ObjectBox is a superfast object-oriented database with strong relation support. ObjectBox is embedded into your Android, Linux, macOS, or Windows app.
Latest version: 3.1.0 (2021/12/15)
Demo code using ObjectBox:
// Kotlin
val playlist = Playlist("My Favorites")
playlist.songs.add(Song("Lalala"))
playlist.songs.add(Song("Lololo"))
box.put(playlist)
// Java
Playlist playlist = new Playlist("My Favorites");
playlist.songs.add(new Song("Lalala"));
playlist.songs.add(new Song("Lololo"));
box.put(playlist);
Want details? Read the docs
🏁 High performance on restricted devices, like IoT gateways, micro controllers, ECUs etc.
🪂 Resourceful with minimal CPU, power and Memory usage for maximum flexibility and sustainability
🔗 Relations: object links / relationships are built-in
💻 Multiplatform: Linux, Windows, Android, iOS, macOS
🌱 Scalable: handling millions of objects resource-efficiently with ease
💐 Queries: filter data as needed, even across relations
🦮 Statically typed: compile time checks & optimizations
📃 Automatic schema migrations: no update scripts needed
And much more than just data persistence
👥 ObjectBox Sync: keeps data in sync between devices and servers
🕒 ObjectBox TS: time series extension for time based data
Enjoy ❤️
For Android projects, add the ObjectBox Gradle plugin to your root build.gradle
:
buildscript {
ext.objectboxVersion = "3.1.0"
repositories {
mavenCentral()
}
dependencies {
classpath("io.objectbox:objectbox-gradle-plugin:$objectboxVersion")
}
}
And in your app's build.gradle
apply the plugin:
// Using plugins syntax:
plugins {
id("io.objectbox") // Add after other plugins.
}
// Or using the old apply syntax:
apply plugin: "io.objectbox" // Add after other plugins.
Create a data object class @Entity
, for example "Playlist".
// Kotlin
@Entity data class Playlist( ... )
// Java
@Entity public class Playlist { ... }
Now build the project to let ObjectBox generate the class MyObjectBox
for you.
Prepare the BoxStore object once for your app, e.g. in onCreate
in your Application class:
boxStore = MyObjectBox.builder().androidContext(this).build();
Then get a Box
class for the Playlist entity class:
Box<Playlist> box = boxStore.boxFor(Playlist.class);
The Box
object gives you access to all major functions, like put
, get
, remove
, and query
.
For details please check the docs.
ObjectBox supports multiple platforms and languages. Besides JVM based languages like Java and Kotlin, ObjectBox also offers:
- ObjectBox Swift: build fast mobile apps for iOS (and macOS)
- ObjectBox Dart/Flutter: cross-platform for mobile and desktop apps
- ObjectBox Go: great for data-driven tools and embedded server applications
- ObjectBox C and C++: native speed with zero copy access to FlatBuffer objects
We believe, ObjectBox is super easy to use. We are on a mission to make developers’ lives better, by building developer tools that are intuitive and fun to code with.
To do that, we want your feedback: what do you love? What's amiss? Where do you struggle in everyday app development?
We're looking forward to receiving your comments and requests:
- Add GitHub issues
- Upvote issues you find important by hitting the 👍/+1 reaction button
- Drop us a line via @ObjectBox_io
- ⭐ us, if you like what you see
Thank you! 🙏
Keep in touch: For general news on ObjectBox, check our blog!
Copyright 2017-2021 ObjectBox Ltd. All rights reserved.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.