of LGPLv3, that includes a copyright exception allowing users to statically link the library code in their project and release the final work under their own terms. See the full license text.
The simplest way to see dqlite in action is to use the demo program that comes with the Go dqlite bindings. Please see the relevant documentation in that project.
A talk about dqlite was given at FOSDEM 2020, you can watch it here.
If you wish to write a client, please refer to the wire protocol documentation.
If you are on a Debian-based system, you can get the latest stable release from dqlite's stable PPA:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:dqlite/stable
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install libdqlite-dev
To build libdqlite
from source you'll need:
Your distribution should already provide you with a pre-built libuv shared library.
To build the raft library:
git clone https://github.com/canonical/raft.git
cd raft
autoreconf -i
./configure
make
sudo make install
cd ..
Once all the required libraries are installed, in order to build the dqlite shared library itself, you can run:
autoreconf -i
./configure
make
sudo make install