See Release Notes for what's new in the latest release, v1.1.9.
-
Download the CockroachDB archive for OS X, and extract the binary:
$ curl https://binaries.cockroachdb.com/cockroach-v1.1.9.darwin-10.9-amd64.tgz | tar -xz
-
Copy the binary into your
PATH
so it's easy to execute cockroach commands from any shell:cp -i cockroach-v1.1.9.darwin-10.9-amd64/cockroach /usr/local/bin/
If you get a permissions error, prefix the command with
sudo
. -
Keep up-to-date with CockroachDB releases and best practices:
Thanks!
What's Next?
Quick start a single- or multi-node cluster locally and talk to it via the built-in SQL client.
-
Install the following prerequisites, as necessary:
C++ compiler Must support C++ 11. GCC prior to 6.0 does not work due to this issue. On macOS, Xcode should suffice. Go Version 1.8.1 is required. Bash Versions 4+ are preferred, but later releases from the 3.x series are also known to work. CMake Versions 3.8+ are known to work. Autoconf Version 2.68 or higher is required. A 64-bit system is strongly recommended. Building or running CockroachDB on 32-bit systems has not been tested. You'll also need at least 2GB of RAM. If you plan to run our test suite, you'll need closer to 4GB of RAM.
-
Download the CockroachDB v1.1.9 source archive, and extract the sources:
$ curl https://binaries.cockroachdb.com/cockroach-v1.1.9.src.tgz | tar -xz
In the extracted directory, run
make build
:cd cockroach-v1.1.9
make build
The build process can take 10+ minutes, so please be patient.
Note:The default binary contains core open-source functionality covered by the Apache License 2 (APL2) and enterprise functionality covered by the CockroachDB Community License (CCL). To build a pure open-source (APL2) version excluding enterprise functionality, usemake buildoss
. See this blog post for more details.-
Install the
cockroach
binary into/usr/local/bin/
so it's easy to execute cockroach commands from any directory:make install
If you get a permissions error, prefix the command with
sudo
.You can also execute the
cockroach
binary directly from its built location,./src/github.com/cockroachdb/cockroach/cockroach
, but the rest of the documentation assumes you have the binary on yourPATH
. -
Keep up-to-date with CockroachDB releases and best practices:
Thanks!
What's Next?
Quick start a single- or multi-node cluster locally and talk to it via the built-in SQL client.
-
Install Docker for Mac. Please carefully check that you meet all prerequisites.
-
Confirm that the Docker daemon is running in the background:
$ docker version
If you do not see the server listed, start the Docker daemon.
-
Pull the official CockroachDB image from Docker Hub:
$ docker pull cockroachdb/cockroach:v1.1.9
-
Keep up-to-date with CockroachDB releases and best practices:
Thanks!
What's Next?
Quick start a multi-node cluster across multiple Docker containers on a single host, using Docker volumes to persist node data, or explore running a physically distributed cluster in containers using orchestration tools.
See Release Notes for what's new in the latest release, v1.1.9.
-
Download the CockroachDB archive for Linux, and extract the binary:
$ curl https://binaries.cockroachdb.com/cockroach-v1.1.9.linux-amd64.tgz | tar -xz
-
Copy the binary into your
PATH
so it's easy to execute cockroach commands from any shell:cp -i cockroach-v1.1.9.linux-amd64/cockroach /usr/local/bin/
If you get a permissions error, prefix the command with
sudo
. -
Keep up-to-date with CockroachDB releases and best practices:
Thanks!
What's Next?
Quick start a single- or multi-node cluster locally and talk to it via the built-in SQL client.
-
Install the following prerequisites, as necessary:
C++ compiler Must support C++ 11. GCC prior to 6.0 does not work due to this issue. On macOS, Xcode should suffice. Go Version 1.8, or a later version in the 1.8 series, is required. Bash Versions 4+ are preferred, but later releases from the 3.x series are also known to work. CMake Versions 3.8+ are known to work. Autoconf Version 2.68 or higher is required. A 64-bit system is strongly recommended. Building or running CockroachDB on 32-bit systems has not been tested. You'll also need at least 2GB of RAM. If you plan to run our test suite, you'll need closer to 4GB of RAM.
-
Download the CockroachDB v1.1.9 source archive, and extract the sources:
$ curl https://binaries.cockroachdb.com/cockroach-v1.1.9.src.tgz | tar -xz
In the extracted directory, run
make build
:cd cockroach-v1.1.9
make build
The build process can take 10+ minutes, so please be patient.
Note:The default binary contains core open-source functionality covered by the Apache License 2 (APL2) and enterprise functionality covered by the CockroachDB Community License (CCL). To build a pure open-source (APL2) version excluding enterprise functionality, usemake buildoss
. See this blog post for more details.-
Install the
cockroach
binary into/usr/local/bin/
so it's easy to execute cockroach commands from any directory:make install
If you get a permissions error, prefix the command with
sudo
.You can also execute the
cockroach
binary directly from its built location,./src/github.com/cockroachdb/cockroach/cockroach
, but the rest of the documentation assumes you have the binary on yourPATH
. -
Keep up-to-date with CockroachDB releases and best practices:
Thanks!
What's Next?
Quick start a single- or multi-node cluster locally and talk to it via the built-in SQL client.
-
Install Docker for Linux. Please carefully check that you meet all prerequisites.
-
Confirm that the Docker daemon is running in the background:
$ docker version
If you do not see the server listed, start the Docker daemon.
Note:On Linux, Docker needs sudo privileges. -
Pull the official CockroachDB image from Docker Hub:
$ sudo docker pull cockroachdb/cockroach:v1.1.9
-
Keep up-to-date with CockroachDB releases and best practices:
Thanks!
What's Next?
Quick start a multi-node cluster across multiple Docker containers on a single host, using Docker volumes to persist node data, or explore running a physically distributed cluster in containers using orchestration tools.
See Release Notes for what's new in the latest release, v1.1.9.
-
Download and extract the CockroachDB v1.1.9 archive for Windows.
-
Open PowerShell, navigate to the directory containing the binary, and make sure The CockroachDB executable for Windows works:
PS C:\cockroach-v1.1.9.windows-6.2-amd64> .\cockroach.exe version
-
Keep up-to-date with CockroachDB releases and best practices:
Thanks!
What's Next?
Quick start a single- or multi-node cluster locally and talk to it via the built-in SQL client.
-
Install Docker for Windows.
Docker for Windows requires 64bit Windows 10 Pro and Microsoft Hyper-V. Please see the official documentation for more details. Note that if your system does not satisfy the stated requirements, you can try using Docker Toolbox. -
Open PowerShell and confirm that the Docker daemon is running in the background:
PS C:\Users\username> docker version
If you do not see the server listed, start Docker for Windows.
-
Share your local drives. This makes it possible to mount local directories as data volumes to persist node data after containers are stopped or deleted.
-
Pull the official CockroachDB image from Docker Hub:
PS C:\Users\username> docker pull cockroachdb/cockroach:v1.1.9
-
Keep up-to-date with CockroachDB releases and best practices:
Thanks!
What's Next?
Quick start a multi-node cluster across multiple Docker containers on a single host, using Docker volumes to persist node data, or explore running a physically distributed cluster in containers using orchestration tools.