A naive C++(14) InfluxDB client via C++ REST SDK + a C wrapper of the asynchronous API as a shared library.
See the demo source for the current api example.
The unbatched aprroach (and without connection reuse) may not be sufficient in some situations, as without batching, about 200 lines/sec can be inserted.
A batching api leans towards thousands inserts per second. Behind the scenes, the API uses RxCpp and cppformat.
Build and test ok on Win10/Ubuntu64/OSX.
Feel free to contribute, as the progress is rather sporadic due to lack of spare time.
influxdb::api::simple_db simpledb("http://localhost:8086", "my_db");
db.insert(
line("log", key_value_pairs("my_tag", 42L), key_value_pairs("value", "hello world!")));
influxdb::async_api::simple_db asyncdb("http://localhost:8086", "my_db");
for (int i = 0; i < 123456; i++) {
asyncdb.insert(
line(
"my_measurements",
key_value_pairs("my_count", i % MAX_VALUES_PER_TAG),
key_value_pairs("value", "hi!")
));
}
see async_c_test.cpp and the related headers.
Timestamps can be added as the last parameter to the line
constructor, and only need to return
a serializable value on TTimestamp::now()
. There is a default std::chrono
-based implementation:
line(
"my_measurements",
key_value_pairs("my_count", i % MAX_VALUES_PER_TAG),
key_value_pairs("value", "hi!"),
default_timestamp()
// ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
)
Add lines using the ()
operator on the line:
line
("multiple", key_value_pairs("v1", 1), key_value_pairs())
("multiple", key_value_pairs("v2", 2), key_value_pairs())
influxdb::raw::db_utf8 raw_db("http://localhost:8086", "my_db");
auto query = std::string("select count(*) from my_db..my_measurements";
auto json_response = raw_db.get(query);
↓
{"results":[{"series":[{"name":"asynctest","columns":["time","count_value"],"values":[["...Z",123456]]}]}]}
Basic authentication can be used with all API variants
influxdb::raw::db_utf8 raw_db("http://localhost:8086", "my_db");
raw_db.with_authentication(username, password);
auto query = ...
The library should be easy to build, given RxCpp
and cpprestsdk
can be found. The Visual Studio 2015 solution is self-contained. A locally running, authentication-free instance of InfluxDB is required to run the test.
cpprestsdk needs to be built and available, which in turn has platform-specific transient dependencies.
The easiest way to install it on MacOS X and Linux turned out to be via Homebrew and Linuxbrew respectively.
Once the install brew install cpprestsdk
succeeds, build: make -C build/<platform>/gmake config=release_x64
and run the test.
If the build fails due to failed dependencies, check premake5.lua for the build config, and regenerate makefiles if necessary via premake/premake5<os-specific> gmake
- @kirkshoop for indispensable help with RxCpp
- @nikkov for pointing out the missing essential features