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Install and Deploy TiKV Using Binary Files
Use binary files to deploy a TiKV cluster on a single machine or on multiple nodes for testing.
how-to

Install and Deploy TiKV Using Binary Files

This guide describes how to deploy a TiKV cluster using binary files.

Warning: Do not use binary files to deploy the TiKV cluster in the production environment. For production, use Ansible to deploy the TiKV cluster.

Deploy the TiKV cluster on a single machine

This section describes how to deploy TiKV on a single machine installed with the Linux system. Take the following steps:

  1. Download the official binary package.

    # Download the package.
    wget https://download.pingcap.org/tidb-latest-linux-amd64.tar.gz
    wget http://download.pingcap.org/tidb-latest-linux-amd64.sha256
    
    # Check the file integrity. If the result is OK, the file is correct.
    sha256sum -c tidb-latest-linux-amd64.sha256
    
    # Extract the package.
    tar -xzf tidb-latest-linux-amd64.tar.gz
    cd tidb-latest-linux-amd64
  2. Start PD.

    ./bin/pd-server --name=pd1 \
                    --data-dir=pd1 \
                    --client-urls="http://127.0.0.1:2379" \
                    --peer-urls="http://127.0.0.1:2380" \
                    --initial-cluster="pd1=http://127.0.0.1:2380" \
                    --log-file=pd1.log
  3. Start TiKV.

    To start the 3 TiKV instances, open a new terminal tab or window, come to the tidb-latest-linux-amd64 directory, and start the instances using the following command:

    ./bin/tikv-server --pd-endpoints="127.0.0.1:2379" \
                    --addr="127.0.0.1:20160" \
                    --data-dir=tikv1 \
                    --log-file=tikv1.log
    
    ./bin/tikv-server --pd-endpoints="127.0.0.1:2379" \
                    --addr="127.0.0.1:20161" \
                    --data-dir=tikv2 \
                    --log-file=tikv2.log
    
    ./bin/tikv-server --pd-endpoints="127.0.0.1:2379" \
                    --addr="127.0.0.1:20162" \
                    --data-dir=tikv3 \
                    --log-file=tikv3.log

You can use the pd-ctl tool to verify whether PD and TiKV are successfully deployed:

./bin/pd-ctl store -d -u http://127.0.0.1:2379

If the state of all the TiKV instances is "Up", you have successfully deployed a TiKV cluster.

Deploy the TiKV cluster on multiple nodes for testing

This section describes how to deploy TiKV on multiple nodes. If you want to test TiKV with a limited number of nodes, you can use one PD instance to test the entire cluster.

Assume that you have four nodes, you can deploy 1 PD instance and 3 TiKV instances. For details, see the following table:

Name Host IP Services
Node1 192.168.199.113 PD1
Node2 192.168.199.114 TiKV1
Node3 192.168.199.115 TiKV2
Node4 192.168.199.116 TiKV3

To deploy a TiKV cluster with multiple nodes for test, take the following steps:

  1. Download the official binary package on each node.

    # Download the package.
    wget https://download.pingcap.org/tidb-latest-linux-amd64.tar.gz
    wget http://download.pingcap.org/tidb-latest-linux-amd64.sha256
    
    # Check the file integrity. If the result is OK, the file is correct.
    sha256sum -c tidb-latest-linux-amd64.sha256
    
    # Extract the package.
    tar -xzf tidb-latest-linux-amd64.tar.gz
    cd tidb-latest-linux-amd64
  2. Start PD on Node1.

    ./bin/pd-server --name=pd1 \
                    --data-dir=pd1 \
                    --client-urls="http://192.168.199.113:2379" \
                    --peer-urls="http://192.168.199.113:2380" \
                    --initial-cluster="pd1=http://192.168.199.113:2380" \
                    --log-file=pd1.log
  3. Log in and start TiKV on other nodes: Node2, Node3 and Node4.

    Node2:

    ./bin/tikv-server --pd-endpoints="192.168.199.113:2379" \
                    --addr="192.168.199.114:20160" \
                    --data-dir=tikv1 \
                    --log-file=tikv1.log

    Node3:

    ./bin/tikv-server --pd-endpoints="192.168.199.113:2379" \
                    --addr="192.168.199.115:20160" \
                    --data-dir=tikv2 \
                    --log-file=tikv2.log

    Node4:

    ./bin/tikv-server --pd-endpoints="192.168.199.113:2379" \
                    --addr="192.168.199.116:20160" \
                    --data-dir=tikv3 \
                    --log-file=tikv3.log

You can use the pd-ctl tool to verify whether PD and TiKV are successfully deployed:

./pd-ctl store -d -u http://192.168.199.113:2379

The result displays the store count and detailed information regarding each store. If the state of all the TiKV instances is "Up", you have successfully deployed a TiKV cluster.

What's next?

If you want to try the Go client, see Try Two Types of APIs.