DataStax C/C++ Driver for Apache Cassandra
A modern, feature-rich, and highly tunable C/C++ client library for Apache Cassandra (1.2+) and DataStax Enterprise (3.1+) using exclusively Cassandra’s native protocol and Cassandra Query Language v3.
- Code: https://github.com/datastax/cpp-driver
- Binaries: http://downloads.datastax.com/cpp-driver/
- Docs: http://datastax.github.io/cpp-driver
- JIRA: https://datastax-oss.atlassian.net/browse/CPP
- Mailing List: https://groups.google.com/a/lists.datastax.com/forum/#!forum/cpp-driver-user
- IRC: #datastax-drivers on
irc.freenode.net <http://freenode.net>
Note: DataStax products do not support big-endian systems.
What’s New in 2.5/2.6
- Support for
duration
- Speculative execution
- Idempotent statements
- SSL can be enabled without re-initializing the underlying library (e.g. OpenSSL)
More information about features included in 2.3 can be found in this blog post.
Upgrading from 2.0 or 2.1 to 2.2+
The new schema metadata API in 2.2 required some breaking API changes. Applications that used the previous schema metadata API from 2.0 and 2.1 will require some small modifications to use the new API. More information about the new schema metadata API can be found in this blog post.
Upgrading from 1.0 to 2.0+
There were a couple breaking API changes between 1.0 and 2.0 that are documented here.
Features
- Asynchronous API
- Simple, Prepared, and Batch statements
- Asynchronous I/O, parallel execution, and request pipelining
- Connection pooling
- Automatic node discovery
- Automatic reconnection
- Configurable load balancing
- Works with any cluster size
- Authentication
- SSL
- Latency-aware routing
- Performance metrics
- Tuples and UDTs
- Nested collections
- Retry policies
- Client-side timestamps
- Data types
- Idle connection heartbeats
- Support for materialized view and secondary index metadata
- Support for clustering key order,
frozen<>
and Cassandra version metadata - Blacklist, whitelist DC, and blacklist DC load balancing policies
- Custom authenticators
- Reverse DNS with SSL peer identity verification support
- Randomized contact points
Compatibility
This release is compatible with Apache Cassandra 1.2, 2.0, 2.1, 2.2 and 3.0.
A complete compatibility matrix for both Apache Cassandra and DataStax Enterprise can be found here.
Installation
Binary packages are available for
CentOS, Ubuntu and Windows. Packages for the driver’s dependencies, libuv (1.x)
and OpenSSL, are also provided under the dependencies
directory for each
platform e.g. CentOS 7,
Ubuntu 14.04,
Windows.
Note: CentOS and Ubuntu use the version of OpenSSL provided with the distribution.
The driver can also be built from source.
Feedback Requested
Help us focus our efforts! Provide your input on the C/C++ Driver Platform and Runtime Survey (we kept it short).
Examples
There are several examples provided here: examples.
A Simple Example
#include <cassandra.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int main(int argc, char* argv[]) {
/* Setup and connect to cluster */
CassFuture* connect_future = NULL;
CassCluster* cluster = cass_cluster_new();
CassSession* session = cass_session_new();
char* hosts = "127.0.0.1";
if (argc > 1) {
hosts = argv[1];
}
/* Add contact points */
cass_cluster_set_contact_points(cluster, hosts);
/* Provide the cluster object as configuration to connect the session */
connect_future = cass_session_connect(session, cluster);
if (cass_future_error_code(connect_future) == CASS_OK) {
CassFuture* close_future = NULL;
/* Build statement and execute query */
const char* query = "SELECT release_version FROM system.local";
CassStatement* statement = cass_statement_new(query, 0);
CassFuture* result_future = cass_session_execute(session, statement);
if (cass_future_error_code(result_future) == CASS_OK) {
/* Retrieve result set and get the first row */
const CassResult* result = cass_future_get_result(result_future);
const CassRow* row = cass_result_first_row(result);
if (row) {
const CassValue* value = cass_row_get_column_by_name(row, "release_version");
const char* release_version;
size_t release_version_length;
cass_value_get_string(value, &release_version, &release_version_length);
printf("release_version: '%.*s'\n", (int)release_version_length, release_version);
}
cass_result_free(result);
} else {
/* Handle error */
const char* message;
size_t message_length;
cass_future_error_message(result_future, &message, &message_length);
fprintf(stderr, "Unable to run query: '%.*s'\n", (int)message_length, message);
}
cass_statement_free(statement);
cass_future_free(result_future);
/* Close the session */
close_future = cass_session_close(session);
cass_future_wait(close_future);
cass_future_free(close_future);
} else {
/* Handle error */
const char* message;
size_t message_length;
cass_future_error_message(connect_future, &message, &message_length);
fprintf(stderr, "Unable to connect: '%.*s'\n", (int)message_length, message);
}
cass_future_free(connect_future);
cass_cluster_free(cluster);
cass_session_free(session);
return 0;
}
License
Copyright © 2014-2016 DataStax
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the “License”); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an “AS IS” BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.