1
0
mirror of https://github.com/bigchaindb/site.git synced 2024-11-25 19:18:29 +01:00
site/_src/whitepaper/index.md

38 lines
2.7 KiB
Markdown

---
layout: page
title: Whitepaper
tagline: "BigchainDB: A Scalable Blockchain Database"
description: 'This paper describes BigchainDB. BigchainDB fills a gap in the decentralization ecosystem: a decentralized database, at scale. It is capable of 1 million writes per second throughput, storing petabytes of data, and sub-second latency.'
image: photo3.jpg
header: photo3.jpg
whitepaper:
title: Whitepaper downloads
text: The whitepaper is no longer a living document. Significant changes made since June 8, 2016 are noted in an Addendum attached at the end.
updated: 2017-05-23
files:
- file: bigchaindb-primer.pdf
button: Download primer (pdf)
class: btn-primary
- file: bigchaindb-whitepaper.pdf
button: Download whitepaper (pdf)
class: btn-link
---
*by <br>Trent McConaghy, Rodolphe Marques, Andreas Müller, Dimitri De Jonghe, Troy McConaghy, Greg McMullen, Ryan Henderson, Sylvain Bellemare, Alberto Granzotto*
*February 2016*
*BigchainDB GmbH, Berlin, Germany*
### Abstract
This paper describes BigchainDB. BigchainDB fills a gap in the decentralization ecosystem: a decentralized database, at scale. It points to performance of 1 million writes per second throughput, storing petabytes of data, and sub-second latency.
The BigchainDB design starts with a distributed database (DB), and through a set of innovations adds blockchain characteristics: decentralized control, immutability, and creation & movement of digital assets. BigchainDB inherits characteristics of modern distributed databases: linear scaling in throughput and capacity with the number of nodes, a full-featured NoSQL query language, efficient querying, and permissioning. Being built on an existing distributed DB, it also inherits enterprise-hardened code for most of its codebase.
Scalable capacity means that legally binding contracts and certificates may be stored directly on the blockchain database. The permissioning system enables configurations ranging from private enterprise blockchain databases to open, public blockchain databases. BigchainDB is complementary to decentralized processing platforms like [Ethereum](https://www.ethereum.org), and decentralized file systems like InterPlanetary File System ([IPFS](https://ipfs.io)).
This paper describes technology perspectives that led to the BigchainDB design: traditional blockchains, distributed databases, and a case study of the domain name system (DNS). We introduce a concept called blockchain pipelining, which is key to scalability when adding blockchainlike characteristics to the distributed DB. We present a thorough description of BigchainDB, a detailed analysis of latency, and experimental results. The paper concludes with a description of use cases.