Documentation

Install the InfluxDB JavaScript client library

This page documents an earlier version of InfluxDB OSS. InfluxDB 3 Core is the latest stable version.

API token hashing is enabled by default in InfluxDB OSS 2.9.0

Stronger token security: tokens are stored as hashes on disk, so a copy of the database file doesn’t expose usable tokens. Existing tokens are hashed on first startup and the original strings can’t be recovered afterward — capture any plaintext tokens you still need before you upgrade.

For more information, see Token hashing.

Install Node.js

  1. Install Node.js.

  2. Ensure that InfluxDB is running and you can connect to it. For information about what URL to use to connect to InfluxDB OSS or InfluxDB Cloud, see InfluxDB URLs.

  3. Create a directory for your new Node.js project, and then change to the directory–for example, enter the following command into your terminal:

    mkdir influx-node-app && cd influx-node-app 
  4. Enter the following command to generate an npm package for your project.

    • npm: the package manager included with Node.js
    • -y: uses defaults for the package and bypasses prompts
    npm init -y

Install TypeScript

Many of the client library examples use TypeScript. Follow these steps to initialize the TypeScript project:

  1. Install TypeScript and type definitions for Node.js.

    npm i -g typescript && npm i --save-dev @types/node
  2. Enter the following command to create a TypeScript configuration (tsconfig.json) with default values:

    tsc --init
  3. Run the TypeScript compiler. To recompile your code automatically as you make changes, pass the --watch, -w flag to the compiler.

    tsc --watch

Install dependencies

The JavaScript client library contains two packages: @influxdata/influxdb-client and @influxdata/influxdb-client-apis. Add both as dependencies of your project.

  1. Open a new terminal window and install @influxdata/influxdb-client for querying and writing data:

    npm install --save @influxdata/influxdb-client
  2. Install @influxdata/influxdb-client-apis for access to the InfluxDB management APIs:

    npm install --save @influxdata/influxdb-client-apis

Next steps

Once you’ve installed the JavaScript client library, you’re ready to write data to InfluxDB or get started with other examples from the client library.

Get started with examples

The client examples include an env module for accessing your InfluxDB properties from environment variables or from env.mjs. The examples use these properties to interact with the InfluxDB API.

  1. Set environment variables or update env.mjs with your InfluxDB bucket, organization, token, and URL.

    export INFLUX_URL=http://localhost:8086
    export INFLUX_TOKEN=YOUR_API_TOKEN
    export INFLUX_ORG=YOUR_ORG
    export INFLUX_BUCKET=YOUR_BUCKET

    Replace the following:

    • YOUR_API_TOKEN: InfluxDB API token
    • YOUR_ORG: InfluxDB organization ID
    • YOUR_BUCKET: InfluxDB bucket name
  2. Run one of the influxdb-client-js example scripts.

    query.ts

For more examples and information, see the JavaScript client on GitHub.


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InfluxDB OSS 2.9.0: API tokens are hashed by default

Stronger token security in InfluxDB OSS 2.9.0 — tokens are hashed on disk by default. Existing tokens are hashed on first startup and can’t be recovered afterward. Capture any plaintext tokens you still need before you upgrade.

View InfluxDB OSS 2.9.0 release notes

Hashed tokens authenticate exactly like unhashed tokens — clients and integrations keep working.

Also new in 2.9.0:

  • Configurable backup compression
  • Restore support for backups containing hashed tokens
  • Tighter Edge Data Replication queue validation
  • Flux upgrade
  • Compaction reliability improvements

Key enhancements in Explorer 1.9

Explorer 1.9 is now available with InfluxQL support, an AI-assisted Flux to SQL converter (beta), and new live sample data simulators.

View Explorer 1.9 release notes

Explorer 1.9 includes new features and improvements that make it easier to query, visualize, and manage data.

Highlights:

  • Flux to SQL converter (beta): Convert Flux queries to SQL with an AI-assisted converter.
  • InfluxQL support: Query data with InfluxQL in the Data Explorer and dashboards, and save and load InfluxQL queries.
  • InfluxQL visualizations: Render line and bar charts from InfluxQL results with per-tag series grouping.
  • Query error history: Review a history of query errors in the query tool.
  • Live sample data simulators: Generate continuous live sample data with new bird data and signal generator simulators.

For more details, see Explorer 1.9 release notes

InfluxDB 3.10 is now available

InfluxDB 3 Core 3.10 adds an automatic catalog format upgrade, a configurable query-concurrency limit, and processing engine improvements.

Key updates in InfluxDB 3 Core 3.10:

  • Catalog format upgrade: the on-disk catalog automatically upgrades from format v2 to v3 on first 3.10 startup. Migration is one-way—back up your catalog before upgrading.
  • --max-concurrent-queries: limit concurrent queries (adjustable at runtime).
  • GET /ready endpoint for readiness probes.
  • Processing engine: cross-database queries and trigger lockdown flags.

For more information, see the InfluxDB 3 Core release notes.

InfluxDB 3.10 is now available

InfluxDB 3 Enterprise 3.10 adds automated backup and restore, row-level deletions, and user management, with an automatic catalog format upgrade and performance preview improvements.

Key updates in InfluxDB 3 Enterprise 3.10:

  • Catalog format upgrade: the on-disk catalog automatically upgrades from format v2 to v3 on first 3.10 startup. Migration is one-way—back up your catalog before upgrading.
  • Automated backup and restore (beta)
  • Row-level deletions
  • User management (authentication and RBAC) — preview
  • Performance preview improvements

Backup and restore, row-level deletions, and the performance preview require the Enterprise storage engine upgrade (opt-in beta). Beta and preview features are subject to breaking changes and aren’t recommended for production use.

For more information, see the InfluxDB 3 Enterprise release notes

Telegraf Enterprise is now generally available

Telegraf Enterprise is now generally available, along with Telegraf Controller v1.0.

Telegraf Enterprise combines Telegraf Controller, a centralized management console for Telegraf, with official support from InfluxData. Manage configurations, monitor fleet health, and operate tens of thousands of Telegraf agents from a single system.

InfluxDB Docker latest tag changing to InfluxDB 3 Core

On September 15, 2026, the latest tag for InfluxDB Docker images will point to InfluxDB 3 Core. To avoid unexpected upgrades, use specific version tags in your Docker deployments.

If using Docker to install and run InfluxDB, the latest tag will point to InfluxDB 3 Core. To avoid unexpected upgrades, use specific version tags in your Docker deployments. For example, if using Docker to run InfluxDB v2, replace the latest version tag with a specific version tag in your Docker pull command–for example:

docker pull influxdb:2