Scalable datastore for metrics, events, and real-time analytics
InfluxDB Core is a database built to collect, process, transform, and store event and time series data. It is ideal for use cases that require real-time ingest and fast query response times to build user interfaces, monitoring, and automation solutions.
Common use cases include:
InfluxDB is optimized for scenarios where near real-time data monitoring is essential and queries
need to return quickly to support user experiences such as dashboards and interactive user interfaces.
InfluxDB 3 Core’s feature highlights include:
InfluxDB 3 Core is in public alpha and available for testing and feedback, but is not meant for
production use. During the alpha period we may make breaking changes that will require you to blow
away your data and start over. You should have copies of your data in other places during the alpha
period. Both the product and this documentation are works in progress. New builds get created on
every merge into main, so things will be moving quickly for the next month or so. We welcome and
encourage your input about your experience with the alpha. Join the InfluxDB3 Discord
or the public channels below.
See the InfluxDB 3 alpha release announcement here
or dig into the InfluxDB 3 getting started guide here.
Documentation | Community Forum | Community Slack | Blog | InfluxDB University | YouTube
Try InfluxDB Cloud for free and get started fast with no local setup required. Click here to start building your application on InfluxDB Cloud.
We have nightly and versioned Docker images, Debian packages, RPM packages, and tarballs of InfluxDB available on the InfluxData downloads page. We also provide the InfluxDB command line interface (CLI) client as a separate binary available at the same location.
If you are interested in building from source, see the building from source guide for contributors.
To begin using InfluxDB, visit our Getting Started with InfluxDB documentation.
The open source software we build is licensed under the permissive MIT or Apache 2 licenses at the user’s choosing. We’ve long held the view that our open source code should be truly open and our commercial code should be separate and closed.
Check out current job openings at www.influxdata.com/careers today!