2 stable releases
1.0.1 | Nov 26, 2023 |
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#168 in Database implementations
3MB
87K
SLoC
is the ultimate cloud
database for tomorrow's applications
Develop easier. Build faster. Scale quicker.
A scalable, distributed, collaborative, document-graph database, for the realtime web.
What is SurrealDB?
SurrealDB is an end-to-end cloud native database for web, mobile, serverless, jamstack, backend, and traditional applications. SurrealDB reduces the development time of modern applications by simplifying your database and API stack, removing the need for most server-side components, allowing you to build secure, performant apps quicker and cheaper. SurrealDB acts as both a database and a modern, realtime, collaborative API backend layer. SurrealDB can run as a single server or in a highly-available, highly-scalable distributed mode - with support for SQL querying from client devices, GraphQL, ACID transactions, WebSocket connections, structured and unstructured data, graph querying, full-text indexing, geospatial querying, and row-by-row permissions-based access.
View the features, the latest releases, the product roadmap, and documentation.
Features
- Database server, or embedded library
- Multi-row, multi-table ACID transactions
- Single-node, or highly-scalable distributed mode
- Record links and directed typed graph connections
- Store structured and unstructured data
- Incrementally computed views for pre-computed advanced analytics
- Realtime-api layer, and security permissions built in
- Store and model data in any way with tables, documents, and graph
- Simple schema definition for frontend and backend development
- Connect and query directly from web-browsers and client devices
- Use embedded JavaScript functions for custom advanced functionality
Documentation
For guidance on installation, development, deployment, and administration, see our documentation.
Installation
SurrealDB is designed to be simple to install and simple to run - using just one command from your terminal. In addition to traditional installation, SurrealDB can be installed and run with HomeBrew, Docker, or using any other container orchestration tool such as Docker Compose, Docker Swarm, Rancher, or in Kubernetes.
Install on macOS
The quickest way to get going with SurrealDB on macOS is to use Homebrew. This will install both the command-line tools, and the SurrealDB server as a single executable. If you don't use Homebrew, follow the instructions for Linux below to install SurrealDB.
brew install surrealdb/tap/surreal
Install on Linux
The easiest and preferred way to get going with SurrealDB on Unix operating systems is to install and use the SurrealDB command-line tool. Run the following command in your terminal and follow the on-screen instructions.
curl -sSf https://install.surrealdb.com | sh
Install on Windows
The easiest and preferred way to get going with SurrealDB on Windows is to install and use the SurrealDB command-line tool. Run the following command in your terminal and follow the on-screen instructions.
iwr https://install.surrealdb.com -useb | iex
Run using Docker
Docker can be used to manage and run SurrealDB database instances without the need to install any command-line tools. The SurrealDB docker container contains the full command-line tools for importing and exporting data from a running server, or for running a server itself.
docker run --rm -p 8000:8000 surrealdb/surrealdb:latest start
Update the image to the latest version:
docker pull surrealdb/surrealdb:latest
Getting started
Getting started with SurrealDB is as easy as starting up the SurrealDB database server, choosing your platform, and integrating its SDK into your code. You can easily get started with your platform of choice by reading one of our tutorials.
Client side apps
- Getting started with Javascript
- Getting started with WebAssembly
- Getting started with Ember.js
- Getting started with React.js
- Getting started with Angular.js
- Getting started with Vue.js
- Getting started with Apollo GraphQL
Server side code
- Getting started with Javascript
- Getting started with Node.js
- Getting started with Golang
- Getting started with Rust
- Getting started with Deno
- Getting started with Python (coming soon)
- Getting started with C (coming soon)
- Getting started with Java (coming soon)
- Getting started with Ruby (coming soon)
- Getting started with PHP (coming soon)
- Getting started with Swift (coming soon)
- Getting started with R (coming soon)
Quick look
With strongly-typed data types, data can be fully modelled right in the database.
UPDATE person SET
waist = <int> "34.59",
height = <float> 201,
score = <decimal> 0.3 + 0.3 + 0.3 + 0.1
;
Store dynamically computed fields which are calculated when retrieved.
CREATE person SET
birthday = "2007-06-22",
can_drive = <future> { time::now() > birthday + 18y }
;
Easily work with unstructured or structured data, in schema-less or schema-full mode.
