Awesome
Project Nessie
Project Nessie is a Transactional Catalog for Data Lakes with Git-like semantics.
More information can be found at projectnessie.org.
Nessie supports Iceberg Tables/Views. Additionally, Nessie is focused on working with the widest range of tools possible, which can be seen in the feature matrix.
Using Nessie
You can quickly get started with Nessie by using our small, fast docker image.
IMPORTANT NOTE Nessie has moved away from docker.io
to GitHub's container registry ghcr.io
,
and also quay.io
. Recent releases are already only available on both ghcr.io and quay.io. Please
update references to projectnessie/nessie
in your code to either ghcr.io/projectnessie/nessie
or quay.io/projectnessie/nessie
.
docker pull ghcr.io/projectnessie/nessie
docker run -p 19120:19120 ghcr.io/projectnessie/nessie
For trying Nessie image with different configuration options, refer to the templates under the docker module.<br>
A local Web UI will be available at this point.
Then install the Nessie CLI tool (to learn more about CLI tool and how to use it, check Nessie CLI Documentation).
pip install pynessie
From there, you can use one of our technology integrations such those for
To learn more about all supported integrations and tools, check here
Have fun! We have a Google Group and a Slack channel we use for both developers and users. Check them out here.
Authentication
By default, Nessie servers run with authentication disabled and all requests are processed under the "anonymous" user identity.
Nessie supports bearer tokens and uses OpenID Connect for validating them.
Authentication can be enabled by setting the following Quarkus properties:
nessie.server.authentication.enabled=true
quarkus.oidc.auth-server-url=<OpenID Server URL>
quarkus.oidc.client-id=<Client ID>
Experimenting with Nessie Authentication in Docker
One can start the projectnessie/nessie
docker image in authenticated mode by setting
the properties mentioned above via docker environment variables. For example:
docker run -p 19120:19120 \
-e QUARKUS_OIDC_CLIENT_ID=<Client ID> \
-e QUARKUS_OIDC_AUTH_SERVER_URL=<OpenID Server URL> \
-e NESSIE_SERVER_AUTHENTICATION_ENABLED=true \
--network host \
ghcr.io/projectnessie/nessie
Building and Developing Nessie
Requirements
- JDK 21 or higher: JDK 21 or higher is needed to build Nessie (some artifacts are built for Java 8 or 11)
Installation
Clone this repository:
git clone https://github.com/projectnessie/nessie
cd nessie
Then open the project in IntelliJ or Eclipse, or just use the IDEs to clone this github repository.
Refer to CONTRIBUTING for build instructions.
Compatibility
Nessie Iceberg's integration is compatible with Iceberg as in the following table:
Nessie version | Iceberg version | Spark version (Scala 2.12+2.13) | Hive version | Flink version | Presto version | Trino version |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.99.0 | 1.5.0 | 3.3.x, 3.4.x, 3.5.x | n/a | 1.16.x, 1.17.x, 1.18.x | 0.277, 0.278.x, 0.279, 0.280, 0.281 | 419 |
Distribution
To run:
- configuration in
servers/quarkus-server/src/main/resources/application.properties
- execute
./gradlew :nessie-quarkus:assemble && java -jar servers/quarkus-server/build/quarkus-app/quarkus-run.jar
- go to
http://localhost:19120
UI
Nessie UI sources have moved to their own repository: https://github.com/projectnessie/nessie-ui.
Docker image
Official Nessie images are built with support for multiplatform builds. But to quickly build a docker image for testing purposes, simply run the following command:
./gradlew :nessie-quarkus:clean :nessie-quarkus:quarkusBuild
docker build -f ./tools/dockerbuild/docker/Dockerfile-server -t nessie-unstable:latest ./servers/quarkus-server
Check that your image is available locally:
docker images
You should see something like this:
REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE
nessie-unstable latest 24bb4c7bd696 15 seconds ago 555MB
Once this is done you can run your image with docker run -p 19120:19120 quay.io/nessie-unstable:latest
, passing the relevant
environment variables, if any. Environment variables names must follow MicroProfile Config's mapping
rules.
Nessie related repositories
- CEL Java: Java port of the Common Expression Language
- Nessie apprunner: Maven and Gradle plugins to use Nessie in integration tests.
Contributing
Code Style
The Nessie project uses the Google Java Code Style, scalafmt and pep8. See CONTRIBUTING.md for more information.