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The BusTub Relational Database Management System (Educational)

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BusTub is a relational database management system built at Carnegie Mellon University for the Introduction to Database Systems (15-445/645) course. This system was developed for educational purposes and should not be used in production environments.

WARNING: IF YOU ARE A STUDENT IN THE CLASS, DO NOT DIRECTLY FORK THIS REPO. DO NOT PUSH PROJECT SOLUTIONS PUBLICLY. THIS IS AN ACADEMIC INTEGRITY VIOLATION AND CAN LEAD TO GETTING YOUR DEGREE REVOKED, EVEN AFTER YOU GRADUATE.

Cloning this Repository

The following instructions are adapted from the Github documentation on duplicating a repository. The procedure below walks you through creating a private BusTub repository that you can use for development.

  1. Go here to create a new repository under your account. Pick a name (e.g. bustub-private) and select Private for the repository visibility level.
  2. On your development machine, create a bare clone of the public BusTub repository:
    $ git clone --bare https://github.com/cmu-db/bustub.git bustub-public
    
  3. Next, mirror the public BusTub repository to your own private BusTub repository. Suppose your GitHub name is student and your repository name is bustub-private. The procedure for mirroring the repository is then:
    $ cd bustub-public
    
    # If you pull / push over HTTPS
    $ git push --mirror https://github.com/student/bustub-private.git
    
    # If you pull / push over SSH
    $ git push --mirror [email protected]:student/bustub-private.git
    
    This copies everything in the public BusTub repository to your own private repository. You can now delete your local clone of the public repository:
    $ cd ..
    $ rm -rf bustub-public
    
  4. Clone your private repository to your development machine:
    # If you pull / push over HTTPS
    $ git clone https://github.com/student/bustub-private.git
    
    # If you pull / push over SSH
    $ git clone [email protected]:student/bustub-private.git
    
  5. Add the public BusTub repository as a second remote. This allows you to retrieve changes from the CMU-DB repository and merge them with your solution throughout the semester:
    $ git remote add public https://github.com/cmu-db/bustub.git
    
    You can verify that the remote was added with the following command:
    $ git remote -v
    origin	https://github.com/student/bustub-private.git (fetch)
    origin	https://github.com/student/bustub-private.git (push)
    public	https://github.com/cmu-db/bustub.git (fetch)
    public	https://github.com/cmu-db/bustub.git (push)
    
  6. You can now pull in changes from the public BusTub repository as needed with:
    $ git pull public master
    

We suggest working on your projects in separate branches. If you do not understand how Git branches work, learn how. If you fail to do this, you might lose all your work at some point in the semester, and nobody will be able to help you.

Build

Linux / Mac

To ensure that you have the proper packages on your machine, run the following script to automatically install them:

$ sudo build_support/packages.sh

Then run the following commands to build the system:

$ mkdir build
$ cd build
$ cmake ..
$ make

If you want to compile the system in debug mode, pass in the following flag to cmake: Debug mode:

$ cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug ..
$ make

This enables AddressSanitizer, which can generate false positives for overflow on STL containers. If you encounter this, define the environment variable ASAN_OPTIONS=detect_container_overflow=0.

Windows

If you are using Windows 10, you can use the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) to develop, build, and test Bustub. All you need is to Install WSL. You can just choose "Ubuntu" (no specific version) in Microsoft Store. Then, enter WSL and follow the above instructions.

If you are using CLion, it also works with WSL.

Testing

$ cd build
$ make check-tests

Build environment

If you have trouble getting cmake or make to run, an easy solution is to create a virtual container to build in. There are two options available:

Vagrant

First, make sure you have Vagrant and Virtualbox installed

$ sudo apt update
$ sudo apt install vagrant virtualbox

From the repository directory, run this command to create and start a Vagrant box:

$ vagrant up

This will start a Vagrant box running Ubuntu 20.02 in the background with all the packages needed. To access it, type

$ vagrant ssh

to open a shell within the box. You can find Bustub's code mounted at /bustub and run the commands mentioned above like normal.

Docker

First, make sure that you have docker installed:

$ sudo apt update
$ sudo apt install docker

From the repository directory, run these commands to create a Docker image and container:

$ docker build . -t bustub
$ docker create -t -i --name bustub -v $(pwd):/bustub bustub bash

This will create a Docker image and container. To run it, type:

$ docker start -a -i bustub

to open a shell within the box. You can find Bustub's code mounted at /bustub and run the commands mentioned above like normal.

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