Compass is a search and discovery engine built for querying application deployments, datasets and meta resources. It can also optionally track data flow relationships between these resources and allow the user to view a representation of the data flow graph.
Discover why users choose Compass as their main data discovery and lineage service
- Full text search Faster and better search results powered by ElasticSearch full text search capability.
- Search Tuning Narrow down your search results by adding filters, getting your crisp results.
- Data Lineage Understand the relationship between metadata with data lineage interface.
- Scale: Compass scales in an instant, both vertically and horizontally for high performance.
- Extensibility: Add your own metadata types and resources to support wide variety of metadata.
- Runtime: Compass can run inside VMs or containers in a fully managed runtime environment like kubernetes.
Explore the following resources to get started with Compass:
- Guides provides guidance on ingesting and querying metadata from Compass.
- Concepts describes all important Compass concepts.
- Reference contains details about configurations, metrics and other aspects of Compass.
- Contribute contains resources for anyone who wants to contribute to Compass.
Install Compass on macOS, Windows, Linux, OpenBSD, FreeBSD, and on any machine.
Refer this for installations and configurations
Download the appropriate version for your platform from releases page. Once downloaded, the binary can be run from anywhere.
You don’t need to install it into a global location. This works well for shared hosts and other systems where you don’t have a privileged account.
Ideally, you should install it somewhere in your PATH for easy use. /usr/local/bin
is the most probable location.
compass
is available via a Homebrew Tap, and as downloadable binary from the releases page:
brew install raystack/tap/compass
To upgrade to the latest version:
brew upgrade compass
compass
is available as downloadable binaries from the releases page. Download the .deb
or .rpm
from the releases page and install with sudo dpkg -i
and sudo rpm -i
respectively.
compass
is available via scoop, and as a downloadable binary from the releases page:
scoop bucket add compass https://github.com/raystack/scoop-bucket.git
To upgrade to the latest version:
scoop update compass
We provide ready to use Docker container images. To pull the latest image:
docker pull raystack/compass:latest
To pull a specific version:
docker pull raystack/compass:v0.3.2
If you like to have a shell alias that runs the latest version of compass from docker whenever you type compass
:
mkdir -p $HOME/.config/raystack
alias compass="docker run -e HOME=/tmp -v $HOME/.config/raystack:/tmp/.config/raystack --user $(id -u):$(id -g) --rm -it -p 3306:3306/tcp raystack/compass:latest"
Compass is purely API-driven. It is very easy to get started with Compass. It provides CLI, HTTP and GRPC APIs for simpler developer experience.
Compass CLI is fully featured and simple to use, even for those who have very limited experience working from the command line. Run compass --help
to see list of all available commands and instructions to use.
List of commands
compass --help
Print command reference
compass reference
Compass provides a fully-featured GRPC and HTTP API to interact with Compass server. Both APIs adheres to a set of standards that are rigidly followed. Please refer to proton for GRPC API definitions.
Development of Compass happens in the open on GitHub, and we are grateful to the community for contributing bugfixes and improvements.
Read compass contribution guide to learn about our development process, how to propose bugfixes and improvements, and how to build and test your changes to Compass.
To help you get your feet wet and get you familiar with our contribution process, we have a list of good first issues that contain bugs which have a relatively limited scope. This is a great place to get started.
This project exists thanks to all the contributors.
Compass is Apache 2.0 licensed.