-- Create a schemafull table
DEFINE TABLE user SCHEMAFULL;
-- Specify fields on the user table
DEFINE FIELD name ON TABLE user TYPE object;
DEFINE FIELD name.first ON TABLE user TYPE string;
DEFINE FIELD name.last ON TABLE user TYPE string;
DEFINE FIELD email ON TABLE user TYPE string ASSERT string::is::email($value);
-- Add a unique index on the email field preventing duplicate values
DEFINE INDEX email ON TABLE user COLUMNS email UNIQUE;
-- Create a new event whenever a user changes their email address
DEFINE EVENT email ON TABLE user WHEN $before.email != $after.email THEN (
CREATE event SET user = $this, time = time::now(), value = $after.email, action = 'email_changed'
);
Connect records together with fully directed graph edge connections.
-- Add a graph edge between user:tobie and article:surreal
RELATE user:tobie->write->article:surreal
SET time.written = time::now()
;
-- Add a graph edge between specific users and developers
LET $from = (SELECT users FROM company:surrealdb);
LET $devs = (SELECT * FROM user WHERE tags CONTAINS 'developer');
RELATE $from->like->$devs UNIQUE
SET time.connected = time::now()
;
Query data flexibly with advanced expressions and graph queries.
-- Select a nested array, and filter based on an attribute
SELECT emails[WHERE active = true] FROM person;
-- Select all 1st, 2nd, and 3rd level people who this specific person record knows, or likes, as separate outputs
SELECT ->knows->(? AS f1)->knows->(? AS f2)->(knows, likes AS e3 WHERE influencer = true)->(? AS f3) FROM person:tobie;
-- Select all person records (and their recipients), who have sent more than 5 emails
SELECT *, ->sent->email->to->person FROM person WHERE count(->sent->email) > 5;
-- Select other products purchased by people who purchased this laptop
SELECT <-purchased<-person->purchased->product FROM product:laptop;
-- Select products purchased by people in the last 3 weeks who have purchased the same products that we purchased
SELECT ->purchased->product<-purchased<-person->(purchased WHERE created_at > time::now() - 3w)->product FROM person:tobie;
Store GeoJSON geographical data types, including points, lines and polygons.
UPDATE city:london SET
centre = (-0.118092, 51.509865),
boundary = {
type: "Polygon",
coordinates: [[
[-0.38314819, 51.37692386], [0.1785278, 51.37692386],
[0.1785278, 51.61460570], [-0.38314819, 51.61460570],
[-0.38314819, 51.37692386]
]]
}
;
Write custom embedded logic using JavaScript functions.
CREATE film SET
ratings = [
{ rating: 6, user: user:bt8e39uh1ouhfm8ko8s0 },
{ rating: 8, user: user:bsilfhu88j04rgs0ga70 },
],
featured = function() {
return this.ratings.filter(r => {
return r.rating >= 7;
}).map(r => {
return { ...r, rating: r.rating * 10 };
});
}
;
Specify granular access permissions for client and application access.
-- Specify access permissions for the 'post' table
DEFINE TABLE post SCHEMALESS
PERMISSIONS
FOR select
-- Published posts can be selected
WHERE published = true
-- A user can select all their own posts
OR user = $auth.id
FOR create, update
-- A user can create or update their own posts
WHERE user = $auth.id
FOR delete
-- A user can delete their own posts
WHERE user = $auth.id
-- Or an admin can delete any posts
OR $auth.admin = true
;
Community
Join our growing community around the world, for help, ideas, and discussions regarding SurrealDB.
- View our official Blog
- Follow us on Twitter
- Connect with us on LinkedIn
- Visit us on YouTube
- Join our Dev community
- Chat live with us on Discord
- Questions tagged #surrealdb on Stack Overflow
Contributing
We would for you to get involved with SurrealDB development! If you wish to help, you can learn more about how you can contribute to this project in the contribution guide.
Security
For security issues, kindly email us at security@surrealdb.com instead of posting a public issue on GitHub.
License
Source code for SurrealDB is variously licensed under a number of different licenses. A copy of each license can be found in each repository.
- Libraries and SDKs, each located in its own distinct repository, are released under either the Apache License 2.0 or MIT License.
- Certain core database components, each located in its own distinct repository, are released under the Apache License 2.0.
- Core database code for SurrealDB, located in this repository, is released under the Business Source License 1.1.
For more information, see the licensing information.
Dependencies
~39–84MB
~1.5M SLoC