Fast, Transactional, Distributed Graph Database.
Dgraph is a horizontally scalable and distributed graph database, providing ACID transactions, consistent replication and linearizable reads. It's built from ground up to perform for a rich set of queries. Being a native graph database, it tightly controls how the data is arranged on disk to optimize for query performance and throughput, reducing disk seeks and network calls in a cluster.
Dgraph's goal is to provide Google production level scale and throughput, with low enough latency to be serving real time user queries, over terabytes of structured data. Dgraph supports GraphQL-like query syntax, and responds in JSON and Protocol Buffers over GRPC and HTTP.
Dgraph is at version 1.0.x and is production ready. Apart from the vast open source community, it is being used in production at multiple Fortune 500 companies, and by Intuit Katlas.
The quickest way to install Dgraph is to run this command on Linux or Mac.
curl https://get.dgraph.io -sSf | bash
If you're using Docker, you can use the official Dgraph image.
docker pull dgraph/dgraph:latest
If you want to install from source, you can use go get
to install to $GOPATH/bin
.
go get -v github.com/dgraph-io/dgraph/dgraph
To get started with Dgraph, follow:
- Installation to queries in 3 steps via docs.dgraph.io.
- A longer interactive tutorial via tour.dgraph.io.
- Tutorial and presentation videos on YouTube channel.
- Do you have more than 10 SQL tables, connected to each other via foreign ids?
- Do you have sparse data, which doesn't correctly fit into SQL tables?
- Do you want a simple and flexible schema, which is readable and maintainable over time?
- Do you care about speed and performance at scale?
If the answers to the above are YES, then Dgraph would be a great fit for your application. Dgraph provides NoSQL like scalability while providing SQL like transactions and ability to select, filter and aggregate data points. It combines that with distributed joins, traversals and graph operations, which makes it easy to build applications with it.
Features | Dgraph | Neo4j | Janus Graph |
---|---|---|---|
Architecture | Sharded and Distributed | Single server (+ replicas in enterprise) | Layer on top of other distributed DBs |
Replication | Consistent | None in community edition (only available in enterprise) | Via underlying DB |
Data movement for shard rebalancing | Automatic | Not applicable (all data lies on each server) | Via underlying DB |
Language | GraphQL inspired | Cypher, Gremlin | Gremlin |
Protocols | Grpc / HTTP + JSON / RDF | Bolt + Cypher | Websocket / HTTP |
Transactions | Distributed ACID transactions | Single server ACID transactions | Not typically ACID |
Full Text Search | Native support | Native support | Via External Indexing System |
Regular Expressions | Native support | Native support | Via External Indexing System |
Geo Search | Native support | External support only | Via External Indexing System |
License | Apache 2.0 | GPL v3 | Apache 2.0 |
- Dgraph official documentation is present at docs.dgraph.io.
- For feature requests or questions, visit https://discuss.dgraph.io.
- Check out the demo at dgraph.io and the visualization at play.dgraph.io.
- Please see releases tab to find the latest release and corresponding release notes.
- See the Roadmap for list of working and planned features.
- Read about the latest updates from Dgraph team on our blog.
- Watch tech talks on our YouTube channel.
- See a list of issues that we need help with.
- Please see Contributing to Dgraph for guidelines on contributions.
The Dgraph team maintain a number of officially supported client libraries. There are also libraries contributed by the community unofficial client libraries.
- Please use discuss.dgraph.io for documentation, questions, feature requests and discussions.
- Please use Github issue tracker for filing bugs or feature requests.
- Join .
- Follow us on Twitter @dgraphlabs.